'Poor preparation led to India's whitewash'
London: Former West Indian captain Clive Lloyd said on Friday that he was surprised by India's 0-4 whitewash in the Test series against England and blamed poor preparation as the main reason for the debacle.
"Nobody expected England to beat India 4-0. But you can't not come to any country and play just one warm up game," said Lloyd.
"Young players especially need 3-4 four-day games before Tests and a couple in between. If you are out of form, you don't get your form in the nets," he said.
Lloyd gave the example of Virender Sehwag to drive his point that without preparation, a player howsoever big, would struggle.
"You don't get runs by walking straight in. I don't care how good you are, you don't get it. You are not going to run into form in Test matches. You need to get your timing right, the foot movement, picking the ball properly," he said.
Lloyd, who led possibly the strongest cricket team ever in the history of the game in the 1970s and 80s, also criticised a few senior players for giving the series against West Indies before the England tour, a complete miss.
"Those who went to the Caribbean, people like Dravid, they did well (here). You need games as you are older, you need to train harder and play more games. The mistake they made is not to have played enough games .. a few of your top players should have gone to West Indies," he said.
Lloyd described the current Indian bowling attack, especially the spinners, as the weakest he has seen during his years of association with the game.
"Spin-wise, it looks the weakest. You always had good spinners. As for fast bowlers, anyone would break down with the sort of workload which (Ishant) Sharma had. They needed to use him sparingly and not so often. Other bowlers offered no support. He needed spinners to bowl for long periods. Your spinners always did so in the past," said Lloyd.
The bespectacled former cricketer, however, was not too concerned by the relatively poor form of Sachin Tendulkar and said the Indian maestro will eventually get his 100th international ton.
"He should be alright. If you get 99 international hundreds, you would get the 100th one as well. He's been phenomenal. He's been the batting God," he said.
Lloyd felt Indian cricket administrators and players need to worry about the future and draw the blueprint straightaway.
"Dhoni has been good for India. You obviously look terrible when you are losing. It's how you regroup, how you come out of it."
"England have an elite squad of 25 which is close to the standards of Test cricket. India too needs to have it, your young players must play outside. The 'A' tours are a very good point. How players perform outside India, that should be the goal for the future," he said.
Lloyd warned that the sponsors might start to pull out if India perform poorly on a regular basis in Test cricket.
"I hope people realize it. Nobody wants losers. Sponsors can pull out. For 15 years, we (in the
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