Published: 16 Nov 2025, 05:02 pm
Eden Gardens delivered a rare statistical anomaly in Test cricket: across four innings, not a single team managed to score 200 runs. South Africa posted 159 and 153; India responded with 189 and collapsed to 93 in the final innings. This is the first time such an event has occurred on Indian soil, and it has happened only 11 times in the entire history of Test cricket, the last occurrence dating back to 1959. It was, by every measure, an extraordinary match.
Given the universally poor batting returns, it came as no surprise that scrutiny immediately turned to the pitch curator. Former India spinner Harbhajan Singh did not hold back, accusing the curator of preparing an excessively difficult surface that was “killing Test cricket”.
However, former India captain Sourav Ganguly offered a completely different explanation. He claimed that the curator was merely following instructions — and those instructions came directly from India’s head coach, Gautam Gambhir. Just one day later, Gambhir himself confirmed the allegation.
Speaking to the media after India’s defeat, Gambhir was blunt:
“We wanted exactly this sort of pitch. The curator helped us tremendously and delivered what we asked for. If we don’t bat well, this is what happens.”
With that statement, the former opener effectively shifted the entire responsibility for India’s 93-run collapse — while chasing a modest target of 124 — onto his own batting line-up. Gambhir argued that the pitch was “not unplayable”, using Temba Bavuma’s fighting half-century in South Africa’s second innings, along with contributions from Axar Patel (26) and Washington Sundar (31), as evidence.
Gambhir elaborated:
“There were no demons in the wicket. It wasn’t unplayable. If Bavuma can score and our lower order can score, the top order should be able to do the same.”
He then pointed to the bowling statistics as further proof that the surface wasn’t a spinning minefield:
“Most of the 40 wickets fell to pace bowlers. People keep talking about the wicket turning, but the numbers show the seamers dominated.”
According to Gambhir, the key to success at Eden lay in discipline rather than aggression:
“This was a wicket where skill, mental strength and good temperament could earn runs. Aggressive batting was difficult. Those who defended well — like KL Rahul and Washington Sundar — were rewarded.”
He insisted that India had played on similar surfaces before and that strong defensive technique remained fully viable.
Harbhajan Singh, meanwhile, issued a stark warning about the growing trend of extreme home pitches:
“If we keep preparing surfaces like this, we won’t need opponents to kill Test cricket. We will destroy it with our own hands.”
The debate surrounding the Eden pitch is unlikely to fade soon, but one thing is undeniable: Gambhir’s admission has shifted the spotlight from the curator to India’s dressing room — and it has intensified the scrutiny on the team’s batting resilience.
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