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Prasidh Krishna Test Record in Home Conditions India: The Untested Chapter for India’s Tall Pacer in 2026

By tapeshwar chandra
June 5, 2026 4 Min Read

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    Prasidh Krishna Test Record in Home Conditions India: The Untested Chapter for India’s Tall Pacer in 2026
    Prasidh Krishna Delivering In Test Whites Under Indian Skies - Image Credit: Illustration by nhacricket Digital Labs

    Prasidh Krishna test record in home conditions India sits at zero matches, zero wickets, and a whole lot of anticipation. The 6-foot-2 Karnataka pacer has built every single one of his 22 Test wickets on foreign soil. That blank page at home now stands as the biggest unanswered question in his red-ball journey.

    India’s selectors have seen enough overseas promise to keep calling his name. They have also seen enough inconsistency to leave him out of certain home squads. The result is a career that still lacks the one environment every Indian bowler eventually must master.

    What the Numbers Say So Far

    His six Tests have all come away from home. The debut arrived in Centurion against South Africa in December 2023. The bulk of his experience followed during the 2025 tour of England, where he featured in three of the five Tests and finished with 14 wickets at 37.07. Overall, the raw figures read 6 Tests, 11 innings, 960 balls, 756 runs conceded, 22 wickets, average 34.36, economy 4.73, strike rate 43.64, with a best of 4 for 62 and two four-wicket hauls.

    Those numbers carry the usual Prasidh signature: moments of real threat mixed with spells that leak runs. The Headingley Test in 2025 produced one of the most expensive five-over spells by an Indian bowler in years. Yet at The Oval he delivered the eight-wicket match haul that helped level the series. The pattern is clear. When the ball hits the deck hard and moves, he looks unplayable. When conditions flatten or batters commit to attack, the runs flow quickly.

    The Home Conditions Puzzle

    Indian pitches in 2026 still offer early seam movement for the first hour or two, then slow down and turn. For a tall bowler who relies on bounce and seam rather than swing, that transition can be brutal. The extra lift that troubles batters in Johannesburg or Leeds becomes a gift to skilled players of spin on turning tracks. They simply play late and let the ball die on them.

    Prasidh’s height should still create awkward bounce from short of a length, especially if India prepare the kind of bouncy surfaces sometimes seen at venues like Ahmedabad or Dharamsala. But the margin for error shrinks. One loose delivery that sits up gets punished the same way his short balls were punished in England. The crowd at Wankhede or Eden Gardens will not stay quiet if the runs start leaking.

    You can almost picture the scene already. The stadium lights come on for the evening session. The noise swells every time he runs in from the pavilion end. One short ball rears at a batter’s throat and the entire stand rises. That is the version of Prasidh Krishna India has been waiting to see at home.

    The Human Side of the Wait

    Behind the stats sits a bowler who has fought injuries and selection swings since his 2021 ODI debut. Domestic cricket with Karnataka gave him the platform. The IPL stage with Gujarat Titans sharpened his variations. Yet every time India picked a home squad without him, the questions grew louder. Was it form, fitness, or simply the belief that other options suited Indian conditions better?

    Teammates speak of his work ethic in the nets. He stays late, works on hitting the seam, and studies how batters set up on slower tracks. Those quiet hours matter more than any single overseas spell. They are the reason selectors keep circling back to him when they need an extra tall option who can hit the deck.

    What Comes Next

    India’s 2026 home schedule will eventually give him the chance he has waited for. When it arrives, the focus will shift from raw numbers to adaptation. Can he bowl fuller lengths without losing pace? Will he learn to use the crease better on slower surfaces? Most importantly, can he stay calm when the crowd and the pitch both demand patience?

    The overseas record already proves he belongs at this level on his day. The home chapter will decide whether he becomes a regular across all conditions or remains a specialist for SENA tours. Either outcome starts with that first Test on Indian soil

    Verified Sports Correspondent

    tapeshwar chandra

    Tapeshwar Chandra is a Senior Cricket Analyst at NHACricket.com with 7 years of professional experience in sports journalism. A specialist in IPL match analysis and international fixtures, Tapeshwar is dedicated to delivering high-quality, E-E-A-T compliant content that keeps cricket enthusiasts ahead of the game. His work focuses on providing fans with "the story behind the score" through deep research and a passion for the gentleman’s game.
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