Coventry Telegraph

We walked off punching the air... it felt like we’d won the World Cup!

One of the all-time great Warwickshi­re careers came to an end last month when Jeetan Patel walked off the Edgbaston field for the final time. Before he left, he sat down with to reflect on his time with the Bears. In this second of three parts, Jeets pic

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ASK Jeetan Patel to select the most memorable match of his magnificen­t Warwickshi­re career and the right-arm spinner goes left field. He cites not a cup final, or a game which clinched a trophy or contained or a big personal wicket haul… but a county championsh­ip draw!

Bears legend Patel loved winning and he loved taking wickets, 1,420 of them across all formats,ts, starting with Ian Ward (New Zealand Academy v England A at Lincoln on November 11, 1999) and ending with Jack Haynes (Bears v Rapids in the Vitality Blast on September 18, 2020).

But among all the things he loved about playing the great game of cricket, most of all, it was the team dynamic. The collective. The bond of being all in this together. Win, lose or draw.

It’s always great to win, off course, but sometimes in cricket, when the cards aree stacked against you, a draw cann mean just as much. In July lastt year, when Warwickshi­re visited Hampshire in the county championsh­ip, the cards were well and truly stacked against them.

It was the Bears’ fourth successive away game of a gruelling road trip. The squad and the bowlingg resources, in particular, were ravaged by injuries.

Hampshire piled up 539, bowled the Bears out for 307, declined to enforce the follow-on and finally set a victory target of 404. Half-an-hour into the final day, the chase didn’t look good att 52 for five against an attack including Fidel Edwards, Kyle Abbott and Keith Barker.

Five hours later, it was match drawn. The Bears closed on 347 for eight after a glorious rearguard action by Sam Hain (104, 276 minutes), Tim Ambrose (14, 66), Ben Mike (72, 147), Henry Brookes (36 not out, 125) and Patel (70 not out, 114).

They had fought like tigers for the Bears… and Patel was as proud

that day as he was of any victory.

“That was very special. We were under the cosh with so many injuries and had hardly any bowlers and had been on the road for weeks so, we really had to dig deep,’’ he said.

“I was so proud of the guys. I remember walking off the ground and waving to the supporters because they had backed us all the way and clapped every dot ball.

“The elation when Brookesy and

I walked off and were punching the air… it felt as if we’d won the World Cup. Moments like that are really cool because it is the group feeling from the guys that gets me.

“For me, it’s not the five-fors and hundreds that mean the most. It’s those moments when you just feel part of something very special. They are what I will always carry with me from my time with the Bears.”

If Jjeets harvestedh­d many special memories from his time with Warwickshi­re, he provided even more for those around him.

Every Bears player and fan has their t own fond recollecti­ons of this special s cricketer: The bowling skills; the unquenchab­le spirit; the late-order hitting; the encouragem­ent a in the field; the fire and passion. The spin bowler with a fast bowler’s aggression. Rarely in sport do you find a perfect pe fit. Patel and Warwickshi­re sh were one, as quickly became clear after he returned to Edgbaston in 2011, injury having truncated his first spell in 2009. “I played a couple of championsh­ip games in 2011 and I believe, b to this day, my main claim c to fame is keeping Shivnarine S Chanderpau­l out of the th side!” he said.

“Then as soon as I arrived in 20 2012, I could see a real desire among am the group to go one better than th 2011, when they finished second se in the championsh­ip, and win wi it.

“It was an amazing year and it all gelled for us on the pitch. So many people contribute­d at the right times. Just in the bowling group alone we had Keith Barker, Chris Wright, Boyd Rankin, Rikki Clarke.

“It was a privilege to be part of a group that really knew where they wanted to go and back then, as is still the case now, there were so many good blokes around the club, that made my job easy.

“I just wanted to be part of the team. I hadn’t arrived at the club

with a great record, I wasn’t a ‘big gun’ by any means, but was here to do my best and have some fun. And that’s what happened. Everyone made me so welcome and 2011 onwards was fun.

“2014 was very special. We won the T20 and to be out there at Edgbaston inside a full stadium on Finals Day and take the final down to the last ball and then win on your home ground… well, there are no words. It was a really exhausting, really special day.

“Successes like that mean a lot, but when you talk of ‘fondest memories’, I think that means the ones you think of the most – and they are not always the wins. I loved winning games and trophies but my fondest memories of Warwickshi­re are of the people that work in the place.

“I played with Jim Troughton and Ian Westwood, who went on to become my coaches. Pop Welch, who coached me when I was 16. Dougie Brown coached me. Ashley Giles – Ashes hero and, for me, legend of my career.

“Keith Cook… you just don’t meet people like that – people who will just drop everything to help you. Probably the most special relationsh­ip I had in cricket was with Tim Ambrose.

“The list goes on. That is my most special memory of Edgbaston and the Bears… the amazing people.”

In Part Three, Jeets considers the future and sends a heartfelt message to all the Bears’ members and supporters.

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 ??  ?? Top, Varun Chopra lifts the T20 Blast trophy in 2014 and, above, Jim Troughton leads the celebratio­ns with the County Championsh­ip trophy in 2012
Top, Varun Chopra lifts the T20 Blast trophy in 2014 and, above, Jim Troughton leads the celebratio­ns with the County Championsh­ip trophy in 2012
 ??  ?? Jeetan Patel said the T20 Blast victory at Edgbaston in 2014 wasn’t his most memorable match for Warwickshi­re...
Jeetan Patel said the T20 Blast victory at Edgbaston in 2014 wasn’t his most memorable match for Warwickshi­re...

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