Selection questions for India: Does Vihari get in? And what about Ashwin?

The debate over India’s selection leading into the fourth Test has grown cacophonous. Who should play, who shouldn’t, and why?

Karthik Krishnaswamy31-Aug-2021The highs of Lord’s have quickly given way to the lows of Headingley, and, as is always the case after heavy defeat, the debate over India’s selection leading up to the fourth Test has grown cacophonous. Who should play, who shouldn’t, and why? Here are the major questions for India to answer going into The Oval.Should India play an extra batter?
They were bowled out for 78 on the first day at Headingley, and lost their last eight wickets for 63 on the fourth. While Virat Kohli said after the match that he has “never believed” in having a sixth specialist batter, and that having that batter would be “no guarantee” against such collapses, he has in the past picked combinations that included that extra batter and only four specialist bowlers.Related

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Jadeja taken to hospital for precautionary knee scans

There is a chance that India might be forced to go with six batters anyway, if the knee injury that Ravindra Jadeja suffered at Headingley rules him out of the fourth Test. On this tour, Jadeja has been more of a batting allrounder than a bowling allrounder, with his most telling contributions being his 56 at Trent Bridge and his first-innings 40 at Lord’s rather than his tight but mostly nonthreatening bowling, as his output of 15.2 overs per innings and his strike rate of 228.0 would suggest.If Jadeja is to be replaced, therefore, it’s his batting India will probably want to cover before his bowling. But even if he’s fit, India might consider playing a sixth batter, given the lack of runs from Ajinkya Rahane (who averages 19.00 in this series) and Rishabh Pant (17.40) in particular.If they pick a sixth batter, for whatever reason, the obvious choice would be Hanuma Vihari, but there’s also the option of shifting KL Rahul – who began the tour as a middle-order option – down the order and picking either Mayank Agarwal or Prithvi Shaw to open alongside Rohit Sharma. Vihari would probably be the likelier choice, given both his status as the next middle-order batter in line, and the utility he brings with his part-time offspin.