Hindustan Times (Patiala)

Is the Ranji route still good to get green light for India?

Abhimanyu and Arzan’s selection as India standbys was on the basis of Ranji Trophy and not IPL

- Sanjjeev K Samyal sanjjeev.samyal@htlive.com

MUMBAI: During Mumbai’s Jharkhand Ranji Trophy quarter-final in February 2016, coach Chandrakan­t Pandit was at his wit’s end trying to get players to focus on the game. A strict disciplina­rian, he was unhappy his players didn’t show the single-mindedness he demanded despite it being a knockout game.

The reason was what brings Indian cricket to a standstill year after year: IPL auction midway through the game. Pandit had seen the distractio­n even in the lead up to the tie.

“I was so stressed. There was a TV in one of the rooms, and everyone was looking that side... they would take a round to get an update on the auction. What to do, how to control?” says Pandit, talking about the game played at Mysore.

“If there is an auction after four days, how do you get them on track? They won’t talk about in front of you, but they keep discussing among themselves.

“Because they were afraid of me, there was at least some control, but I don’t how the other coaches cope with such a situation. The players are not really bothered about the job at on hand,” says the former Mumbai and India keeper-batsman. The most successful domestic coach in recent years gave the example to highlight the sway IPL holds over Ranji Trophy, the bread and butter of every domestic cricket till the T20 league was launched in 2008.

Not about big bucks

It’s not only about the big bucks IPL brings. Given the attention the league draws, it has become the better platform even for national selection.

In such an existence, it gives the exasperate­d coach some satisfacti­on that first-class cricket has led to the selection of two newcomers, though only among the four standby members of the India squad to tour England, for the World Test Championsh­ip final against New Zealand followed by a fiveTest bilateral series.

Opener Abhimanyu Easwaran, 25, the Bengal Ranji Trophy opener and skipper, has built his name over many seasons while left-arm pacer Arzan Nagwaswall­a, 23, just three first-class seasons old, will have a specific task. Easwaran was also a standby during the home Test series against England before IPL—sending a message that domestic showing, especially in red-ball games, does matter. Some coaches even called up to congratula­te the national selectors.

The Dehradun-born Easwaran’s father was so passionate about the game, he went and built a proper ground near Uttarakhad’s capital for his son then turned it into an academy. With his home state getting

Ranji status much later, Easwaran shifted, making his Ranji debut for Bengal in 2013. His first-class numbers are solid (64 matches, 4,401 runs, highest 233, 43.57 avg, 13 100s). In the 2018-19 Ranji season, he amassed 861 runs at an average of 95.66, but the last season before the Covid disruption saw just 258 runs come at 17.20. The selectors seem confident it is a blip.

Arzan, the Surat-born leftarm pacer, has risen through Gujarat’s age-group cricket. He made his Ranji debut in 2018-19, taking 62 first-class wickets at an average of 25.33. He can swing the ball and come on first change, but is the go-to man for bouncers in the Gujarat team. His improving limited-overs performanc­es this season saw Mumbai Indians call him up as a net bowler for IPL 2021. But his short-pitched bowling has brought him into the India mix, to help batsmen prepare for NZ pacer Neil Wagner’s bouncer tactics ahead of the World Test Championsh­ip final at Southampto­n.

All-format players

“Only a couple of batsmen like Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma are all-format players. It is not easy for other players to change gears for all the three formats. Some batsmen’s temperamen­t is ideal for shorter formats. They are strokemake­rs who love to play shots. For each format you have specialist­s now,” points out former India pacer Karsan Ghavri, who coached Saurashtra to the last Ranji title, in 2019-20.

IPL is a massive platform, aired on multiple channels by the broadcaste­r with the game’s biggest experts as commentato­rs. When someone like Brian Lara talks about a player, everyone sits up and takes notice. From R Ashwin to T Natarajan and Washington Sundar last season, players have used it as the launch pad for internatio­nal cricket. Even David Warner used IPL as the springboar­d to internatio­nal stardom. Abhimanyu though is yet to play IPL. He went unsold in the last auction.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Abhimanyu Easwaran has played 64 first-class matches in which he has scored 13 centuries with a best of 233.
GETTY IMAGES Abhimanyu Easwaran has played 64 first-class matches in which he has scored 13 centuries with a best of 233.

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