Indian Test cricket is going through its most alarming downfall in over a decade. What was once India’s strongest, most respected format has suddenly turned into a confused, directionless mess. The decline didn’t begin today. It traces back to November 2024, when New Zealand humiliated India 0–3 in our own backyard — the first home Test series defeat since 2012. That whitewash wasn’t just a loss; it was a warning shot fired straight into the heart of Indian cricket. But no one acted. Then came the inevitable shift. Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, and Ravichandran Ashwin retired from Tests ahead of the 2025 UK tour. Shubman Gill was handed the reins during a period of complete instability, and instead of steadying the ship, the slide accelerated. The recent home series against Temba Bavuma’s South Africa — another whitewash — exposed every crack, every misstep, every bad selection call made over the past year. Across four innings in Kolkata and Guwahati, India didn’t cross 200 even once. That is not just failure. That is system collapse. And at the centre of this freefall stands one question: Why is India building a Test team like a franchise T20 side?
Team Management’s T20 Dreams Are Destroying India’s Test Reality
Gautam Gambhir and the current management seem obsessed with the idea of creating a squad full of “multi-role” cricketers — players who can bat a bit, bowl a bit, field a bit. But Test cricket isn’t won by bits and pieces. It is won by specialists. By players with deep skills, not shallow versatility
India has turned the legendary No.3 spot into a revolving audition. This is the batting position that defined Rahul Dravid. The one Cheteshwar Pujara guarded for a decade. And now, instead of grooming a proper red-ball warrior with technique and temperament, India is fielding players like Washington Sundar there — a talented cricketer, but not the kind you build a Test spine around. The experimentation has become so ridiculous that the team seems clueless about what kind of player is even required for that role. To make things worse, the squad is overflowing with left-handers — seven of them — making India a dream matchup for any off-spinner. This is basic tactical awareness, yet somehow the management has ignored it. When Gill got injured, instead of rewarding a prolific domestic batter, India handed out another chance to mediocrity. Meanwhile, Ranji giants scoring mountains of runs continue to watch from home. The all-rounder obsession is hurting the team even more. Instead of picking proper frontline bowlers and specialist batters, India is stacking the XI with players who do everything except win sessions. Nitish Kumar Reddy, labelled an all-rounder, bowled just 10 overs across two innings and batted at eight. Five spinners were picked for a two-Test series. And despite all this “batting depth,” the team couldn’t cross 200 once. It’s not selection anymore; it’s panic disguised as strategy.
Selectors Need to Follow Domestic Cricket, Not Foreign Sightseeing Tours
The selection committee is equally responsible for the chaos. Ever since Gambhir took charge, chief selector Ajit Agarkar and his zonal panel members have been seen on almost every foreign tour — Australia, England, South Africa — posing in stadiums, sitting in hospitality boxes, travelling with the team. But for what purpose? Their job for those tours is already done. The squads are already picked. Where they aren’t showing up is where it matters most: the Ranji and India A games across Indian grounds. These are the places where the next Dravid, next Zaheer, next VVS will emerge — not on foreign tour parties. Instead of identifying future Test players, selectors are spending their time abroad doing… nothing that actually counts. This negligence has reached a level where the chief selector isn’t even aware of Mohammed Shami’s current status, despite Shami actively bowling for Bengal and repeatedly declaring he is fully fit. If selectors don’t know what’s happening in their own backyard, how can they possibly choose the right players for the nation? Domestic cricket is the heartbeat of Indian Test cricket. Ignoring it — while enjoying foreign trips — is a betrayal of the format and a direct reason for India’s shrinking Test depth.
India’s Test cricket right now is broken. Confused team identity, chaotic strategies, misplaced priorities, and total disconnect between management and domestic structure. The basics that once made India unbeatable at home and fierce overseas have been abandoned for shortcuts and fantasies. If India wants to climb back, the solutions are brutally simple: pick specialists, respect roles, trust domestic performers, and get the selectors back to actual scouting instead of sightseeing. Because at this moment, Indian Test cricket isn’t just struggling — it is screaming for rescue.















































