Sunday Tribune

‘Kesh’, Kyle proving that left-arm spin can be cool

- Lungani Zama

BY THEIR very nature, left-arm spinners are not the most fashionabl­e commodity in the game of cricket.

They certainly don’t garner the same level of excitement as their more exotic cousins, the ‘Chinaman’ bowler.

Indeed, the most sustained bit of spotlight that the humble left-armer received since the days of ‘Deadly’ Derek Underwood came when Kevin Pietersen kept being dismissed by them. ‘KP’ intended to treat them with “you can’t bowl to me” disdain, but they somehow kept getting him out.

The world and its team went in search of these left-arm merchants of evil and they were in vogue for a summer.

Somehow, they have lasted the course, not blasted away by the hurly-burly of T20 cricket, and the proliferat­ion of batsmen with terrible pitchside manners.

And yet we see them everywhere, with varying degrees of success.

The Proteas have one in their Test ranks now, and despite the initial naysayers, Keshav Maharaj has settled very happily into his role.

He patiently hits his mark, dutifully following the instructio­ns of Faf du Plessis.

Far from being just a stopper of runs, Maharaj has added to his armoury and is giving his stock delivery more air, turning it and reaping regular rewards.

Despite his current standing in the national Test side, ‘Kesh’ has retained the humility that got him there in the first place.

He took his maiden five-wicket haul in the ongoing first Test against New Zealand and his reaction was to shed a tear of joy in the dressing-room.

Those who only take notice of cricketers once they start appearing on television may not understand or appreciate the length and ruggedness of the Maharaj journey to the summit he now occupies.

But those who frequent Kingsmead know just how far he has dug to get there.

Linda Zondi and his selectors made a sensible choice of a slow bowler, and their practicali­ty has proven to be very shrewd.

Funnily enough, Maharaj’s ascension to the Test ranks has opened a door at the Dolphins.

That’s the wonderful thing about sport, because the domino effect of opportunit­y goes all the way to the first rung of the potential ladder.

Kyle Nipper, a star in the first-class ranks for KZN Inland over the past few seasons, would have been forgiven for giving up the franchise cricket dream, and maybe finding a ‘normal’ job to do.

But, as we now know, left-armers are not normal and mundane, but rather men of considerab­le substance.

Nipper has just come off the fortnight of his career, with runs in Paarl, wickets in Bloemfonte­in and national exposure on the small screen.

One commentato­r even had the unwitting nerve to call him “young” Nipper, as he and Sibonelo Makhanya closed out a run-chase against the Cobras.

Nipper is 30 later this year, so he’s no spring chicken. He has led the Inland side to trophies and quietly tapped on the Dolphins’ window for the last five years.

And yet, the unglamorou­s road of first-class cricket has not weathered him or diminished his ambition.

Like Maharaj, he remains one of the game’s genuine good guys.

Importantl­y, they both quickly understood that they needed to bring a fuller repertoire to the paid ranks, and they have worked on their batting, and are always sharp in the field.

They understand that it is not always enough to just be a left-arm spinner in modern times.

But happily, they have also found that it is also no longer unfashiona­ble to be just that.

Long live the humble leftie…

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