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 Former India batsman Sanjay Manjrekar  has questioned India's approach of handling the fitness of its players  and has strongly suggested a review of the entire process. Highlighting  the example of Zaheer Khan  - who had to pull out of the Lord's Test after playing barely one  session on the first day due to a hamstring injury - Manjrekar said that  the Indian think tank should have known better than rushing Zaheer  straight into the first Test of a major series at Lords with barely any  practice in English conditions.  
 Zaheer's previous international match was the World Cup final on April 2 after which he played in the IPL and later skipped India's tour of the West Indies due to an ankle problem. 
 "If Zaheer Khan had not gone to the West Indies the worry should've been  that he was coming into a Test match cold," Manjrekar told  ESPNcricinfo. Though Zaheer bowled 20 overs in the first innings of the  three-day match against Somerset where he finished wicketless, Manjrekar  said that it was definitely not enough to be match fit.  
 "Just one side game, a few overs here and there is not enough. For  people to suggest that he would ease into the series and that it takes a  while for Zaheer to warm-up is not the right way to look at it at all.  For the first match of a major series the player has to be ready;  fighting fit and raring to go. The first Test match is critical." 
 After Zaheer left the field due to injury, India's bowlers toiled hard  but that was not enough to stop England from piling up big totals in  both innings. At the end of the Lord's Test, MS Dhoni said that India  had been severely short of a third seamer, a complete contrast to the  impact of England's three-man pace attack on the progression of the  game.  
 Dhoni remained sceptical about Zaheer's availability for the second Test  at Trent Bridge. "We have three days but I am not 100% sure if we will  play him or not," Dhoni said. "It is a long series and we don't want to  risk any individual if he is only 90% fit as that only increases the  chances of him getting injured further. It is very important to get the  guys fully fit." 
 It is believed that Zaheer does not want  to risk aggravating the injury and has expressed reservations in  private about playing the second Test which begins on July 29. This is not the first time that Zaheer has broken down during a game. 
 In India's only warm-up match against Somerset, Zaheer did not bowl in  the second innings, which had raised some doubts about his match fitness  going into the first Test. 
 "What has really come out from what happened to Zaheer is how we (the  Indian team) are managing the fitness of the senior players so that they  are ready and raring to go in that first Test match," Manjrekar said.  "We cannot have a player using a Test match to get warmed up  completely."  
 "What is happening currently with the fitness of major players is that  it is left to the individual, the way he wants to tackle his own  fitness. I don't think the Indian physio has a plan for the overworked  players. I don't think there is a sophisticated, well-planned approach. I  think it is left to the cricketer himself.  
 "Zaheer perhaps made the mistake. India's worst nightmare came true on  the very first day of the Test series. It is time [Indian cricket]  starts looking at it [player injury] a little more seriously and not  leave it to the individual to look to assess his own fitness and  approach matches the way it is being done at the moment." 
Source:Espncricinfo 

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