Hindustan Times (East UP)

Manhas recalls young Umran terrorisin­g Ranji team batters

- Sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com PTI

NEW DELHI: It was business as usual for coach Randhir Singh Manhas during a winter day in 2017 when a 17-year-old boy walked up to him during a net session at the Maulana Azad Stadium in Jammu’s Nawabad Area. “Sir, kya aap mujhe ball daalne dengey? (Could you allow me to bowl),” Manhas remembered the short and stout boy’s request while senior state team batter Jatin Wadhawan was having a knock at the nets.

“What’s your name?” “Umran Malik,” replied the boy, who had dropped in at the net session without bowling spikes.

Manhas obliged but till date, he has failed to figure out whether it was his gut feel or just wanting to be indulgent with a young boy, that made him agree to the request. He had a bowler short at the nets, though.

Whatever it was, Manhas’ role in giving a precocious talent wings to fly is beyond doubt.

The seeds of the express pace deliveries that Umran is hurling at the best of batters under intense pressure on a platform like the IPL, were sown that very day at the MA Stadium.

It was the birth of Umran Malik, the fastest bowler in the history of Indian cricket, who has made heads turn with 15 wickets in just eight games in this edition of the T20 league.

“On that day, he was very quick for a 17-year-old as Jatin, who was a first-class player was hurried by him. “In my mind, I knew that the kid was special and my views were seconded by our senior team pacer Ram Dayal, who had then just reached the ground and saw him bowl. Ram told me that this boy had bright future,” Manhas, the coach of the Jammu District Cricket Council said.

Umran is not a product of the system but despite the system, and his rise can be attributed to that.

He didn’t receive any structured coaching till the age of 17, never played with a leather ball, and all he did was to play in the ‘Mohalla’ tennis ball tourneys, from which any teenager could earn anything between Rs 500 to Rs 3000 per match depending on the reputation.

Hailing from a middle-class family in Jammu’s Gujjar Nagar, his father, who runs his own fruit shop in the local market, initially wanted him to focus on studies, but later, along with his wife, encouraged him to take up profession­al cricket.

Having impressed the coach, Umran was asked to enrol in the academy but Manhas recollecte­d that in the initial days in 2017-18, he was never a regular.

“He would come one day and then remain absent for the next few days. We had to tell him that he needs to be discipline­d about training as he cannot let the opportunit­ies go abegging.

“I told him, ‘listen Umran, the day you play at the national level, you won’t have to look back. So be serious’. I sent him for -19 trials, where he borrowed bowling spikes and bowled. He was picked for Cooch Behar Trophy but got only one match, and that too, a rain-truncated one against Odisha. “But those who watched him told me that the keeper was standing a good 35 yards behind the stumps, something that doesn’t happen a lot at U-19 level,” said the coach, who is a storehouse of anecdotes.

One of his favourite stories is the one where the Assam Ranji team, coached by former keeper Ajay Ratra, had come to Jammu for an away game.

 ?? ?? Umran Malik of SRH celebrates the wicket of Shubman Gill during the IPL match against Gujarat Titans on Wednesday.
Umran Malik of SRH celebrates the wicket of Shubman Gill during the IPL match against Gujarat Titans on Wednesday.

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