Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Meriwala, Sakariya and IPL’S enduring story

- Rasesh Mandani

MUMBAI: Back in 2006, when Lukman Meriwala cut and weld metal, shielding his eyes from the sparks off the cutting torch, he would tell friends: “Aapro ne cricket no mel nahi pade (cricket is not meant for us).” After repeated struggles to break into the playing eleven of club sides in Baroda, his aspiration to play higher grade cricket had faded into a distant dream.

Elsewhere in Gujarat when schoolboy Chetan Sakariya was doubling up as salesman in his uncle’s bookstall to fund his cricket, seeing his father compelled to drive a goods tempo to make ends meet, despite one side of the body left numb after a road accident, would leave him dispirited.

On Thursday at the IPL auction, when the gavel went down on the names of Meriwala and Sakariya, they had earned their ticket to the game’s richest league. Both are left-arm fast bowlers–meriwala, 29, was picked up by Delhi Capitals at his base price of R20 lakh while Rajasthan Royals won a bidding war for 22-year-old Sakariya and will pay him R1.2 crore.

Gujarat’s Sarnar village in Bharuch district where Meriwala stays and Vartej, a smalltown in Bhavnagar district, where Sakariya resides are the latest additions to IPL’S geographic­al outreach in uplifting the lives of families from humble background in rural India.

The cheers for T Natarajan are still ringing, reinforcin­g IPL’S power to help script great underdog stories. The left-arm pacer from rural Tamil Nadu found IPL success, became a net bowler for India, ended up making debuts in all formats in Australia, and signed off with the Gabba Test triumph. Meriwala and Sakariya watched the auction drama with their state team-mates ahead of the Vijay Hazare Trophy. At home, the Meriwala family was overjoyed. At the Sakariyas, tears of sorrow mingled with joy as they are still mourning the death by suicide of Chetan’s younger brother.

“My father wasn’t making much money being a small farmer (for a family of five).

Cricket wasn’t working out. With the sheer urge to help the family, I took up fabricatio­n,” Meriwala recalled. “But my parents convinced me to give cricket another try. A distant uncle, Zakir bhai, showed me around Baroda and I began to play again. After the focus was back, I began to do well. I earned a place in the Baroda U19 side, and in 2013 I got in the Baroda one-day team.” work together,” said Unadkat. “From what I see, he does like me a lot. But he speaks very little. So, I go and have a word with him every now and then in net sessions and even during matches. I generally speak with him when his rhythm is not going right or when he is doing well, just to remind him not to overdo things in training.”

While Sakariya gets to bowl in tandem with Unadkat, Meriwala has benefitted from the advice of former India leftarmer Irfan Pathan, who was in the Baroda side in his early days of domestic cricket.

“He has been a consistent performer for Baroda in whiteball cricket since the last 4-5 years. He has finally got what he deserved,” said Pathan. ”He has got decent zip and great control of his yorker, which makes him useful with the new as well as the old ball.”

Meriwala always wanted to be a fast bowler. But he would spray the ball around in his early days. With the help of mentors, he polished his bowling. In 2013-14, he became the all-india highest T20 wickettake­r. In 2017, he made his Ranji Trophy debut. Now, he believes to be in a space where he can bowl exactly where his mind tells him to.

Both Meriwala and Sakariya know they can’t get carried away by the IPL money. They have to make it count. They want to move their families to Baroda and Rajkot respective­ly to live the good city-life.

“I will pick the brains of Ishant Sharma and Umesh Yadav. I will use the nets to impress all Indian batsmen who are there in DC,” Meriwala’s IPL wish-list is ready. “I just hope I get matches.”

 ??  ?? Chetan Sakariya (right)
Chetan Sakariya (right)
 ??  ?? Lukman Meriwala (right)
Lukman Meriwala (right)

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