Harmanpreet: Domestic players can use WPL to earn India call-up for T20 World Cup

“It makes things easier for the selectors because you’ve proven yourself at a good level and under pressure,” she says

Vishal Dikshit16-Feb-2024India’s domestic players can use the upcoming second season of the WPL to make themselves known on the big stage and earn an India call-up in the lead-up to the T20 World Cup later this year, India and Mumbai Indians captain Harmanpreet Kaur has said.Harmanpreet, who lifted the inaugural WPL trophy as Mumbai captain last season, has led India in three T20 World Cups before. In 2018 and 2023 India made the semi-final, while in 2020 they lost in the final against Australia.With the next T20 World Cup slated for September-October later this year in Bangladesh, Harmanpreet said: “WPL is the kind of platform where domestic players will get opportunities,” at the pre-season press conference in Mumbai. “If they do well here then it means they’re kind of ready for international cricket. It makes things easier for the BCCI [selectors] because you’ve proven yourself at a good level and under pressure. If we get to see good talent and performances here, then it’ll be really good for us [Indian team] to look at such players and give them opportunities while thinking of the team for the T20 World Cup.”I think players getting such opportunities will want to grab them with both hands because if you can perform here then everyone is looking at you and your performance won’t be wasted, and you’ll get chances going ahead.”Harmanpreet cited the example of left-arm spinner Saika Ishaque who shot to fame in the maiden WPL season with 15 wickets that earned her ODI and T20I debuts later in the same year, and a maiden Test call-up as well. Ishaque first made a memorable WPL debut with figures of 4 for 11 in the opening game against Gujarat Giants, then wore the purple cap for a while in the league stage before finishing the tournament as the joint second-highest wicket-taker along with her team-mates Issy Wong and Amelia Kerr.”Last year we saw Saika do well and other players too who were picked later in the team,” Harmanpreet said. “Later on they got opportunities in the Indian team. So it’s a good platform for players because if you do well here, you can get picked [for the Indian team].”Saika Ishaque’s impressive WPL 2023 performance earned her an India spot•BCCIAs has been in the IPL, the Mumbai Indians women’s team could also create a legacy for unearthing unknown talent from domestic cricket and fast-forwarding their path to international cricket. The Mumbai set-up is known for its scouting system and their team management is banking on some more domestic spinners this time.”We’re trying to give chances to young girls in domestic cricket,” bowling coach Jhulan Goswami said. “Our scout team is working really hard to bring them here and we choose the best for our combination and all our quality cricketers. They just need a little bit of support from our end and this platform. On any day they might be a match-winning bowler. We don’t know if we’re going to make a superstar, but we give them the right platform to showcase their talent in front of everyone, and it helps Harman for the World Cup team.”Who is the next uncapped star from Mumbai Indians?Head coach Charlotte Edwards was also confident about the “great depth” in their squad and was hopeful of unearthing the “next Indian star for the future”. One such spinner Goswami singled out for praise was 20-year-old left-arm wristspinner Amandeep Kaur who plays domestic cricket for Haryana with Shafali Verma. Amandeep was bought for INR 10 lakh (US$ 12,000 approx.) by Mumbai at the recent auction and will be among the spin-bowling options with Ishaque, Kerr and Chloe Tryon apart from the uncapped spinners SB Keerthana (legspinning allrounder) and Sajeevan Sajana (offspinning allrounder).Amandeep was the third-highest wicket-taker in the Under-23 T20 series that finished late last year with a tally of 15 wickets from seven games and has taken 17 from 10 games in the ongoing Under-23 One-Day Trophy, in which Haryana will play the final against Uttar Pradesh on Saturday.”She has been so exciting, when we saw her in the trial,” Goswami said of Amandeep. “We don’t have many left-arm wristspinners in the country. Charlotte and me really enjoyed watching her in the trials and we signed her. She can be a big star, it’s not easy to bowl left-arm wristspin, it’s unique in women’s cricket. In the future, Harman will be happy to have her in the Indian team.”As per the women’s FTP, India are scheduled to play only two more international series before the T20 World Cup – the Asia Cup in August-September and a home T20I series against South Africa in September. The younger players will want to use the WPL as a platform to impress the selectors to earn an India call-up.

Atletico Madrid confirm €30m signing of David Hancko from Feyenoord after Al-Nassr bizarrely abandoned transfer at last minute

Atletico Madrid have snapped up David Hancko from Feyenoord after Al-Nassr bizarrely pulled out of the deal at the very last second.

Atletico sign Hancko from FeyenoordSlovak defender signs deal until June 2030Al-Nassr abandoned transfer despite medicalsFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Atletico have confirmed the €30 million (£25m/$34m) signing of Hancko from Feyenoord. The Slovakian centre-back signed a long-term contract until June 2030 after completing his medical in Madrid. Hancko had been on the verge of joining Al-Nassr and had even arrived in Austria to meet the Saudi club’s squad in pre-season. However, in a bizarre turn, Al-Nassr told the player in person that the transfer had collapsed at the last moment.

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The 27-year-old becomes Atleti's latest addition as they continue to bolster their squad for the 2025-26 season. He joins other new arrivals including Marc Pubill, Matteo Ruggeri, Thiago Almada, Alex Baena and Johnny Cardoso. Hancko is expected to slot directly into Diego Simeone’s defensive plans, having impressed over three seasons with Feyenoord and earned interest from multiple top clubs.

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Al-Nassr's decision to abandon the signing of Hancko sparked a furious reaction from Feyenoord, who labelled it a "truly scandalous" incident.

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Los Rojiblancos finished third in La Liga last season and are gearing up for a fresh campaign that kicks off against Espanyol on August 17. Hancko will immediately join Atletico's pre-season camp in Los Angeles de San Rafael and he will look to integrate quickly into the team’s defensive setup and prove his value after a chaotic transfer saga.

Nepal's Airee makes history by smashing six sixes in an over

Big-hitting finisher joins Yuvraj Singh and Kieron Pollard in T20I cricket’s elite list

ESPNcricinfo staff13-Apr-2024Dipendra Singh Airee, Nepal’s big-hitting finisher, entered the record books as the third man to hit six sixes in an over in an international T20 game, achieving the feat in the last over against Qatar in their ACC Men’s Premier Cup match in Al Amerat on Saturday.Starting the final over on 28 off 15 balls and Nepal on 174 for 7, Airee smashed medium pacer Kamran Khan for six sixes to end on 64 from 21. Nepal’s 210 for 7 then proved too much for Qatar as they went down by 32 runs. Airee also took two wickets in the chase.

That put his name on a list which only had Yuvraj Singh (off Stuart Broad in Durban in the 2007 T20 World Cup) and Kieron Pollard (off Akila Dananjaya in Coolidge in 2021) so far. In ODI cricket, the feat has been achieved by Herschelle Gibbs and USA’s Jaskaran Malhotra.Airee, the 24-year-old playing his 60th T20I to go with 55 ODIs, is no stranger to the feat though. He had achieved it once previously, though the six consecutive sixes on that occasion were spread across two overs.That was during the Asian Games in Hangzhou in September 2023, against Mongolia. It was made even more spectacular because those sixes came off the first six legal deliveries he had faced. The first five came in one over off Mungun Altankhuyag, and Airee completed the set off the first ball he faced next over from Luvsanzundui Erdenebulgan.Airee had scored 52 not out in ten balls that day as Nepal put up a mammoth 314 for 3 and then bowled Mongolia out for 41. It was the first 300-plus team total in a T20I match, and the nine balls Airee took to get the fastest-ever T20I fifty in history, topping the mark of 12 held by Yuvraj, Chris Gayle and Hazratullah Zazai.

'I played in two of the greatest Tests of all time'

Peter Willey is now better known as an international umpire, but for 22 Tests in the early 1980s, he was a doughty presence in England’s middle order.

08-Jul-2005Peter Willey is now better known as an international umpire, but for 22 Tests in the early 1980s, he was a doughty presence in England’s middle order, taking on the might of Australia and West Indies with his chest-on batting stance. Cricinfo spoke to him about his role in two of the most amazing Ashes Tests of all time – Headingley and Edgbaston 1981

Peter Willey © Getty Images
I will always remember the last morning of the Headingley Test, running out onto the ground in such an atmosphere that there were goose pimples on my arms. It was absolutely fantastic when Bob Willis had his amazing spell, ending up with eight wickets. It was the first Test I played in that we won, so it was an amazing occasion.Botham’s knock was one of those innings where he just went for it and I suppose he could have got out any time. We were all thinking that he couldn’t carry on the way he was batting. Even when they needed 130, we didn’t expect to win. If you’d read it in a book you have thought it was Roy of the Rovers stuff, which it was. I drove home that night, I had a sponsored car with my name on the side, and people were tooting as I went down the motorway. It was just great for the country.The stories about the Aussies having the champagne on ice are all true, they were ready to celebrate. It was all in their room and I think we ended up drinking it, which was even better. Then of course we went to Edgbaston and it wasn’t an easy pitch to play on. I think Mike Brearley was going to ask me to bowl in the last innings, as the pitch was turning quite a bit, but he decided to give Both a go and of course he took 5 for 1. It was marvellous but unfortunately after that game I got left out.I was disappointed to be left out especially at Old Trafford when Both got another hundred in no time at all. But I was just happy to play for England against anyone and I can always say I played in two of the most talked-about Tests of all time.Brearley just had a way of handling pressure – and especially Botham. When he took over it allowed Botham to express himself again and it paid off. When he was captain, the team struggled a bit, and he felt he couldn’t always go out and play his own way, but then he was allowed to do what he did best – just play cricket.Even after the Headingley and Edgbaston Tests there was a feeling that he couldn’t go on – not even the great Garry Sobers could change that many games – but Both just had a brilliant spell of three or four games when he could do nothing wrong. After being slated and being at rock-bottom following his pair at Lord’s it was just magnificent to see him come back. He had the strength of character to do it and it came off for him. I’ve never seen anything that has competed with 1981 for a single-handed turnaround of a series.I don’t think one person could beat this Australian side like Botham managed in ’81. They are a superb side, but if our bowlers can stay fit and bowl to their full ability, and if we can get enough runs, we can give them a contest. With good weather, good pitches and both teams playing to their potential I think we could have a great series and it is going to be marvellous to watch.I played 22 Tests and only won three – Headingley and Edgbaston in 1981, and Headingley in 85 – and to be involved in those games is something you will always remember. People always bring it up and come over with old scorecards saying “are you the Peter Willey that played there?” and it’s marvellous to be able to say I was.

Warne logs out of MCG in style

Stats highlights of the third day’s play of the fourth Test between Australia and England at Melbourne

Kanishkaa Balachandran28-Dec-2006

The script was perfectly written for Shane Warne’s final hurrah at the MCG © Getty Images
3 – The number of times Australia have been 4-0 up in an Ashes series after winning the first four games. The first instance was in 1920-21, before sweeping the series 5-0. The second was in 2002-03, though England managed a consolation win in the fifth Test at Sydney.40* – Warne’s score which happens to be his highest at the MCG, his home ground. His previous highest was just 18.56 – Warne’s wicket tally at the MCG, in 11 Tests. He now has over 50 Test wickets in four home venues, his favourite venue being the Gabba where he has 68 wickets at an average of just a shade over 20.17 – The number of Man-of-the-Match awards for Warne in Tests. He is the joint world-record holder with Pakistan’s Wasim Akram. Close on their heels are Jacques Kallis and Muttiah Muralitharan who have 16 each.35 – Glenn McGrath’s duck count after he was dismissed for zero today at the MCG. He was tied with Warne on 34 before the Boxing Day Test and has now moved into second place on the overall list behind Courtney Walsh who has 43.2 – The number of instances Chris Read has effected six dismissals in a Test innings. The first instance was on his debut Test, against New Zealand at Edgbaston in 1999. This is also the eighth such instance of an England wicketkeeper affecting six or more dismissals in an innings.335 – Runs added by Australia after England had them on the mat at 5 for 84.156 – Andrew Symonds’s highest Test score, which is also the second highest by a number seven batsman at the MCG. The highest remains Don Bradman’s 270, which is a world record.

Eleven improvers, and two tons at Lord's

The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket

Steven Lynch22-May-2006The regular Monday column in which Steven Lynch answers your questions about (almost) any aspect of cricket:

Dilip Vengsarkar scored three hundreds in his first three Tests at Lord’s © Getty Images
I noticed that all Sri Lanka’s batsmen at Lord’s scored more runs in the second innings than they did in their first. How often has this happened in Tests? asked Nirmalan Wigneswaran and Steve Howe
It’s certainly very rare: the instance in the first Test at Lord’s was only the third in Test history. The last time it happened was way back in 1924, when all South Africa’s batsmen bettered their first-innings score second time around against England at Edgbaston. (It wasn’t difficult, as they were all out for 30 in the first innings but made 390 in the second!) England also managed it against Australia at Melbourne in 1894-95. Bangladesh achieved the feat in reverse – everyone scoring more in the first innings than the second – in their inaugural Test, against India at Dhaka in 2000-01.Was Sri Lanka’s total at Lord’s the highest in the second innings of a Test? asked Ajith Gunasinghe from Chilaw
Sri Lanka’s 537 for 9 at Lord’s was their own highest in the second innings of a Test – comfortably beating their 448 for 5 declared against Pakistan earlier this year in Colombo – but it was some way short of the overall Test record, which coincidentally was scored against Sri Lanka. That was New Zealand’s 671 for 4 at Wellington in 1990-91, when Martin Crowe (299) and Andrew Jones (186) shared a record stand of 467. There have been five other second-innings totals of more than 600.Mahela Jayawardene has now played two Tests at Lord’s, and scored two centuries. How many other visiting batsmen have done this? asked Nishan Seneratne from Colombo
The Indian batsman Dilip Vengsarkar uniquely scored centuries in each of his first three Tests at Lord’s, in 1979 (103), 1982 (157) and 1986 (126 not out), before falling short with “only” 52 and 35 in 1990. Only seven other visiting players had scored two Test centuries at Lord’s before Mahela Jayawardene joined them last week. Australia’s Warren Bardsley was the first, with 164 in 1912 and 193 not out 14 years later in 1926, by which time he was 43, but he missed out in his other three Tests at Lord’s; George Headley collected both of his in the same game, with 106 and 107 for West Indies in 1939 (but he had done less well in 1933); the inevitable Don Bradman reached three figures for Australia in 1930 – with 254, which he felt was the best innings he ever played – and 1938, with 102 not out (but he missed out in 1934 and 1948); his fellow Australian Bill Brown made 105 in 1934 and 206 not out 1938 (but also failed to repeat the feat in 1948); Garry Sobers hit 163 not out in 1966, and 150 not out in 1973, but didn’t reach 100 in his other three official Tests at Lord’s; another West Indian, Gordon Greenidge, scored 214 not out in 1984 and 103 in 1988, having missed out in his first two visits, in 1976 and 1980; and finally Martin Crowe hit 106 in 1986 and 142 in 1994 (but did less well in 1983 and 1990). Sobers did, however, slam 183 for the Rest of the World against England at Lord’s in 1970 (he also took 6 for 21!), in what was thought to be a proper Test at the time but was later deemed unofficial. And Greenidge hit 122 against the Rest of the World in the five-day MCC Bicentenary match at Lord’s in 1987.Did Fred Titmus play for England again after his terrible accident? asked Maureen Bird from Southsea
The accident you’re referring to happened during England’s tour of the West Indies in 1967-68. Fred Titmus, the Middlesex offspinner who was Colin Cowdrey’s vice-captain on that trip, lost four toes when his left foot tangled with the propeller of a motor-boat – the propeller was unusually placed in the middle rather than at the back, and Titmus let his legs go underneath the boat while he was holding on to it. He was lucky in one way, in that the big toe – which is important for balance – was virtually undamaged, and he returned to county cricket a couple of months later. It did look, however, as if his England career had stalled after 49 caps – but he received a surprise recall for the 1974-75 tour of Australia, and played four Tests there to take his total to 53, in which he took 153 wickets at 32.22. He made his last appearance for Middlesex in 1982, when he was 49. Titmus joked that “the only real problem the accident left me with was counting – afterwards, I always had trouble going over 16!”When (and where) is the next women’s World Cup? asked Anuka Jain from Delhi
The next one will be played in Australia in 2009, when the Aussies will be defending the trophy that they won for the fifth time at Centurion in South Africa last April. Four years later, in 2013, the tournament will be played in India.Who called his autobiography Beating the Bat? asked James Lee from Crawley
That was the name of the memoirs of Derek Underwood, the Kent and England left-arm bowler who finished up with a tantalising total of 297 Test wickets. The book came out in 1975, when Underwood’s first-class career still had a dozen years to run, so maybe it’s time he wrote another one! Having said that, he did update his story a little in Deadly Down Under, which came out in 1980, but that was mainly an account of England’s tour of Australia the previous winter.

Play more to win more

If there has been one lesson from the women’s World Cup Qualifiers, it is that the teams needs more cricket – and more competitive games

Nishi Narayanan26-Feb-2008
Sana Mir and Caroline de Fouw shared the Player-of-the-Tournament award © ICC
It began with political unrest in Pakistan, which led to uncertainty over whether the tournament would be played at all. That was followed by a three-month postponement and a shift to South Africa. Now after a week of cricket between eight sides, the Women’s World Cup Qualifiers have ended with South Africa and Pakistan making it to next year’s World Cup in Australia.The tournament featured South Africa, Pakistan, Ireland, Netherlands, Scotland, Bermuda, Papua New Guinea and Zimbabwe. At stake were not only the two World Cup places but also a chance to gain ODI status for the next four years.As things now stand at the end of the tournament, South Africa and Pakistan will travel to Australia, with South Africa gaining a higher ranking of the two. Ireland and Pakistan were placed third and fourth respectively and they will retain their ODI status till 2012. Scotland, Bermuda, Zimbabwe and Papua New Guinea were unable to shake up the rankings and push their way into the top ten.Though nothing seems to have changed, when you look at the bigger picture, there are worrisome details that all the teams must introspect on. In the pool phase alone, where the teams played three games each, a whopping 669 extras were conceded. Bermuda topped the list with 165, followed by Ireland (114), Scotland (107), Zimbabwe (78), PNG (70), Netherlands (64), Pakistan (39) and South Africa (32). The nine run-outs in Ireland’s opening game against Pakistan can’t all be put down to excellent work on the field. And then there was Bermuda’s imploding batting line-up, which scored 13, 85, 44, 112 and 74; and most of these totals were boosted by extras. To be fair, Bermuda’s men have also fared just as badly in recent times, but that simply reflects on the poor training and lack of competitive cricket in the country.Among the positives were Cri-zelda Brits’ maiden one-day hundred, some fine bowling by Sana Mir, Alicia Smith and Caroline de Fouw, and Urooj Mumtaz’s hat-trick against Zimbabwe. PNG came up with a few respectable totals and beat Bermuda twice in the tournament to win seventh-place honours. Most importantly, the players got to shake the cobwebs off their cricket gear and play some reasonably competitive cricket.Once they are home, though, unless they carry forward from where they left off in Stellenbosch, the qualifiers will be meaningless. For associate nations, money and time off to play cricket are luxuries they can hardly afford, but if their game has to improve they have to play more often. Ireland could play Scotland in a format like the Rose Bowl, or the two could play Netherlands in a European version of the Asia Cup. Zimbabwe and South Africa could have bilateral series, or like in the men’s circuit, Zimbabwe could join South Africa’s domestic league. For Bermuda and PNG, the ICC may have to step in and review their situations. Only when the qualifiers are as bitterly competitive as those in men’s football, will there be better quality and subsequently more interest.

Mystery spinner

Sri Lanka’s new tweaker has made everyone sit up and take notice

17-Apr-2008

Mendis gets ready to ‘bowl everything’ © AFP
“Mendis bowls everything. With a smile on his face as he caresses the ball before delivering it, he bowls the offbreak, he bowls the legbreak, he bowls the googly, he bowls the flipper, he bowls a straight delivery, he bowls them with different grips and different actions, he bowls them with a different trajectory and at a different pace, he disguises them brilliantly. The result is that he mesmerises, or bamboozles, batsmen.”
Jamaica Gleaner”[Ramnaresh] Sarwan had problems picking him, and from the time we saw this, most of the batsmen retreated to the dressing room and had a close look at his hand on the TV monitor.”
“I could tell you about his variations if I knew what they were.”
Sri Lanka coach Trevor Bayliss is mystified about his charge“Mendis is unusual, freaky and has developed a ball which could be described as a ‘flicker’, which he releases with a snap of his fingers, which is very unusual compared to other orthodox spin bowlers.”
“I have just seen the future of spin bowling – and his name is Ajantha Mendis.”
“The 23-year-old, we were told, plays his cricket for the Sri Lankan army. I suggest he’s going to make a right officers’ mess of hundreds of international batsmen’s stumps in years to come.”
“Mendis is something special and for a while I’ve been telling some of the guys to look out for him.”

Quick learner

Ishant Sharma has soaked up all the lessons that have come his way to become one of the top fast bowlers in the game

Nagraj Gollapudi29-Oct-2008

Good hair day: Ishant celebrates a wicket in the Mohali Test © AFP
Ranjit Nagar is a quintessential Delhi neighbourhood, with leafy lanes and narrow alleyways. Buildings stand within kissing distance of each other, tangled up in snarls of cable TV wire. It is a mainly middle-class locality.It’s a day after the bomb blasts in the city in early September. Despite the clamour and distress of the previous evening, life continues as usual on the streets as I look for Ishant Sharma’s house.The house, when I find it, is a three-storey structure with cream-coloured walls. Ishant and his immediate family live here, with four of his uncles and their families. Outside it, a few men are playing cards, sitting on a wooden cot.Earlier in the day Ishant had asked me to come over, after counting out the number of hours he wanted to sleep. Now he walks in wearing a t-shirt and shorts, greets me with a smile and a yawn, and slumps onto the sofa. “Sleep is the only thing I love too much. I sleep 10-12 hours,” he declares.He has just recovered from an injury during the Sri Lanka tour and is to play in the Nissar Trophy the next day. I had caught him singing a Punjabi tune as he walked into the dressing room after a nets session in the morning, and I prod him to sing a few lines now. He laughs and obliges, singing the first few lines of “Seeti Marke” by his current favourite Punjabi singer, Miss Pooja. (Stop calling me out by whistling at me / stop hassling me every day). His smile grows wide.***On current form Ishant is a frontrunner for the title of the best fast bowler in the world. He staked his claim when he had Ricky Ponting hopping at the WACA earlier this year. There have been others, but that bowling spell remains the one that has come to define Ishant. In the Test before Perth, at the SCG, he went wicketless, but showed he could toil, frail-looking physique or not.”The Perth pitch was good and the ball was moving nicely,” he says. “For me it has always been that if I bowl a length ball it goes in, and if I pitch it up it is a straight ball. The ball that got Ponting out was at the fifth or sixth stump [Ponting edged to Rahul Dravid at first slip].”The previous balls were all length balls but the one that got him was pitched up,” Ishant explains. “Up” for him means a fraction short of length. He bowled only two such deliveries to Ponting in that nine-over spell, and got him with the second. “I grasped that he was not confident and was struggling against the inswinging ball. I worked him out myself.”A month before Perth, Sunil Gavaskar had noted in a newspaper column that playing Ishant so early, against Pakistan in Bangalore, was an error. A couple of days later Ishant had picked up his maiden five-wicket haul, in only his second Test. The previous evening Venkatesh Prasad, India’s bowling coach, had showed Ishant a few clips of his bowling. “We worked on a couple of things which had to do with his gather,” Prasad remembers. “Next day it was completely different. He is a very keen and willing student of the game.”Action replayv Pakistan, Bangalore, 2007
first Test five-wicket haul
“I had just finished the Ranji season. The previous night Anil [Kumble] had told me I was playing. That was the first time after the Bangladesh series and I was under pressure. The wicket had uneven bounce but I bowled in the right areas without any variations. I didn’t bowl well with the first new ball, but with the second I took those wickets.” v Australia, Adelaide, 2008
9-2-22-0 before lunch; gets rid of Hayden immediately after
“The ball was reversing quite well. They were going at four per over so our strategy was to keep it tight. But at the same time we were looking to be aggressive in our body language and the rest of it. I was enjoying myself.Viru [Sehwag] was standing in the covers, and he likes to chat a lot. This was his commentary: “Here’s Ishant Sharma from Patel Nagar, who is bowling 130kph. Oye, why are you bowling 130? Your mother is watching the match and she is thinking, ‘He’s not doing anything. He’s not doing anything special to bowl the Australians out.’ Meanwhile Bhajji [Harbhajan] joins in from mid-on. Anil is standing there, too, but he’s serious. That kind of chit-chat is always encouraging.Later Viru came to mid off and asked me, “Why are you bowling outswingers only? You can’t bowl inswingers?” Anil asked me to bowl one inswinger. I told him I can’t bowl inswingers. Viru said: ” Anil , he can’t bowl inswingers as he doesn’t know.” The next ball was an outswinger. Viru mocked me a little more. I decided that I had to bowl an inswinger. I did, and I got Hayden. I looked at Viru . He was smiling.” v Australia, CB Series, Melbourne
bounces back with three quick wickets after going for 18 runs in his second over
“The way I came back was good. Despite being in a good rhythm I was trying too much. After I went for 18 runs Sachn told me: “You are thinking too much about your bowling. You are the kind of person who enjoys bowling.” I understood it wasn’t just me under pressure but the entire team. So I decided to keep it simple.After the third over Venky sir told me when I was standing at fine leg, “You are bowling well. All the runs went through or over the slips. Remain confident.” That was a good thing: that your bowling coach has confidence in you. Ishant’s rise may seem sudden and dramatic, but it hasn’t been for the man himself. “It didn’t surprise me that I’m at this level, because my progress was steady. But I never thought I would play for India so early.”As a teenager just out of Class 10, he went to the Rohtak Road Gymkhana at the Ramjas Sports Complex to ask Shravan Kumar, the coach there, for help getting into junior college at the Ganga International School. Kumar coaches at the school, and has been sports supervisor at Delhi Trasco Ltd (formerly DESU) for three decades.Kumar noticed the “Railway Under-17″ on Ishant’s shirt and asked if he played cricket. Ishant’s height impressed Kumar and when Ishant said he was a bowler, Kumar threw him an old ball.”No one would have said then that he would become a good bowler,” Kumar, who has worked with the likes of Manoj Prabhakar, says. But he saw that the youngster had a very good action, despite the run-up, which was completely awry. Ishant got into the school and Kumar’s role in his early career proved significant.His first job was to work on Ishant’s run-up, to make him aware of how to run, and then catch a rhythm. “He has always been a quick learner,” Kumar says. “That and his ability to do things when told have been his strong points.”Kumar is not a qualified coach and his methods are more practical than scientific. To fire up his students he uses Dilli-speak, playfully sledging them. “” he would yell at Ishant when he slipped up.For 18-odd months Ishant would wake at five in the morning to take the bus to the school, in Bahadurgarh, Haryana. The first four days of the week he would train at the school ground after classes, returning at 8pm. After a day off on Friday he would play for Rohtak Road on the weekend.Eventually his first real cricket game came along: a competitive Under-17 school game, at the Najafgarh sports complex. “I took only two wickets but I started to improve as I played regularly,” Ishant says. As the opportunities came his way he became steadily more confident about his cricket; he had had ambitions of becoming a chartered accountant till then.The rise was quick. He shone against Haryana in an Under-17 game in 2004, taking eight in the first innings to force a follow-on, and then another five. He played for Delhi Under-19s the next year, and later that season in the Ranji one-dayers. The next season he made it to the Delhi senior squad.***When Ishant delivered the back-of-the-hand slower deliveries that got him two quick wickets, including Ponting’s, in Bangalore recently, eyebrows were raised among those who know him well.Pace has been something of an obsession with Ishant. During the CB Series he was desperate to break Ashish Nehra’s mark (149.7kph, set during the 2003 World Cup) to become India’s fastest bowler. He finally did in a league game against Australia, in Melbourne, when he hit 152.6, just a day after he spoke to a good friend back home about setting the record.The slower balls in Bangalore were a little surprising given all that. Ian Chappell spoke of how they were evidence of a fast-maturing mind.”He is somebody who understands situations very well,” Prasad says. “I have not seen many bowlers with his kind of maturity.” All through the Australia tour Prasad watched as Ishant bowled “with the same zeal as he would in his first spell”.It’s not just in his bowling that Ishant is evolving. He has been growing as a sportsman too. In the Sydney Test, after going wicketless for more than 30 overs under a sweltering sun, he got Andrew Symonds. But the Australian stood his ground after Steve Bucknor refused to raise his finger for a deafening edge. Ishant took it in his stride and moved on, and when Symonds got to his century ran up to congratulate him. “Because of the respect. He played very well after that [the edge],” Ishant says.Not that that means he is a throwback to the age of placid Indian fast bowlers. Ishant is not one to start a sledging match, but he isn’t one to shy away from retaliating. “If someone is saying something, you can’t just put your head down and walk back.” He doesn’t mind harmless banter either. In the Sydney Test, as Sachin Tendulkar marshalled the tail in the first innings, Ishant was the last man in. Brett Lee bowled one full and Ishant went for the drive and missed. “Lee said, ‘You can’t hit like that, cowboy.’ I didn’t know then what cowboy was, so I asked paaji” Tendulkar asked him to focus on his batting. And so he did: in the 31-run partnership between the two, Ishant managed 23 runs, more than in all his previous first-class matches put together.***The evening before I met Ishant, Kumar had invited some schoolkids to meet the bowler at the Ramjas ground. Ishant showed up, though an hour late, posed obligingly for photos and signed autographs. Given a choice he’d rather be left alone, but he’s quickly coming to grips with the demands of fame.

Strike one: Ishant gets Ponting at Perth, the first of five times he has dismissed the Australian captain © Getty Images
“I’m like a role model for youngsters. I accept that responsibility now,” he says with an equanimity that belies his age. He has learned to draw the line when necessary, though. When a prominent national newspaper asked him to be a guest editor for a day, he turned the offer down. “Sometimes it gets irritating,” he says.About a month after the Perth Test, Ishant became the highest-paid bowler in the IPL, despite being the least experienced, when Shah Rukh Khan’s Kolkata Knight Riders bought him for $970,000. Ishant says he was shocked at the figure at first, but goes on to add that it isn’t about the money. “It is about satisfaction; someone is paying you because you have worked hard to earn it.”While he may have adjusted well to his rise, his family is still trying to come to terms with some of the changes that have come with it. “His life has changed. Ours remains the same,” Vijay Sharma, Ishant’s father, says. “When he stays out late, we are worried.””My mom is a little worried about my nightlife,” Ishant says. “She wants me to be back by 10pm, but I keep telling her that’s not possible now. So we have arguments. Even my sister is angry at me.”He isn’t exactly the partying type, though: Ishant likes the company of his close friends, with whom he likes to drive around in his Honda Civic (he recently got a sports model from the same company). Earlier, before people began to approach him in public, they would hang out in places like Khan Market, digging into Khan Chacha’s succulent kebabs.There haven’t been many changes at home. There is still only one TV in the house. Everyone has their dinner, Ishant says with a laugh, “anywhere”. The living room, which is also Ishant’s bedroom, has a sofa and a couple of cushioned chairs upholstered in maroon. At one end are a couple of showcases holding Ishant’s trophies in no particular order. One wall is covered with newspaper and magazine pictures of his various glorious moments. Do they talk cricket in the house? “Never,” Ishant replies instantly.Ishant wears a number of religious threads around his neck and hands, but says he is not overly religious. “I bow if I pass a temple. When I’m on tour I carry posters of Hanuman and Lord Ganesh. I get a sense of peace when I pray.”He comes across as a simple young athlete, with a mind of his own and a free will, who is trying to be his own man.***We have been talking for about two hours. Through the kitchen window across from the entrance to the living room I see the light fade. Outside I hear the wails of playing kids. There’s a thin smog in the air. Ishant stands up to stretch himself. As I get ready to leave, I ask him about his favourite cricketing souvenir. At first he is unable to think of anything but then remembers the ball signed by Anil Kumble after his debut Test against Bangladesh. He plucks it out of the cabinet, wipes it and holds it up so I can see the writing: “Well done. Many more.”

Tall, sharp and uncomplicated

He doesn’t fail dope tests, he doesn’t fight team-mates or officials, he just runs up, bowls – damn well – and goes away

Osman Samiuddin13-Jun-2009After Shoaib Akhtar and before Mohammad Asif, there was Umar Gul. Not as quick as one, not as gifted as the other, not as flash a Feroze as either, but a special one nonetheless. He’s all grown up now from the gawky, thin teenager with an action so clunky the Tin Man from once called him to ask for it back. He has filled out, become stronger, smoothed his action, grown a mullet, cropped it and experimented with blond streaks. He now wears the confident, spiky crop beloved of 25-year-old men.But not so much have things changed either; when he cocks up, the same grin appears. When he let the ball slip through his legs for a boundary against England the other day, he looked much like he did that March day in Lahore when he picked up a stump and ran off at the end of India’s second innings, thinking the Test was over, when Pakistan had actually to chase 40 runs.With ball in hand he has grown years. He wasn’t swift then, but that day, against the finest modern-day batting line-up, he worked the channels, finding nip, bounce and cut where others found only frustration. He hits the bat harder now, and if he hasn’t always found the same movement – the Mohali 2006 Champions Trophy game against South Africa was one occasion – he has other tricks. His natural length, just back of a length, demands caution from batsmen to survive and risk to thrive. Extra bounce makes it no easier.Few men’s yorkers have such unquenchable lust for toes or stumps. And only Albie Morkel could claim to have taken on an oft-deceptive bouncer and come out better; that too in a recent warm-up game. But the context of that India Test was significant: faster, brasher men – Shoaib and Mohammad Sami – sprayed it around that day, while Gul slipped in quietly, unheralded, took wickets and went back. Yes, much has changed, but not this.If he isn’t the best Twenty20 fast bowler in the world currently, it is only because the glare that falls upon Shoaib and Asif hasn’t located him. Thank god for it. “The yorker and changes in pace are the two big weapons in this cricket,” he says. “It is a batsman’s game, but there is so much of it now that there is an opportunity to really hone these two skills.”Honed they have been during long hours in the nets, and by a wanderlust rare for the modern Pakistani cricketer. After ending the first World Twenty20 as the highest wicket-taker, a limited-overs anomaly in that he was a lethal first-change, Gul worked it at the IPL for the Kolkata Knight Riders, and in Australia’s Twenty20 competition for Western Australia. He only played six games in the IPL, and though others from the franchise got more newsprint, nobody took more than his 12 wickets. In Australia he was the second-highest wicket-taker, alongside Dirk Nannes.”Yes, I did well,” is the uncomplicated observation, before noting how much watching old videos of Wasim and Waqar have helped his yorker. More has hopefully been picked up from the videos than just the ability to break a toe; manful things about leading attacks and all that. For with Gul lies the same job the one before him and the other after have failed abysmally at. He hasn’t shirked so far and the outlook, from this year, is bright.

He is a plain and straightforward cricketer, is Umar Gul. Complexity is not contemplated around him, and though all humanity is inevitably complex, with Gul it is of no interest to anyone else

Understandably it was forgotten among the bullets of Lahore, but Gul’s efforts in those two Tests were mammoth. Few nine-wicket hauls could have extracted such sweat and toil. It wasn’t enough that he was combating surfaces with less life than Michael Jackson’s pop career; he was lumbered with two raw newbies, each playing his first Test. Yet Gul caused a flutter in Karachi and ended with his best Test haul the day before the cricket world changed, Sri Lanka coasting to 600-plus each time. That performance was sandwiched between seven ODIs this year against Sri Lanka and Australia, in which he took 16 wickets. And before arriving in England, he poleaxed Australia in a Twenty20 international with the second-best figures ever in the format. Perhaps he needs to fail a dope test or three, or get arrested somewhere, to attract some attention?”Playing international cricket for five-six years, I think you learn to adapt across formats. There is so much happening, you have to,” he says. “I still enjoy Tests more than any other because you can really set yourself in for a spell. And if you don’t do well, you can always come back in another spell, or the second innings. It’s a proper test.”I’m very happy with the responsibility, very comfortable with it. A lot is expected from us as players, but the coach, the captain and the team are there for support and they are happy with me. It’s not like I mind leading Pakistan’s attack or that it is a burden. You do it and you respect it.”How often he gets that opportunity is about the only dark spot on his horizon. Gul will be of a sizeable generation of players – including Salman Butt, Danish Kaneria, Sohail Tanvir – on whom isolation might take a toll. It is early yet, but Pakistan’s lack of cricket over the last two years has done little for growth and development. No country has played as little international cricket as Pakistan has since the start of 2007. And where the rest of the world gorged themselves on cricket, glam and moolah at the IPL in South Africa, Gul and his countrymen lurked off cricket’s red carpet, wronged and patient.”Obviously it will help those who were there, but we also had a decent warm-up with the camp and the RBS tournament,” he says. “But yes, it [lack of international cricket] is frustrating. When you are in form, at your peak, you want to play as much as you can and if you don’t it affects your development as a player.”Few men’s yorkers have such unquenchable lust for toes or stumps•AFPHe is a plain and straightforward cricketer, is Umar Gul. Complexity is not contemplated around him, and though all humanity is inevitably complex, with Gul it is of no interest to anyone else. With Asif and Shoaib, you cannot but avoid it, heaped upon you by their very actions; excessively pampered, delusional, village bumpkin made it too big, all that stuff. Even Waqar, Wasim and Imran had much greyness about them. Gul? He bowls. He bowls long, hard and uncomplainingly. Then he goes away.Though he is the head of the attack, he is naturally inclined to be an unquestioning follower; therein may be required some adjustment, but it is nothing terminal. And this shouldn’t take from him. Rather the opposite; it is what makes him. He’s already been through and come back from serious stress fractures of the back. If he had come back diminished or the same, nobody would have been surprised. But remarkably, he’s come back better, and you could probably count the number of fast bowlers to have done that on one hand.But what should brighten all Pakistan is the prospect that, at the end, when all is said, done and dusted, Gul’s tale will be told in on-field feats and numbers and not in off-field scrapes.

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