As an opening batsman, Ravi Shastri relished pushing deliveries down the ground. He played the percentage game, batted straight.
And, as coach, Shastri is someone who talks straight. No roundabout answers. He gets to the point quickly, does not go into denial mode.
NZ vs IND second Test: Batsmen will have to step up for India to draw level
Asked about India’s inability to make short work of the tail, a factor that has often haunted this side, Shastri said: “It has been a problem in the last year or so. We’ve had a chat on this. We have been over-aggressive or at times too defensive. We will look to address it.”
Ashwin’s batting
On R. Ashwin, Shastri observed: “He is a world-class bowler. If anything, he will be disappointed with the way he has batted. He would want to improve his batting. We have had conversations on this.”
On having to choose between Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja for a place in the eleven, Shastri said: “We will see how much of a role a spinner has, first of all. How many overs you think he is going to bowl in the game. Is there going to be something for him on day four or five.
“Will the second innings be that important. Do you need him more in the first innings. Is his batting going to count? Is his fielding going to count? Is his overall fitness going to count? Those are areas you look into.”
Shastri felt a defeat, such as the one in the first Test, was sometimes good for a team. “I always believe when you are on a run like we were, a shake-up like that is good because it opens your mind-set.”
He said: “When you are on the road winning all the time, or you have not tasted defeat, you can have a closed mind-set. I thought we were a little conservative and tentative in that first Test. Winning away from the sub-continent in red-ball cricket is always difficult. You need to adapt.”
Pacers ready to strike
Talking about the Indian pacemen, Shastri exuded confidence. “Bumrah is very close to getting a five-for or a six-for, might happen tomorrow. Similarly with Shami, so nothing to worry about. The Indian bowlers have to be more patient, bowl more in the right areas and create pressure.”
Looking at the second Test, Shastri is not short on optimism.