Mayank Agarwal. (Photo | PTI)
Mayank Agarwal. (Photo | PTI)

Sanjay Manjrekar is worried about Mayank Agarwal’s mode of dismissals in his last few innings. He observed that the opening batter is poking at deliveries outside the off-stump with hard hands, which is a problem that needs to be worked upon soon.

Mayank Agarwal started the three-Test series against South Africa on a promising note, scoring a 123-ball 60 in difficult conditions in Centurion. But his form tapered off after that, with scores of 4, 26, 23, 15, and 7 in the next five innings. He was caught at slips while trying to drive good length deliveries outside the off-stump in both innings of the ongoing Test.

Mayank Agarwal. (Photo: BCCI)
Mayank Agarwal. (Photo: BCCI)

Sanjay Manjrekar Is Worried By The Way Mayank Agarwal Was Dismissed In The Last Few Test Innings

Mayank Agarwal has played 19 Tests so far amassing 1429 runs at an impressive average of 43.3. He didn’t do well in Australia recently and played the two Tests against New Zealand only because opener KL Rahul got injured and another opener Rohit Sharma was rested.

The Karnataka star followed up his 150 in the first innings with 62 runs in the second innings in the 2nd Test against New Zealand. After scoring 60 in the 1st innings of the 1st Test in the next Test series against Proteas, the opener failed to cross 30 even once in the next 5 innings, amassing only 135 runs averaging 22.5 against South Africa.

Speaking in this regard on an interaction, Sanjay Manjrekar said: “How you get out is very important for a coach or a selector to decide the future of a player and the way Mayank Agarwal has got out in the last few innings worries me. Until this Test match, I thought he was shaping well and he might [have found] a way to come with softer hands on the ball, leave balls outside the off-stump.”

Sanjay Manjrekar | Sportzpics
Sanjay Manjrekar | Sportzpics

“Outside the off-stump, that channel is tricky to handle. Different batters handle it differently. Virat Kohli these days leaves everything outside the off-stump, some people play and are very confident. Mayank Agarwal needs to find a way to tackle that line.”

Sanjay Manjrekar added: “At the moment, he’s coming with two hard [hands], with a high backlift and the bat is coming hard on the ball. The slip catches [off his bat] are also going so quickly to the catchers to suggest it’s coming very hard. So Mayank Agarwal has a problem and that’s I guess work for the batting coach and Rahul Dravid.”

Mayank Agarwal was equally bullish on his off-side strokeplay in that first innings of the series. But he got away with a few close calls and made the South African pacers pay for their inconsistent lengths. The Proteas bowlers have since been on the money, exposing the right-hander’s weaknesses on quicker pitches.

The series was a crucial opportunity for Mayank Agarwal to perform in the absence of other openers injured Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill. He would not be happy with just 135 runs from six innings.

Sanjay Manjrekar: Series A Show Of 2 Quality Bowling Attacks Against 2 Weak Batting Lineups

Looking at the bigger picture, Sanjay Manjrekar also noted that the series has been a show of two quality bowling attacks against two ‘weak’ batting lineups so far.

Sanjay Manjrekar explained: “We are looking at two quality bowling lineups, but the fact also remains that we are seeing two not-so-great batting lineups. One is South Africa that’s weak on ability, to begin with; India of course [is] not weak in ability but on form – a lot of them are off the boil a little bit. So it’s the story of two teams with weakness in the batting lineup.”

Dean Elgar punches the air after hitting the winning four AFP via Getty Images
Dean Elgar punches the air after hitting the winning four AFP via Getty Images

Despite Mayank Agarwal and KL Rahul’s early dismissals, India raced to a 70-run lead at the end of Day 2. Sanjay Manjrekar insisted that, barring Dean Elgar, he has “no faith” in the hosts’ batting lineup, adding that a 200-run target should be enough for Team India.

Sanjay Manjrekar said: “I just have no faith in this South African batting lineup. If Dean Elgar plays well, there’s some hope. But when you have a batting lineup of the kind where Marco Jansen is coming so up the order, I think 200 should be enough for India’s bowling attack. The kind of attack they have, with Bumrah now finding a way to bowl outside the off-stump so runs should be hard to come by. The last time they chased 240 was a combination of Elgar playing one of his best innings and India bowling poorly. That’s unlikely to happen everytime.”

Dean Elgar played an unbeaten 96-run knock in South Africa’s second innings in the previous 2nd Test to take his team across the finish line. The gritty opener took numerous blows to his body but kept the Indian attack at bay during his more than five-hour vigil at the crease.