The Sunday Guardian

‘My understand­ing with Ashwin helps the team’

- DEBAYAN MUKHERJEE KOLKATA

Wriddhiman Saha is buoyant over his understand­ing with off-spinner Ravichandr­an Ashwin and hopes it would augur well for the team as it readies to host New Zealand in a three-Test series, with the first match in Kanpur next week.

Saha notched up his maiden ton in the longest format of the game with a patient 104 in the third Test against the West Indies at St. Lucia's picturesqu­e Gross Islet, cobbling up in the process a risk-free 213-run sixth wicket stand with Ashwin (118) that helped India recover from a precarious position to a thumping 237-run win last month.

"Ashwin has been playing for a longer time than me. But yes, in the last three to four series that I have been consistent­ly part of, our understand­ing has improved. I hope that will help the team's cause," Saha told IANS in an interview.

"I tell him which line to bowl at times, which position is better and the length to bowl to a particular batsman. In the batting department, I can talk about that innings where he told me to wait for the loose ball and take my time. We were doing that. My understand­ing with Ashwin while keeping to him has helped better our running between the wickets," said the Bengal boy.

According to Saha, Ashwin is the hardest to keep wickets to among the trio that also included Amit Mishra and Ravindra Jadeja.

"On turning tracks, he gets sharp turn and bounce since he is tall. Jadeja is not always a huge turner of the ball, and Amit is slow with not as much bounce. So, yes, Ashwin is the toughest."

Of the pacers, it is Umesh Yadav who hits Saha's gloves the hardest. "Consistent­ly, Umesh is the fastest. It varies from spell to spell though. At times, due to the bounce he generates, Ishant is quite fast."

Saha's maiden Test hundred came after 22 innings. His two fifties in Sri Lanka came last year, before which the diminutive right-hander failed to convert the starts. In the first two Tests in the West Indies, he had scores of 40 and 47.

Today, when a keeper is judged not just by his performanc­e behind the stumps but also in front, is Saha walking that extra yard on his batting?

"I do concentrat­e on my batting though I haven't had many big scores. I like to contribute to the team's cause and the hundred against West Indies surely boosted my morale. I know batting is important, but first I consider myself as a wicketkeep­er as I am in the team because of that."

Coach Anil Kumble and captain Virat Kohli, he says, made the job easier for him. "They always told me a hundred is just around the corner. The entire team was so happy when I reached the milestone.

"Anil bhai knows how to bond with players. He always tells us how to approach a match. He doesn't try to change much. He believes we all should play our natural game." IANS

 ??  ?? Ravichandr­an Ashwin
Ravichandr­an Ashwin

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