...
...
Next Story

Swing in the tail

A common sight when India are fielding is of Pathan swinging the ball, trapping the batsmen plumb in front.

Published on: Jul 31, 2004 06:50 PM IST
PTI | By , Colombo
Prefer HTon Google
Advertisement

The commonest sight when India are fielding in the Asia Cup is that of Irfan Pathan swinging one back into a batsman, trapping him plumb in front.

This inswinger is so lethal that few batsman have had the time to put the bat in line. Moving your feet away is out of the question, and anyway, if the batsman managed to do that, the verdict would be bowled instead of lbw.

Pathan has had the experts eating out his hands. Ian Chappell gushes about his ability to bring the ball back, while his athleticism and attitude have been up for praise almost all through his short career.

"He is a very talented bowler, its God's gift that he has," Sachin Tendulkar says of Pathan. "Not many left-armers swing that consistently and it's something which he should value and I'm sure he knows that. He's only 21 and going to get better."

It seems like not so long ago when Baroda seemed to be the nursery for fast bowlers. There was Zaheer Khan, already an India star, then the two Irfan Pathans, senior and junior, and Rakesh Patel.

While it would be too much to expect all four to make it big, having two out of four bowlers from one state side in the Indian XI on a consistent basis is quite a feat.

The Pathan we talk about is the junior one, a young man from a modest background who is now a pin-up boy of Indian cricket. His exploits in Australia and Pakistan made him a superstar, but that has not in any way affected his form, fitness or fire.

No such problems for Pathan. He has struck in every match, and the only time he was not successful, relatively, was the first-round league game against Sri Lanka in Dambulla, where he went for 49 off ten picking up just one wicket.

But his tally is impressive. He has 12 wickets from five games, with the best figure of three for 28 coming in the very first game against the UAE, when most of his team-mates were struggling to find their feet.

Pathan also seems to have filled the void of a bowling all-rounder very well. Among the specialist batsmen, only Sourav Ganguly bowls seam-up, while Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag and Yuvraj chip in with the slow stuff.

What India required down the order was someone to come in and score some quick and vital runs. In that context, Pathan's 38 against Pakistan, and his 63-run partnership with Sachin Tendulkar, is invaluable. It paved the way for India to snatch the bonus point.

In Pathan, India have found a tremendous talent, someone who can serve the country for long.

But many a youngster has fallen on the way, dazzled by the limelight and blinded by fame and money. If Pathan can see through that, he’d have arrived — as a potential great of the game.

 
Check India news real-time updates, latest news on Hindustan Times and more across India.
Check India news real-time updates, latest news on Hindustan Times and more across India.
SHARE THIS ARTICLE ON