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Harbhajan Singh Urges Team India to Stop Seeking Rank Turners After Series Defeats

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India’s recent Test losses have reignited discussions around the team’s pitch strategies, with former spinner Harbhajan Singh openly criticizing the current management’s preference for rank turners. Following back-to-back defeats against South Africa, including a dramatic collapse while chasing 124 in Kolkata and a heavy 408-run loss in Guwahati, Harbhajan stressed that relying on turning tracks from Day 1 is hurting India’s long-term growth in Test cricket.

Reports indicate that the opening Test pitch was deliberately prepared as a sharp turner upon the request of head coach Gautam Gambhir and the support staff, prompting curator Sujan Mukherjee to avoid watering the surface for several days. Harbhajan, frustrated by the recurring pattern, stated that India must “look into the mirror” and accept that such pitches expose more weaknesses than strengths.

He highlighted how similar pitch decisions backfired in last year’s home series against New Zealand, where India suffered a 0-3 whitewash. According to him, a decade of manufactured turners has halted the evolution of Indian cricket and limited the development of batters, who now struggle with fundamental spin techniques such as sweeps and footwork.

Referencing the Anderson-Tendulkar Trophy, Harbhajan pointed out that India performed significantly better on fair wickets—drawing 2-2—and praised Shubman Gill’s impressive 754-run performance across five matches. He argued that only balanced surfaces provide equal opportunities for batters and bowlers, helping India build a competitive and adaptable Test unit.

The former off-spinner reiterated that protecting the future of Test cricket requires abandoning extreme pitch manipulation and returning to high-quality, competitive tracks that reward skill over surface advantage.

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