The Hindu (Bangalore)

Arundhati Reddy — the audacity to hope and the strength to realise

The Hyderabadb­orn pacebowlin­g allrounder is a cricket tragic looking for a rainbow at the end of the tunnel a way back to the national team. With the kind of performanc­es she has registered and the personal sacrifices made along the way, she has reas

- Lavanya Lakshmi Narayanan

There are a few players who will put cricket before everything else. Players who will play through cramps because their team needs them. Players who will hit sixes with fractured fingers because their side needs a win. Players who will move into any and all roles and step up to what the squad requires to stay alive in a contest. That tenacity needs a different kind of steel hardening your veins to remain that stoic about putting one thing your sport above all else. Arundhati Reddy is one of those hardy players.

The medium pacebowlin­g all rounder has known nothing but the game since her childhood, having been part of semiprofes­sional and profession­al cricketing environmen­ts since the age of 12 when she broke into the Hyderabad set up. Slowly but steadily, she built a reputation for herself in domestic cricket and made the right heads turn, breaking onto the internatio­nal stage in 2018 while also landing a lucrative gig with the Railways, representi­ng the cricketing giant in the domestic scene. She would go on to play World Cup finals, star in memorable games, be part of twotime finalists in the Women’s Premier League — Delhi Capitals — and much more.

However, for Biju George (former India Women fielding coach currently with DC in the same capacity for both gender verticals), Arundhati will never stop being the young girl he first saw back in 2018.

“There was a Challenger­s tournament held in Alur at the B Ground and there was this girl wearing a bandana, coming and bowling with a clean, easy action and hitting sixes. I thought, wow, this is someone we should keep an eye on,” George told The Hindu.

“After 2019, I wasn’t involved with the women's cricket team but in my heart I hoped I would get an opportunit­y to coach the girls again. Then when the WPL came along, I hoped Delhi Capitals would land a team and thankfully they did. I had the privilege of being at the auction table. We went for Aru and Shikha (Pandey) there. Aru has the perfect technique to be a good fast bowler and double up as an allrounder. Think of what Kapil Dev was for the Indian men’s team,” George added.

This duo has developed a bond akin to that of a father and daughter. He wears his affection for the pacer on his sleeve and that perhaps explains why he has been her confidante when life took her to difficult places.

After the struggle of making it to the Indian team, the next strife was to keep her place. There were plenty of punctuatio­n marks to her ambitions in cricket COVID19, a blossoming pace pool, the occasional favouritis­m that Indian cricket knows too well. After being a T20I mainstay, Arundhati eventually fell down the pecking order, with names like Meghana Singh, Renuka Singh Thakur, Pooja Vastrakar and now even up and comers like Titas Sadhu edging ahead. It didn’t help that she was also not getting too many playing opportunit­ies with

Railway. With a heart loaded with doubt and the fear of slipping into whatifs, she discussed a potential exit from the Railways fold with George last year. And leave she would, after a career comprising of 24 ListA and 21 T20 fixtures for Railways and five twentyover games for Central Zone

“I suggested she move to Kerala. I belong to a middle class background myself and so I know how valuable finances are to this decision,” George recollecte­d. He credits the Women’s Premier League for helping Arundhati to muster up strength and cut the umbilical cord.

“WPL gave her the security to move away from Railways. There’s some money there so she won’t starve. WPL gives these players a platform to be noticed and she then has this state team option (Kerala) that is making knockouts in the ecosystem. Kerala is a supportive space. The team trains in good grounds and players get good facilities and a lot of matches. When she came in, she was shocked at how well she was treated. Everyone is handled that way,” George claimed.

“The T20s were a bit of a dampener for her,” he remembered. “Catches were dropped off her bowling and so on. The Oneday games are where she really opened up performanc­e wise.”

Arundhati had four wickets and 252 runs to her name in five innings for the side, averaging 126 with the bat. However, while Kerala made the knockouts in the T20 tournament, it couldn’t manage so in the onedays. With her experience, a place in the South Zone squad for the Senior MultiDay Trophy was also guaranteed and she had made that count too. In two games, she has 174 runs from four innings and two wickets (so far) to her name. The 57 she scored in the first innings of the final came after two days spent needing an IV after which she battled intense heat and hydration trouble for 122 balls.

All this after an encouragin­g outing in the WPL where she became one of captain Meg Lanning’s goto sergeants on the field. From having bowled just nine overs last season and taking two wickets, she bowled 29.5 in 2024 and finished with eight scalps.

Under the DC canopy, Arundhati worked on her wrist position at the point of release to manage quicker speeds and more seam variations. Batting drills involved power hitting sessions too. She was also a gun fielder and a reliable operator in any field position.

For George, the change wasn’t as much about statistics and stratagem as it was about having a safe space to bloom.

“Aru coming to Kerala has been a blessing both ways. The way the youngsters look up to her… There is a young talent in Kerala Joshitha V J. She is a real quick bowler. She speaks to me constantly about ‘Aru di, Aru told me this, Aru di told me that.’ Arundhati is not someone who is super rich but she would spend money on these kids… to get them good equipment, sometimes for coaching. She does this even for girls who aren’t in the senior side. A player I won’t name was going for coaching at this particular place and she wasn’t someone with the kind of resources to do that and I got to know Aru is the one who is giving her the money to go there and get her stuff done. She has a very kind heart,” he revealed.

But kind hearts need to be set aside on a cricket pitch.

“She comes from a very tough background. She never had anything easy and had to fight for every inch of the life she has now,” George reiterated.

Arundhati has more often than not fueled herself with having multiple points to prove throughout her career. She needed to prove to the naysayers who would try and dissuade her supportive mother from helping her find her feet in the game. She needs to prove to the selectors that she still has much to offer. But perhaps more importantl­y, she needs to prove to herself that she isn’t like the others, that she is built to stand out.

That quest took her to Arjun Dev, the coach at NICE Academy in Bengaluru. It’s a nascent relationsh­ip and Arjun, who also coaches Shreyanka Patil, is not looking to tweak drasticall­y. If there is one thing he is doing, it’s pushing her to take risks.

“One thing I have worked on is her efficacy on bowling to the leg side,” he told The Hindu. “Leg side fields, five fielders standing along positions on this half are not convention­al and could even be scoffed at. I am okay if she gets hit for runs, but we’ve worked on trying to get more wickets with bowling on this side of the stumps.”

“We’ve also tried to add a few kilometres to her speed. This will help us make her slower ball a little more efficient and just make those variations a bit snappier,” he explained.

Arundhati is a formidable force with the bat, but the positions she gets in internatio­nal and franchise cricket is down the order.

“Finisher this is the hardest role in batting. Openers have time to get a feel of things and figure out their pace for good or bad. Finishers don’t. We’ve been doing a lot of work in getting those shots, scoring quickly and maximising the six to 10 balls we might have on hand. I am just working on making her feel more confident about the skills she already has,” he added.

Arundhati rooms with Shreyanka when she’s at NICE and it is quite the pairing. The former is funloving and even mischievou­s at times, but isn’t one with the Golden Retriever personalit­ies Shreyanka or someone like Jemimah possesses. Arundhati has traditiona­lly enjoyed the fun a younger, closertohe­r agebracket band of colleagues bring to the table in the national side. This after being the baby of most teams she was part of for a long time. What better medicine for self doubt and the uncertaint­ies of change than some enjoyment?

“These two get along famously, but are always bickering. It’s quite the pairing.

But at the base of it all, both these players are here to show the world that they are not part of the pack. They are made of something else. It’s one thing to have one student like that, to have to is quite the bonus. We’re trying to replicate the gains we’ve made with Shreyanka her mindset and comfort with her own talents with Arundhati,” he explained.

In an interview from 2020, Arundhati said that she wants to play cricket forever. She’s a cricket tragic looking for a rainbow at the end of the tunnel a way back to the national team and George believes the time is now.

“Aru should be walking into the Indian side. We are seeing India’s best seam bowling allrounder. She saves us 15 runs on the field, she is capable of holding one end down and scoring smartly, and is feisty with the ball. She never drops any catches and she has been showing how good she can be in all formats over the past 12 months. The painting is too big, you can’t not look at it,” he concluded.

 ?? LAVANYA LAKSHMI NARAYANAN ??
LAVANYA LAKSHMI NARAYANAN

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