da mrbet: Their top order has shouldered the bulk of the batting workload in recent times, but do India have themselves to blame for their middle-order muddle?

da heads bet: Sidharth Monga and Srinath Sripath24-Jul-2018India are one of the best ODI sides in the world. That is clear from the results: they reached the semi-final of the last World Cup, final of the Champions Trophy, and only recently had their nine-series winning streak in bilateral ODI cricket ended. However, they still don’t know what their best middle order is, which, after the introduction of wristspinners post last year’s Champions Trophy, seems to be the only glaring weakness in the ODI set-up.Since 2015, India have used 11 different batsmen at No. 4 in 62 games. By extension, the whole middle-order combination and dynamic is bound to keep changing. Fair to say India are struggling to identify the ideal middle order.

The number four spot in ODIs since World Cup 2015: how the teams stack up

Team Innings Batsmen used Average innings/batsman Batting AverageZimbabwe 67 13 5.2 32.74Australia 57 11 5.2 31.05India 57 11 5.2 35.31Sri Lanka 61 10 6.1 42.56West Indies 44 10 4.4 27.02Afghanistan 45 9 5.0 22.32New Zealand 60 9 6.7 56.97Pakistan 53 8 6.6 35.90South Africa 51 7 7.3 48.25Ireland 51 7 7.3 27.24Bangladesh 39 6 6.5 36.04England 67 5 13.4 46.94One of the possible reasons for short ropes is that India seem to be looking for some bowling insurance should one of the five go for a plenty. That is perhaps why Suresh Raina kept getting selected ahead of Dinesh Karthik in England. India just don’t have a real part-timer in the top six except Kedar Jadhav. Even Rohit Sharma doesn’t bowl nowadays. Whether this fascination with a part-timer is justified or not is up for debate.Graphic: Apart from Kedar Jadhav, India’s top six have hardly bowled in ODIs since World Cup 2015•ESPNcricinfo LtdSome of those on the musical chairs in this middle order come into the side based on their IPL performances. However, in the IPL they mostly bat at the top of the order. They rarely get to play the domestic one-dayers, but not all of them bat in the middle order for their state side either. Only one of the top-five middle-order run-getters in Vijay Hazare over the last two years has had some kind of a chance: Dinesh Karthik. That puts more premium on IPL performances, which is how Ambati Rayudu and Suresh Raina came back this year. Even from the IPL, the middle-order performers haven’t got get a decent run: Rishabh Pant, Karthik, MS Dhoni, Manish Pandey and Krunal Pandya are the five highest run-getters in the middle order in the last two IPLs.Graphic: A number of India’s middle order batsmen bat in the top order in domestic cricket•Ishita Mazumder/ESPNcricinfo LtdAnother reason why top-order performers in domestic cricket get shifted to middle order in international cricket is that the top order in the India team is packed. And they are also doing most of the heavy lifting too. They are scoring more than any other top order in the world.Graphic: India’s top three in ODIs have shouldered the bulk of their run-scoring workload in recent times•Girish TS/ESPNcricinfo LtdHere’s how every India ODI batsman has fared since World Cup 2015, not counting matches against Zimbabwe.Graphic: The gulf between India’s top and middle orders since World Cup 2015•Girish TS/ESPNcricinfo LtdThere is only one Indian in the top-25 run-getters in the middle order since World Cup. The problem is, it is Dhoni, who has tried batting at 4 and 5 a fair bit and is now back to No. 6. India have not been able to pin his role: dasher in the lower middle order or accumulator at 4. He is nowhere near top-10 strike rates for Nos 6 and 7 nor is he in the top-10 averages for Nos 4 and 5.India might have finally been tempted to give a settled line-up a fair run but then Jadhav, who manages the rare double of high average and strike rate – 41 and 109 since World Cup 2015, began to drop out with hamstring injuries.Graphic: MS Dhoni is the only Indian representative among the world’s top 25 middle-order batsmen since World Cup 2015•Girish TS/ESPNcricinfo LtdAverage fall of second wicket (since World Cup 2015)

England: 103 in 17th over

Sri Lanka: 81 in 15th over

Australia 93 in 17th over

India 122 in 22nd over

South Africa 104 in 19th over

New Zealand 86 in 16th over

Pakistan 89 in 17th over

Bangladesh 81 in 16th over

In big tournaments or series India’s middle order rarely get to do much, and then one fine day, in a crucial game, the top order collapses or they come in in the 35th over with eight an over required and they don’t seem to know how to handle those situations. Is it because England’s middle order inspires more confidence that their top order can score more freely or is it because India’s top order is a tad conservative that they go slow?Is the middle order putting extra pressure on the top order or is the time taken by them giving the middle order less time? There was a time when India were paying the price for the top order not going absolutely ballistic when batting first on flat tracks – like in Australia in early 2016 – but their wristspinners have sort of made up for it. The middle-order breakdown still keeps cropping up every now and then.

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