Former Indian pacer Zaheer Khan has advised the Indian management against making too many changes in the team. Zaheer won the 2011 ODI World Cup with India, he has warned his former teammate Gautam Gambhir over too much 'flexibility', especially in the white-ball format. While England came to India with pretty much a similar squad for the T20I and ODI series, India named two very different squads for both formats. Gautam Gambhir advised against too much 'flexibility' There's been too much chopping and changing, and different opening combinations have been tried, Shreyas Iyer was not in the XI for the first ODI, but since Virat Kohli was unavailable, Iyer played and scored a match-winning knock. With question marks being asked about the 'flexibility' approach Zaheer stated that all these perennial changes can cause 'insecurity' in the team. "You've said that you've got to have the flexibility. Number one and two will be there but the others are going to be flexible. Within that flexibility, some rules also apply. There are certain protocols you have to follow," Zaheer Khan told Cricbuzz. "Certain communication needs to happen, which is gonna streamline things. Otherwise, you are creating insecurity, which, at some stage, will come back and hurt you. You don't want it to be the case. So you've got to be prepared to deal with that situation," he added. Zaheer highlights differences between Rahul Dravid and Gautam Gambhir's approach Talking about the difference between former coach Rahul Dravid's approach and Gambhir's way of going about things, Zaheer highlighted that 'recency bias' is very strong nowadays. "That's why I said recency bias is something very strong right now. The situation has become dynamic if you have to compare Rahul Dravid's approach and Gautam Gambhir's approach. You can say it's good, bad or ugly, or you can say how do we adapt," the legendary left-arm pacer stated. He continued, "Each individual is a part of this system, be it the senior management or the think tank, be it the players, be it the selectors. They will have to gauge it, and the entire system needs to be streamlined for the wheel to turn properly."Original Article