The Asian Age

Manjrekar takes a hard look at Manjrekar’s life

- Rahul Banerji

Fd or one whose career as an India cricketer lasted nine years, spanning 37 Test matches and 74 oneday internatio­nals, to say, “Since the day I retired from cricket I have not been tempted, even once, to pick up a cricket bat and play a match,” doesn’t really ring true.

Sanjay Manjrekar, though, was not the everyday India cricketer. Literally born into the game — many swear that his father, Vijay (“Tat” as he was also known), was technicall­y one of India’s finest batsmen, he is widely reckoned to have never really realised his full potential, and possibly these lines provide a clue: “I realise now, 17 years after quitting the game, I played cricket because it served a purpose at the time and not really because I deeply loved the game. No amount of coaxing has got me to play a cricket match after my retirement, whether it is a benefit match or a veteran’s tournament or an overseas tour of retired or tired cricketers.”

This is baring the soul — something most of our imageobses­sed cricketers will find hard to even imagine — on a scale rarely seen or experience­d in Indian cricket.

Imperfect is a long and hard look by Sanjay Manjrekar at his life, as the son of one of the country’s celebrated cricketers to a budding talent himself, to an India batsman of great promise who never quite delivered, and finally to a commentato­r and respected analyst of the game.

It is in this vein of candour that he acknowledg­es the sport has given him an active and fulfilling life, even post- retirement, though he was never really that much into it. And even as he does so, Sanjay defends his years in India colours. “To those who think I underachie­ved as a cricketer, I say this: For a guy who was basically not really that into sport, playing more than 100 internatio­nal matches was not a bad of fitness, the need for levelheade­dness and good, strong guidance in the early years of developmen­t, the dangers of pride and ego, the pitfalls that accompany all glamorous internatio­nal sporting careers, the dangers of well- intentione­d but completely inaccurate advice among other areas. Modern day cricketer is in many aspects far more fortunate that his seniors even 20 or 30 years ago, and not just in terms of making a lot more money. There are strong support systems in place now for many of these aspects of the game that go into making a complete player. It would also be a good idea to get young talent to read about cricket in the past. It may help them realise the value of all that they have now and not take it for granted.

In the end though, this is a book of — and about — cricket. Sanjay Manjrekar may have a successful second career, but it was always about the sport, as he found out himself.

“Cricket can be hard to get out of your system, though,” he writes. “A dear friend of mine, Somi Kohli, who makes Vampire cricket bats, used to make bats for me sometimes. At his factory, whenever he comes across a bat he feels is just like the ones I used to play with, he promptly couriers it to me. And I, retired for so many years now, keep telling him that I don’t play any more. He says he can’t help it when he sees a bat that reminds him of me.”

“Sometimes, when I pick up the bat and take my stance, it all comes back to me. I suddenly realise, ‘ Shit, this completes me’. It’s amazing. When I take the stance, that position in which I spent hundreds of hours, the bat, I tell Madhavi ( his wife), feels like an extension of my body that was missing, like an arm, and now I have found it, I feel complete — a whole person again. “I must have loved the game a little, after all.”

As good a footnote as any.

For young cricketers there is much to learn from The importance of fitness, the need for level- headedness and good, strong guidance in the early years of developmen­t, the dangers of pride and ego, the pitfalls...

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