Sunday Star-Times

Sodhi ready to take spin to next level

- MARK GEENTY

Legspin is in. Yasir Shah reminded the cricketing world of that when he twirled and ripped Pakistan to victory over England at Lord’s, then claimed the world’s No 1 test bowling ranking.

Ish Sodhi could have been in England, too, but chose Christchur­ch instead. Yes, Christchur­ch. In mid-winter. Sodhi’s spinning fingers were cold, but itching to bowl as he wheeled down over after over in the grass nets under the marquee at Lincoln.

One of the standout bowlers of the World Twenty20 Sodhi had English county offers but said he knocked them back to work with his mentor Paul Wiseman in Christchur­ch with the red ball. T20 success is dizzying and lucrative but test wickets remain intoxicati­ng.

There are 14 tests for the Black Caps in Zimbabwe, South Africa, India and at home these next eight months; their busiest period in recent memory. And Sodhi, who hasn’t bowled in a high-level match since their T20 semifinal exit to England in Delhi on March 30, has unfinished business in whites, starting with Thursday’s first test in Bulawayo.

‘‘There were a couple of opportunit­ies in England but they didn’t work out. Generally it would have been T20 stuff and in terms of preparatio­n for test cricket I was better suited to training at Lincoln. My preparatio­n has been pretty bang on and I’m hoping to take that into the next month or so,’’ he said.

Sodhi’s just 23, and played the last of his 11 tests in November 2014, leaving him with a record of 27 wickets at 53. He’s much better than that, and like a lot of spinners needed time. He realised not every delivery had to be a wicket-taker, and the looping free hits were lessened.

A year ago Sodhi’s resurgence began in Zimbabwe with a spell of 3-38 in an ODI, but it wasn’t till the last six weeks of the season when this stunning run began. A match-turning ODI spell against Australia in Hamilton, including the prized wicket of Steve Smith, was followed by seven-wicket and five-wicket bags for Northern Districts, 4-24 in the inter-island match then that World T20 in his country of birth: snaring 10 wickets at an average of 12 as New Zealand swept into the last four. Control, guile, a vicious wrong ‘un and tailor-made turning pitches were Sodhi’s trump cards.

‘‘Getting that success in internatio­nal white ball cricket gave me a lot of confidence to use those same skills in the four-day format. Then being able to take that to India on wickets that offered quite a bit for us spinners, I’m pretty proud of the way I handled the pressure over there.

‘‘I definitely wanted to improve on my consistenc­y on and off the park and I wanted to get a lot fitter.‘‘

Now he has a spin partner in crime, too. Mitchell Santner and Sodhi have combined effectivel­y for ND but never in a test. That will likely change in Bulawayo. Santner snared near identical figures at the World T20 with 10 wickets at 11.4, and the pair were lethal in tandem.

‘‘He’s a left-armer and puts quite a few revs on it for a finger spinner. We bowl with a relatively similar mindset which is pretty attacking. With the ball turning away our ideas and plans are pretty similar. We always assess the conditions together and give each other that little bit of feedback. It’s pretty easy to combine as a duo,’’ said Sodhi.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand