Hyderabad: As an out of fuel England, away from their home comforts of muggy, cool weather and strips that aid movement, brace itself for scorchy heat and spin-friendly wickets in Ahmedabad, a topic that has become common in the daily lives of cricket aficionados and critics alike are the pitches being catered to opposition batsmen.
The last two Test matches in "the land of spin" as said by West Indian great Viv Richards, have witnessed England batsmen befell and outfoxed by Indian spinners. So much so, that even their best wicket-keeper Ben Foakes has admitted it to being a tall order behind the stumps.
Read:EXCLUSIVE: Pitches at Motera, Chennai are like fields to grow vegetables, says Karsan Ghavri
To go by the numbers, R Ashwin alone has accounted for 24 wickets in a mere 3 matches and his junior partner Axar Patel has stirred England's batsmen already jangled nerves with 18 wickets in two matches. In a nutshell, the batting hasn't clicked and bowlers have failed in front of Indian batsmen who have better cognisance of the situation.
Have England brought it on themselves by not adjusting and repairing their technical glitches or is it the pitch that has been unfair on them?
"This pitch was like an agriculture field. It became extremely difficult for the batsmen to survive," former left-arm seamer Karsan Ghavri, who together with Kapil Dev picked 183 wickets in 27 Test matches, told Etv Bharat.
However, Joe Root and his teammates haven't made any complaints but the captain's reaction, a sardonic smile, when he saw the pink ball missing Zak Crawley's bat by a mile in the first innings of the second Test summed up England's overall mindset and approach towards the game.