A tale of two southpaws
Anand Vasu - 27 August 2001
On the face of it they have nothing in common. One is a fast
bowler who, ignored by his home state Mumbai, went on to win
national colours playing for Baroda. The other is an opening
batsman seemingly so cavalier and laid back that even his home
state, Tamil Nadu, found him frustrating. In their own ways,
both Zaheer Khan and Sadagoppan Ramesh underlined their
importance to the team in India's recent series squaring
triumph at Kandy.
The first Test of the three-Test series, played on a grassy
Galle wicket exposed some of the shortcomings of India's pace
attack. A three-pronged pace line-up starring Javagal Srinath,
Zaheer Khan and Venkatesh Prasad, played into the hands of
Sanath Jayasuriya. Feeding the strong southpaw with deliveries
short and wide ensured that a series of lusty square cuts put
India out of the reckoning in a hurry. How could someone who
played cricket day in and day out bowl to Jayasuriya in that
fashion, asked the whole cricket loving public in India. Well,
one knows not what temporary madness seized the Indian bowlers
but at least one can say that is has passed.
The second Test saw Zaheer Khan step up a gear, stick to the
basics and torment opposition batsmen. Sourav Ganguly's lack
of confidence in Railways mediumpacer Harvinder Singh meant
that the workload on Zaheer Khan and Venkatesh Prasad was
almost unfair. For a bowler in Zaheer Khan's mould, who relies
on pace and extra bounce, this is hardly the best mode to
operate in.
In the first innings, the left-arm seamer bowled 22 overs of
the total 78.3, claiming 3/62. In the Islanders' second dig,
Zaheer Khan bagged a career best 4/76 after sending down 23 of
the 66.3 overs bowled. In both innings, Zaheer Khan bowled
more than any of the other bowlers. Coming into the Test,
severely under fire for his approach in the first Test, Zaheer
Khan outshone every other Indian bowler with ease.
Sadagoppan Ramesh, for his part, has been batting for his
place in the Test side almost every time he has walked out to
bat in recent times. His footwork has always been leaden, his
tendency to play at the ball away from his body, a weakness.
However, he did manage to make up for all of that with a
dogged temperament and a good eye, scoring runs at the top of
the order. With increasing media scrutiny and no doubt
pressure from some selectors, Ramesh has gone out of the way
to curb his shotmaking.
In the second Test at Kandy, Ramesh left the ball outside the
off stump with greater regularity than one had ever seen him
do. Top scoring with 47 in the first innings, Ramesh did not
score off 74 of the total 95 balls he faced, and a good many
of those were left alone. In the second essay, Ramesh made
only 31, but consumed 105 balls in the process, of which 90
were not scored off, thereby seeing off the new ball, a key
responsibility for any opener.
As a captain, Ganguly has made it a point to back the players
he has selected. With Zaheer Khan and Sadagoppan Ramesh, this
certainly has paid off. There's a lesson in that, for Ganguly
first, and certainly for the young cricketers who enjoy the
captain's confidence.
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