Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

All over again

Big buys Yuvraj Singh and Dinesh Karthik under tremendous pressure to click

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well in the Asia Cup and Yuvraj flopped at the World T20.

Royal Challenger­s Bangalore had bagged Yuvraj for R14 crore while Delhi Daredevils paid R12.5 crore for Karthik. Till now, it was just a case of runs, wickets and catches. In the IPL, the rupees will always be divided by runs and wickets to weigh their value.

STARTING POINT

The pressure of expectatio­ns can be suffocatin­g. Finding ways to deal with it will be a challenge. Dinesh Karthik has worked his guts out to get in peak physical shape, and having just returned from the three-week long tournament in Bangladesh, it will be interestin­g to see how Yuvraj goes about slaying his self-doubts.

Before joining the Delhi team camp, Karthik spent two days training hard with former India keeper Sameer Dighe at the Cricket Club of India. The Asia Cup for Karthik was an excellent opportunit­y spurned, having got a break only because MS Dhoni was injured. In the two crucial games India lost, against Pakistan and Sri Lanka, Karthik had two big misses which cost the team dearly. After he missed a stumping chance off Kumar Sangakkara, when on 30, the batsman took his team home with a knock of 103. Against Pakistan, he fell to a pre-meditated sweep at a crucial juncture after getting his eye in with 23 runs.

The intensity seen in his workout was of a player wanting to prove a point. Under scorching sun, he had two gruelling sessions with Dighe with an hour long pool session thrown in between.

UNSTEADY HANDS

He’s among the fittest on the Indian circuit, but for all his athleticis­m is not consistent with his glovework. The concentrat­ion level seems to let him down. It could be about his temperamen­t as he’s quite an excitable character, always bubbling with energy; ‘keeping requires the patience of a hunter who lies in wait all day long, waiting for the right moment to go for his kill.

“The focus of the training was T20 skills, ‘keeping as well as batting. One of the areas we focused on was footwork and head position while gathering the ball. He practiced a lot standing up to pace bowlers, and in batting, playing different strokes to the same good length ball. He is an avid learner,” said Dighe.

The situation is tougher for Yuvraj, as he misfired at the World Cup final. And his painstakin­g 11 off 21 balls will be fresh in memory with just a week to go for the start of the IPL. In his talk-show in Cricinfo, former India batsman Sanjay Manjrekar analysed it. “He’s going through a phase (where) he has self-doubt. When you are in this kind of situation, the batsman wants to (somehow) make amends… When you look at the scoreboard and see that you have done a lot of damage to the team, suddenly the strength in your forearms vanishes and the shots don’t come,” Manjrekar said in his show.

The toughest part of T20 cricket is that there’s no time for a comeback. It will be the same in the IPL. The only advantage will be that Yuvraj will have more matches to prove himself. NEW DELHI: During the IPL auctions earlier this year, the Kolkata Knight Riders went all out to buy Yuvraj Singh. In the end, however, they lost out to Royal Challenger­s Bangalore by a crore.

Yuvraj’s performanc­e in the final of the World T20 may have raised a few eyebrows but the KKR skipper Gautam Gambhir backs his former India mate to the hilt. “Let me put it this way. Had there been an auction today, the Kolkata Knight Riders would have bid for him in the same aggressive manner. Yuvraj has been our greatest matchwinne­r,” said Gambhir on Tuesday.

On the same day Gambhir spoke to the media, a depleted Delhi lost to unfancied Kerala in Mumbai in the national T20 knockouts.

The senior players, led by regular skipper Gambhir, have skipped the tournament due to their IPL franchise camps. “It is something we can’t do much about. Maybe they may have to schedule the super league (the knockouts) a bit differentl­y.”

Both Gambhir and Sehwag were pivotal in helping Delhi cruise through to the knockouts. “After having played Ranji Trophy on tougher wickets, it helped when we got to the flat tracks.”

 ??  ?? Traffic came to a standstill as thousands of cheering fans lined the streets to welcome home the Sri Lankan cricket team. Following their three-hour flight from Dhaka, the team showed off the World Cup trophy as they travelled in an open-top bus along...
Traffic came to a standstill as thousands of cheering fans lined the streets to welcome home the Sri Lankan cricket team. Following their three-hour flight from Dhaka, the team showed off the World Cup trophy as they travelled in an open-top bus along...

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