How Sarfaraz mastered spin: 500 balls/day in nets and 1,600km journey`
With two confident half centuries in his debut Test in Rajkot, Sarfaraz has shown that he is here to stay in the Indian team. The 26-year-old got his Test cap after years of toiling in the domestic circuit
PTI
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The hard work and systematic planning of the past few years, especially during the two COVID-19 lockdowns, paid off against the likes of Tom Hartley, Joe Root and Rehan Ahmed in Rajkot. PHOTO: PTI
New Delhi, 19 Feb
Sarfaraz Khan's dominating performance
against England's spinners in just his debut Test was no fluke. It was the
culmination of over 15 years of hard work that involved playing 500 deliveries
everyday under the watchful eyes of his zealous father Naushad Khan.
With two confident half centuries in his
debut Test in Rajkot, Sarfaraz has shown that he is here to stay in the Indian
team. The 26-year-old got his Test cap after years of toiling in the domestic
circuit and also honing his skills at his father's 'Macho Cricket Club'.
The hard work and systematic planning of the
past few years, especially during the two COVID-19 lockdowns, paid off against
the likes of Tom Hartley, Joe Root and Rehan Ahmed in Rajkot. "It has
taken playing 500 deliveries per day from off, leg and left-arm spinners across
Oval, Cross and Azad Maidans in Mumbai," said a coach who has seen the
Mumbaikar's growth from close quarters. "...during (COVID) lockdown, he
undertook a car journey covering 1600km. From Mumbai to Amroha, Moradabad,
Meerut, Kanpur, Mathura and Dehradun, he travelled and played on proverbial
'akhadas' where the ball turns square with one shooting up and few staying
down," he added.
The Sarfaraz that was manoeuvering the
spinners with ease, honed his skills the tough way. The credit for the final
product lies not just with Naushad though. Coaches of Bhuvneshwar Kumar (Sanjay
Rastogi), Mohammed Shami (Badruddin Sheikh), Kuldeep Yadav (Kapil Deo Pandey),
Gautam Gambhir (Sanjay Bhardwaj) and father of India A captain Abhimanyu
Easwaran (RP Easwaran) have also contributed in their little way to make
Sarfaraz a finished product. They all arranged for Sarfaraz's net sessions
against spinners, especially during the COVID lockdown.
"During lockdown, Naushad called me as
we are both from Azamgarh and we played club cricket in Mumbai when I was
employed with the Indian Navy. So, when he wanted his son to get practice, I
felt it's my duty," Kapil Pandey told PTI. "During lockdown, Sarfaraz
played Kuldeep a lot at our Kanpur Academy. They did lot of net sessions
together. I would arrange T20 matches as that season, Mushtaq Ali T20 was main
tournament. "Having grown up playing on Mumbai's red soil, Sarfaraz has
the perfect game against spin and uses his feet well," he added.
Shami's coach Badruddin also spoke about his
part in helping Sarfaraz attain mastery of spin. "Yes, I arranged for his
training and nets in Moradabad. No doubt both the father and son worked hard. I
arranged for his stay in a hostel and got him to play a number of games." Another
coach who has seen Naushad train his sons -- Sarfaraz and India U-19 star
Musheer -- spoke about the gruelling training regimen that the two players
endured even on non-match days.
"From a young age, he has been playing
hundreds of balls. So, when Mumbai didn't have a match, Naushad prepared an
astro turf wicket at home where Sarfaraz practised against pacers. But the
moment he has to play spin, they go to the Maidans and do open field
training," he said. "Even for red-ball training, Naushad would give
Sarfaraz simulation training. Suppose Mumbai play Tamil Nadu in Chennai, the
bowlers would be asked to create roughs with spikes and then he would be asked
to play on a track that resembles a day four pitch with wide cracks," he
explained.
The combined effort seems to have got the
desired results as was evident from the commanding manner in which Sarfaraz
tackled the visiting spinners in Rajkot.
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