World Cup 2023 | Kuldeep Yadav’s reinvention has him spinning success stories for Team India

Spin, the art that infuses both meditative and seductive nuances to a whirring sphere, be it red or white, is part of cricket’s infinite charm. If the muscular art of fast bowling taps into our inner cave-man rhythms, not that the speed merchants aren’t into nuance, there is a certain primitive element innate to the sultans of swing.

But the twirly men offering flight, loop, dip and turn, add a certain value to cricket. This is life in slow motion but with its own share of magic. And among the varied segments of spin, wrist-spin, officially known as leg-spin, is a difficult art to master. Leg-spin’s foundation rests on a clean action.

You hardly see a leg-spinner called for chucking and that’s because bowling leg-spin is akin to hurling a discus, wherein the elbow cannot be bent. This is unlike off-spin where the fingers are employed more than the wrist and a tendency to bend the elbow can creep in. Truth is, in real life when we all throw a ball, we bend our elbows to generate pace, that is the natural order of things.

Also read | World Cup 2023 | Maxwell’s Miracle in Mumbai — the greatest ODI innings ever?

Discus throw or leg-spin or bowling at large with its emphasis on not bending the elbow goes against muscle memory and whatever athleticism our genes have imparted to us. Even if the ICC has given a fine-print of degrees of permissible bending not ideally seen by the naked eye, bowling without bending the elbow is mandatory.

Leg-spin takes the bending-the-elbow proposition out of the equation, but equally it is prone to a lack of control. The practitioners of this art tend to go for runs while taking wickets; legends like the late Shane Warne and Anil Kumble could be the exceptions but point is even the finest of leg-spinners have been taken to the cleaners. Vinod Kambli once tucked into Warne, a young Sachin Tendulkar waded into Abdul Qadir.

India’s Kuldeep Yadav in action during the 2023 ICC Men’s Cricket World Cup one-day international (ODI) match between India and Bangladesh.
| Photo Credit:
Deepak K R

If leg-spin is difficult, imagine the Chinaman, the left-arm leg-spinner! The penchant for errors quadruples and it is in this most difficult skillset that India has unearthed a diamond, rough-cut in the beginning, but finally glowing now with a polished hue. Kuldeep Yadav, with his Kanpur roots and under-19 exploits, was fast-tracked into the Indian squad. And while R. Ashwin ruled the roost in Tests, Kuldeep and Yuzvendra Chahal, a traditional leg-spinner, forged a tango that led to a culinary name – Kul-Cha!

Chahal lost his way a wee bit in recent times, but Kuldeep has survived. Importantly, he has prospered. He is India’s primary spinner in the shorter versions with Ravindra Jadeja being his accomplice, a combination that is very much the fizz and the tight lid.

Yuzvendra Chahal and Kuldeep Yadav.

Yuzvendra Chahal and Kuldeep Yadav.
| Photo Credit:
Emmanual Yogini

Having made his India debut back in 2017, Kuldeep now has finally cemented his place. The initial promise and the manner in which he puzzled all batters, gave way to a fallow phase when he failed to hoodwink his rivals. Used to a 45 degree turn while ambling towards the bowling crease, Kuldeep, for all his flight and turn, had turned a touch slow, allowing batters to read him off the air and the pitch. They could be in position for the turn and stagnancy crept in.

Kuldeep Yadav after his knee surgery.

Kuldeep Yadav after his knee surgery.
| Photo Credit:
Instagram/Kuldeep Yadav

A knee injury that demanded surgery laid him low, but that break retrospectively did wonders to him, both as a player and as a person. While recuperating and plotting his way back, he straightened his run-up a bit more, got his body more involved in the final release and that combined to increase the pace of his delivery. The temptation would be to ask but aren’t spinners supposed to be slow?

Yes, they ought to be slow but not at such a languid rate wherein a batter could read a book, whip up an omelette and then strike a six. A smidgeon of pace is essential to the spin armour, as Kumble made it obvious through his storied career. Kuldeep 2.0 has upped his speed, delivers on the money, leaves no room for batters to second-guess, and that translates into brushing edges, rapping pads and nudging stumps.

The angles that Kuldeep conjures and the accuracy that Jadeja dispenses have meant that India has largely enforced the middle-over strangle on the opposition through this World Cup. Recently, coach Rahul Dravid said that the spin-duo has strangely gone under the radar while encomiums are heaped on the pace trio of Jasprit Bumrah, Mohammed Siraj and Mohammed Shami.

Ever since he put behind the trauma of injury, the stress over being dropped and the self-doubts that crept in during a dull point, Kuldeep has been a different man. A naughty lad still lingers within him, the kind who will tell a press photographer to get some good pictures of his batting stints in the nets. He always has an impish grin, like a child about to dab some ketchup sauce on your spotless cream shirt.

 In this World Cup, Kuldeep has had yields of two for 42, one for 40, two for 35, one for 47, two for 73, two for 24, zero for three and two for seven.

 In this World Cup, Kuldeep has had yields of two for 42, one for 40, two for 35, one for 47, two for 73, two for 24, zero for three and two for seven.
| Photo Credit:
Jothi Ramalingam B

The naughtiness has crept into his bowling too, leaving batters perplexed. He has the wrong one that turns away besides all the classical deliveries. Even if the odd half-tracker may be peddled, and most leg-spinners are guilty of this due to the rigidity of their bowling action, Kuldeep, the Chinaman, has kept it largely tight. In this World Cup, he has had yields of two for 42, one for 40, two for 35, one for 47, two for 73, two for 24, zero for three and two for seven.

The cumulative tally is 12 at an average of 22.58, fine numbers even if the two for 73 against New Zealand may be deemed an aberration. Even in that game at Dharamshala, he came back well in his second spell. Back then, with Hardik Pandya ruled out due to injury, Rohit Sharma had no luxury of a sixth bowler and there was no respite for Kuldeep, who bravely countered the Black Caps. Spinners also need a big heart because there will be days when they will get hit, Kuldeep surely has one.

FILE PHOTO: Harbhajan Singh and Ravichandran Ashwin.

FILE PHOTO: Harbhajan Singh and Ravichandran Ashwin.
| Photo Credit:
Pichumani K

Like the earlier Ashwin-Harbhajan Singh fault-lines, a reality of the predecessor-successor trends in life, Kuldeep too was drawn into this when some years back, previous coach Ravi Shastri named him as India’s best overseas spinner. The 28-year-old has thankfully steered clear of needless angst or words, and instead has sharpened his craft, a mighty difficult one at that.

He and Jadeja, along with the pace troika, ensured that India has remained unbeaten so far in this World Cup. Kuldeep may not be a frog-in-the-blender like South Africa’s former spinner Paul Adams, but he has enough mystique to bamboozle the best in the business.

All bowling boils down to a good rhythm where the limbs and the mind are in tandem and life is imparted to the ball as it leaves the hand. It is akin to the zone that well-set batters refer to. Kuldeep seems to be in that space and India can only thank its sporting gods.

There will be the odd bad day of bruising sixes, but Kuldeep seems mature enough to handle it. And hey what about some runs? “I would love to score 15 to 20 runs for my team,” he said. Surely, he doesn’t want to be a one-trick pony.



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Cricket World Cup 2023 | With statement win over South Africa, Netherlands shows it’s here to stay

It wasn’t just the result. It was stunning enough, yes.

It wasn’t just the margin, either. It was impressive enough, too.

But it was the manner in which the Netherlands beat South Africa at Dharamshala on Tuesday to author one of cricket World Cup’s biggest upsets of all time. The Dutchmen outplayed and out-thought the Proteas.

Look at the way the inspirational Netherlands captain Scott Edwards — after playing probably the innings of his life — marshalled his bowlers throughout the South African innings. Especially the way he used the spinners inside the first PowerPlay to good effect, making them bowl seven of the first eight overs. Or the way he moved the fielder squarer when Rassie van der Dussen came on strike and obliged, reverse-sweeping a catch.

Edwards got a fair bit of assistance, as the sheet of paper Max O’Dowd pulled out at the fall of each wicket suggested. Planning minutely — which may not be that difficult given the data available for the think tank in modern day cricket — is one thing, but the execution part is quite another.

South Africa surely wouldn’t have planned to give away 32 extras in 43 overs (the rain shaved off seven). In contrast, the Dutchmen gave away only eight; they couldn’t have afforded to be more generous, as they didn’t have in their bowling line-up the pedigree and experience of Kagiso Rabada, Lungi Ngidi or Keshav Maharaj. What they had in plenty was discipline and an urge to prove that they belonged.

When they batted, they showed they had the resilience to overcome the top- and middle-order collapses: they had been reduced to 112 for six with only 16 overs remaining. Led by the captain’s unbeaten 69-ball 78, they knocked off 104 in the last nine overs. Then their bowlers destroyed the formidable South African batting — perhaps as strong as any in the competition – within the first 12 overs, at the end of which the score read 46 for four.

Seven overs later, when Heinrich Klaasen fell, South African hopes must have begun to fade. This wasn’t the first major victory for the Flying Dutchmen in an ODI this year. It was, in fact, the third within the last four months.

It was because of those previous wins that they could board the plane to India. In two memorable games at the World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe, they defeated the West Indies and Scotland.

Logan van Beek was the architect of the win against the former World champion. The West Indies scored 374 for six and the Netherlands responded with 374 for nine, with van Beek providing late fireworks (28 off 14) and getting out on the last ball.

But his request for redemption was granted by coach Ryan Cook. In the Super Over, van Beek hammered his good friend Jason Holder for 30, hitting every ball for a boundary, and then took both the West Indies wickets with his seam bowling.

That victory, the articulate van Beek told this correspondent on a rainy afternoon in Thiruvananthapuram early this month, meant a lot to the team. “It gave us the belief that we could go against the best in the world and we could win those key moments,” he said. “To take the match to the Super Over, we had to chase a big total. You have got to have that full belief, that full confidence to go out there and do it. I think that’s the environment that we have created right now… The guys that come in can feel that energy.”

van Beek was born in New Zealand, for which he played in the Under-19 World Cup. In fact, the last time he toured India, a year ago, he was playing for New Zealand-A in a Test and ODI series.

Like him there are others in the team who were born or grew up in other countries. Roelof van der Merwe, who struck a 19-ball 29 down the order and then removed Temba Bavuma and van der Dussen with his left-arm spin, had played for South Africa till 2010.

Edwards was born in Tonga and grew up in Australia, while Teja Nidamanuru, who scored a superb 111 off just 76 balls in that great chase against the West Indies in the Qualifier, and Vikramjit Singh were born in India. O’Dowd’s roots are in New Zealand. Vikramjit, though, learnt his cricket in the Netherlands, as did Aryan Dutt, another player of Indian origin.

“The diversity of the team is something that we celebrate every day,” Cook, the coach from a prominent cricket family of South Africa, told The Hindu at Thiruvananthapuram after a training session. “It is something that we really pride ourselves on, bringing that diverse group of people together.”

The team also boasts talented cricketers of Dutch origin such as Bas de Leede, the man who played a key role in the crucial Super Six game against Scotland in the Qualifier. It was, in fact, one of the finest all-round performances ever in ODI cricket.

de Leede, whose father Tim played in three World Cups, took five for 52 with his seam bowling and then smashed 123 off 92 balls to lead his team’s successful chase, which had to be completed inside 44 overs to overtake Scotland on net run-rate and thus qualify for the World Cup. He became only the fourth male cricketer in history to score a hundred and take five wickets in an ODI.

His heroics thus helped the Dutch return to the World Cup for the first time since 2011. The coach has played a significant role in it.

“It has been amazing to work with the guys,” Cook said. “They have been just fantastic in terms of their work rate. Their work ethic is incredible. They want to learn. They want to grow. They want to improve.”

They are improving, no doubt. The performance at Dharamshala is ample proof. They had shocked South Africa in the T20 World Cup at Adelaide last November.

In the 2014 edition of the T20 World Cup in Bangladesh, they had advanced to the Super 10, in which they scored a famous win against England. They dismissed England for 88 after making 133 for five.

They have shown this year that they have the game to surprise their much stronger rivals in the ODI format. After playing in the ODI World Cups in 1996, 2003, 2007 and 2011, the side arrived in India looking to ruffle a few feathers, with the captain eyeing nothing less than a semifinal finish.

THE GIST

Before this game, Netherlands had never beaten a Test-playing nation in ODI World Cups. It had also never beaten South Africa ever in ODIs

This is not the first time the Dutch proved to be the thorn in the side for the Proteas in a World Cup. In the T20I 2022 edition, Colin Ackermann starred with bat and ball to hand the Netherlands a famous 13-run win

More recently, in two memorable games during the World Cup Qualifier in Zimbabwe, Netherlands defeated the West Indies and Scotland to get on the flight to India

That may sound too ambitious, but then, you have to aim for the moon, if you want to hit a star. Shows like the one against South Africa could help cricket gain attention back home in the Netherlands, where the game has to compete with more popular sports like football and hockey.

“Hopefully the World Cup will provide the aspiration to people to make a career out of cricket,” Cook said. “So that’s what we are hoping for. I think that will take some time. But this is really a stepping stone in that direction.”

It is.



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