Sportstar

A thorough test of skill, temperamen­t and conduct

Egos were humbled and lessons learnt. The Duleep Trophy, involving some of the top players from different States, reclaimed a slice of its pride and prestige. West Zone emerged triumphant, beating South Zone by 294 runs.

- DHRUVA PRASAD

Duleep Trophy, the orphan-child of Indian domestic cricket, returned after a three-year exile and a fourseason long dalliance with a format that saw contrived identities of India ‘Red’, ‘Blue’ and ‘Green’ foisted on players competing in traditiona­l whites.

The tournament’s homecoming in the inter-zonal format after a hiatus of eight years, however, was hardly met with a red carpet. There was no live telecast for the quarterfinals and semifinals, and spectators weren’t allowed, at least officially.

Once considered a national selection trial for the Test team, the Duleep Trophy was deprived of a host of budding stars who were busy playing for India ‘A’ against New Zealand ‘A’.

Sarfaraz Khan, the top run-getter of the preceding season of the Ranji Trophy, was made available only for the final, which Prithvi Shaw missed after his Player-ofthe-match performanc­e in the semifinal. The services of Rajat Patidar, Ruturaj Gaikwad and Shardul Thakur, among others, were deemed of better use in the redball and white-ball legs of the ‘A’ series.

West Zone clinched a recording-extending 19th title amid muted celebratio­ns at the quaint SNR College Cricket Ground in Coimbatore. Spectators were allowed for the summit clash, but with South Zone facing a mountain too steep on the final day, the few plastic chairs kept under the hastily-erected shamianas at one end of the straight boundary were empty.

The exuberance of youth in the West Zone side somewhat made up for the subdued post-match revelry even as 20-yearold Yashasvi Jaiswal, smarting a reprimand from captain Ajinkya Rahane, was being counselled by match referee Narayanank­utty Vengalil on the sidelines.

Exemplary leadership

Rahane, in an unpreceden­ted show of exemplary leadership, ordered Jaiswal off the field for seven overs on the final day for his poor on-field behaviour. The veteran warned Jaiswal sternly after the latter ex

changed words with batter T. Ravi Teja and R. Sai Kishore. The exchange of words prompted the umpires to intervene. When Jaiswal didn’t relent, Rahane gave him the marching orders.

“You have to follow the rules, and respect the game and the opponents and the umpires. That is the way I have always played my cricket and will continue to play,” Rahane said, explaining the decision.

His ward had learnt a lesson in discipline. “Whatever Ajju-bhai says I take that seriously and try to follow it,” Jaiswal said after being adjudged Player-of-the-match in the final. After all, the elegant southpaw had reaped the benefits of the counsel of experience earlier.

Runs galore

Jaiswal (265, 323b, 30x4, 4x6) stamped his class and turned the match on its head on the third day, flattening South Zone’s slender 57-run first-innings advantage and widening the gulf between the sides by scoring at a fast clip.

“I made double-hundreds in two games because of the way Ajju-bhai told me to carry on after I reached hundred and to make it count. He was guiding me like an elder brother,” Jaiswal said.

When Sarfaraz (127 n.o., 178b, 11x4, 2x6) took over on the following day, South Zone was up against the wall. Het Patel (51 n.o., 61b, 7x4, 1x6) toyed with the bowlers and built on his first-innings rescue act of 98 before Rahane declared. Relief for the fielders after the toil of 128 overs gave way to agony for the batters as the heat of the West Zone pace attack turned on them in a chase of 529.

Domestic stalwart Jaydev Unadkat (six for 80 in the match) led the way with accuracy and consistenc­y, his probing angles wide of the crease from around the stumps leaving India players Mayank Agarwal and Manish Pandey in a fix.

Unadkat, the Player of the Series, finished the tournament with 13 wickets in three matches at an average of 14.07.

His efforts didn’t go unnoticed. National selector Sunil Joshi had a long conversati­on with the 30-year-old after his exploits on the fourth day. Chairman of selectors Chetan Sharma was in attendance at the same venue when West Zone had thumped Central Zone by 279 runs in the semifinal.

Humbling defeat

Barring Baba Indrajith’s (118, 125b, 14x4) effortless first-innings hundred and Rohan Kunnummal’s (93, 100b, 14x4, 1x6) breezy knock in the second, there was little to rejoice for South Zone.

After being positioned comfortabl­y at 236 for four on the second day in reply to West Zone’s 270, Hanuma Vihari would have fancied his team’s chances. But the lack of firepower in the pace department, an insipid show by the spinners and missed opportunit­ies on the field in the second innings didn’t help South Zone, which was coming off a 645-run drubbing of North Zone in the semifinal.

Egos had been humbled, lessons had been learnt, and a former India Test captain, fighting for form and survival, had led his team to victory. The Duleep Trophy, involving some of the top players from different States, had reclaimed a slice of its pride and prestige.

“The beauty is, today I can talk with Ajinkya [Rahane] sir, I can talk with Prithvi [Shaw]. Anyone can come and talk to me. We share our experience­s. That is the beauty of this trophy. Everyone comes from a different place, has their own journey and we can learn from each other,” Central Zone’s Himanshu Mantri said, summing up the significance of the tournament.

The frenzy of white-ball cricket and coloured clothing is up next, with the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy and the Vijay Hazare Trophy slated to be held in the next couple of months.

The red-ball journeymen, meanwhile, eagerly await the return of the Ranji Trophy.

The scores (final):

West Zone 270 (Het Patel 98, Sai Kishore 5 for 86) and 585 for 4 dec. (Jaiswal 265, Sarfaraz 127 n.o., Iyer 71) beat South Zone

327 (Indrajith 118, Unadkat 4 for 52) and 234 (Kunnummal 93, Ravi Teja 53, Mulani 5 for 51) by 294 runs.

 ?? M. PERIASAMY ?? Well-deserved win: Ajinkya Rahane receives the Duleep Trophy from R. S. Ramasaamy, secretary of the Tamil Nadu Cricket Associatio­n, in Coimbatore. Thanks in main to Yashasvi Jaiswal and Sarfaraz Khan, West Zone turned it around after conceding a lead of 57 runs in the first innings.
M. PERIASAMY Well-deserved win: Ajinkya Rahane receives the Duleep Trophy from R. S. Ramasaamy, secretary of the Tamil Nadu Cricket Associatio­n, in Coimbatore. Thanks in main to Yashasvi Jaiswal and Sarfaraz Khan, West Zone turned it around after conceding a lead of 57 runs in the first innings.
 ?? M. PERIASAMY ?? Red-hot form: Yashasvi Jaiswal scored his second double century in two weeks as West Zone scored 585 for 4 in the second innings, effectively putting the game beyond South Zone’s reach.
M. PERIASAMY Red-hot form: Yashasvi Jaiswal scored his second double century in two weeks as West Zone scored 585 for 4 in the second innings, effectively putting the game beyond South Zone’s reach.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Mandhana fuels Indian response: After losing the T20I series 1-2, India bounced back with a seven-wicket win in a 228-run chase in the first ODI in Hove. Indian opener Smriti Mandhana's flawless 99-ball 91 made light work of the target.
GETTY IMAGES Mandhana fuels Indian response: After losing the T20I series 1-2, India bounced back with a seven-wicket win in a 228-run chase in the first ODI in Hove. Indian opener Smriti Mandhana's flawless 99-ball 91 made light work of the target.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Harman unstoppabl­e: Skipper Harmanpree­t Kaur followed up her 74 from the first ODI with a belligeren­t 143 — the second-highest ODI individual score among Indian women — in the second ODI in Coventry. Kaur’s innings was laced with 18 fours and four sixes and handed India an 88-run win while defending its second-biggest ODI total (333/4).
GETTY IMAGES Harman unstoppabl­e: Skipper Harmanpree­t Kaur followed up her 74 from the first ODI with a belligeren­t 143 — the second-highest ODI individual score among Indian women — in the second ODI in Coventry. Kaur’s innings was laced with 18 fours and four sixes and handed India an 88-run win while defending its second-biggest ODI total (333/4).
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? History, controvers­y and lot more: India completed a series whitewash at Lord’s in the third ODI, which was veteran Jhulan Goswami’s final match before retirement. However, Deepti Sharma stole the show when she ran out England’s Charlotte Dean while stopping in her delivery stride to clinch a narrow 16-run win. The incident ignited controvers­y in the cricketing world.
GETTY IMAGES History, controvers­y and lot more: India completed a series whitewash at Lord’s in the third ODI, which was veteran Jhulan Goswami’s final match before retirement. However, Deepti Sharma stole the show when she ran out England’s Charlotte Dean while stopping in her delivery stride to clinch a narrow 16-run win. The incident ignited controvers­y in the cricketing world.
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? 1999, all over again: Jhulan Goswami’s swansong series ended in triumphant fashion at the epochal Lord’s as India recorded its first ODI series win over England in England since 1999.
GETTY IMAGES 1999, all over again: Jhulan Goswami’s swansong series ended in triumphant fashion at the epochal Lord’s as India recorded its first ODI series win over England in England since 1999.
 ?? ??
 ?? SPORTZPICS / BCCI ?? Green turns India black and blue: India suffered a harrowing defeat in the first T20I against Australia in Mohali despite posting a 208-run total. Cameron Green, who had never opened in any format of the game, went hammer and tongs at the top with his 30-ball 61 as Australia chased down the target with four balls to spare.
SPORTZPICS / BCCI Green turns India black and blue: India suffered a harrowing defeat in the first T20I against Australia in Mohali despite posting a 208-run total. Cameron Green, who had never opened in any format of the game, went hammer and tongs at the top with his 30-ball 61 as Australia chased down the target with four balls to spare.
 ?? SPORTZPICS / BCCI ?? Hitman carnage levels
series: In a return to his birthplace during a rain-affected second T20I in Nagpur, Rohit Sharma sizzled with the bat during a high-pressure chase of 91 in eight overs. The skipper smacked four fours and as many sixes during an unbeaten 46 as India squared the series with a six-wicket win.
SPORTZPICS / BCCI Hitman carnage levels series: In a return to his birthplace during a rain-affected second T20I in Nagpur, Rohit Sharma sizzled with the bat during a high-pressure chase of 91 in eight overs. The skipper smacked four fours and as many sixes during an unbeaten 46 as India squared the series with a six-wicket win.
 ?? ??
 ?? SPORTZPICS / BCCI ?? India’s master card: India found itself in another uphill run-chase during the decider in Hyderabad against Australia. Chasing 187, India lost openers Rohit Sharma and K. L. Rahul before Suryakumar Yadav’s riposte brought the side back on track. Suryakumar floored the Australian attack during his whirlwind 36-ball 69 to lay the foundation for a nervy last-over win. Virat Kohli (64 off 48 balls) and Hardik Pandya (25 not out, 16 balls) also contribute­d to the cause.
SPORTZPICS / BCCI India’s master card: India found itself in another uphill run-chase during the decider in Hyderabad against Australia. Chasing 187, India lost openers Rohit Sharma and K. L. Rahul before Suryakumar Yadav’s riposte brought the side back on track. Suryakumar floored the Australian attack during his whirlwind 36-ball 69 to lay the foundation for a nervy last-over win. Virat Kohli (64 off 48 balls) and Hardik Pandya (25 not out, 16 balls) also contribute­d to the cause.
 ?? SPORTZPICS / BCCI ?? Comeback complete: India’s come from behind 2-1 series win over Australia will hold it in good stead ahead of its final set of three T20IS against South Africa before the T20 World Cup. The Indian side has not lost a bilateral T20I series since Rohit Sharma’s full-time reign began in late 2021.
SPORTZPICS / BCCI Comeback complete: India’s come from behind 2-1 series win over Australia will hold it in good stead ahead of its final set of three T20IS against South Africa before the T20 World Cup. The Indian side has not lost a bilateral T20I series since Rohit Sharma’s full-time reign began in late 2021.

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