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Analysis

India start as statistical underdogs

On head-to-head form, Sri Lanka clearly have the upper hand, India however, are playing at home; an advantage they haven't made the best use of in recent times

George Binoy
George Binoy
24-Oct-2005


Sachin Tendulkar's return will add some much-needed experience to a batting line-up that is missing Mohammad Kaif, VVS Laxman and Sourav Ganguly © Getty Images
The seven-match one-day series against Sri Lanka is a critical one for Indian cricket, and almost everything will depend on how the players, especially Rahul Dravid, the new captain, fare in a tough series against opponents who have not been in better form since the 1996 World Cup.
Sri Lanka's record in their last 50 one-day matches is fantastic - 34 wins and only 16 losses. And it gets better: in their last 25 games, they have won 19, a clear indication of a team on the rise. Sri Lanka haven't toured India since 1999 but they've won seven of their last 11 games in the subcontinent outside home (four against Pakistan, one each against India, Zimbabwe and Bangladesh).
India, on the other hand, have lost 24 and won 22 of the 47 ODIs that they've played at home since 2000. India's tigers-at-home tag has taken a severe beating after 2001: they've lost 21 of their 37 games while six wins came against Zimbabwe and West Indies. To put a different spin on India's home blues, they have won two, drawn one and lost four of their last seven ODI series at home (this doesn't include the one-off BCCI platinum-jubilee match against Pakistan, which India lost). Look closer and you'll find that both the wins came against Zimbabwe.
Head to head, Sri Lanka have 11 wins to India's seven in their last 20 ODIs. They have come up tops in five of their last six encounters against India. The solitary loss was in a match without Muttiah Muralitharan and Chaminda Vaas.
Dravid will be determined not to let captaincy affect his batting, and he has his counterpart to look up to for the perfect example. Marvan Atapattu has averaged a stunning 52.67 over the last 12 months. All the Sri Lankan batsmen have healthy averages over the past year, while most of the Indians have struggled. And with Mohammad Kaif, VVS Laxman and Sourav Ganguly not in the line-up and Sachin Tendulkar returning from a long injury lay-off, Dravid, Virender Sehwag and Yuvraj Singh will have to shoulder much of the responsibility for scoring runs.
Batsmen's comparison over the last 12 months
Batsman Matches Runs Average 100s/50s
Sanath Jayasuriya 11 393 39.30 0/2
Virender Sehwag 25 874 31.30 1/4
Marvan Atapattu 11 474 52.67 1/4
Sachin Tendulkar 9 227 25.22 1/0
Kumar Sangakkara 20 626 36.82 0/6
Rahul Dravid 23 807 38.43 1/8
Mahela Jayawardene 15 442 44.20 0/4
Yuvraj Singh 19 678 39.88 2/3
Russel Arnold 8 182 36.40 0/2
Mahendra Singh Dhoni 19 525 37.5 1/2
One of India's major worries will be the form of Harbhajan Singh who has taken just 11 wickets in his last 17 games at an expensive 65.55 apiece. While a few Indian bowlers are inexperienced in the one-day format (even Irfan Pathan has played just two ODIs in India), the Sri Lankan slow-bowlers are experts at keeping the batsmen on a leash. On head-to-head form, Sri Lanka clearly have the upper hand, India, however, are playing at home, an advantage they haven't made the best use of in recent times.
Bowlers comparison over the last 12 months
Bowler Matches Wickets Average Econ
Muttiah Muralitharan 13 20 23.75 3.86
Harbhajan Singh 17 11 65.55 4.67
ChamindaVaas 9 11 28.36 4.23
Irfan Pathan 12 17 30.82 4.97
Dilhara Fernando 11 11 36.73 4.64
Ajit Agarkar 9 20 18.65 4.82
Upul Chandana 13 19 25.37 4.54
Jai Prakash Yadav 5 3 46.00 4.60
Tillakaratne Dilshan 13 12 19.33 3.79
Murali Kartik 4 5 29.80 5.14

George Binoy is editorial assistant of Cricinfo. For the stats, he was helped by Arun Kumar Gopalakrishnan from Cricinfo's Chennai office