The Hindu (Bangalore)

Deepti Sharma — the jack of all trades seeking to master the game

With an eagerness to improve and the skillset to dominate the world, the all-rounder’s journey across formats brings great hope to her UP Warriorz mentor Lisa Sthalekar

- Lavanya Lakshminar­ayanan

It’s not easy being captain. More so in a tournament final. You are tasked with motivating 11 nervous (in varying degrees) players while also reassuring the nagging doubts in your head as you set about seeking glory.

Deepti Sharma’s heart rate must have been in its upper limits on Thursday morning as she stepped out with teammate Uma Chetry with 153 runs left for her side – East Zone – to chase vs South Zone in the Inter Zonal redball tournament.

Deepti has been a source of calm for East in the three games played during this tournament. What she missed out on during the Women’s Premier League – dominating bowling charts – she more than made up for here with 27 scalps to her name, imperiousl­y ahead of the rest of the field. She has been crucial with the bat too, helping bring stability to an inexperien­ced batting order that is still learning the demands of long format cricket. Her side eventually finished with a memorable onewicket win.

“I texted Deepti before her final to wish her luck saying ‘I think she’s enjoying the format,’ Lisa Sthalekar, Deepti’s team mentor at WPL outfit UP Warriorz tells Sportstar. “Deepti replied saying, “I think it’s my favourite format.” Yeah, she is pretty good at it to be honest.”

Identity crisis

The 26yearold barely betrays emotions. Extremes may be curdling her nerves within but there’s no sign of it on the exterior. And so, a slight identity crisis that she’s been unravellin­g in the pursuit of a solution slips under the radar with the discourse often stuck at adaptabili­ty and form. Change, to an observer, may be easy and even expected, but the one going through it will tell you of the seismic shifts it entails. Deepti faced a predicamen­t of the sort which ate into her first season in the WPL. She was still trying to figure her essence as an allrounder, particular­ly in the T20 game, when all her skills were pointing to finesse in the longer formats of the game. This often comes down to a matter of confidence and mindset. Deepti was no different.

“I remember speaking to her during the first edition and telling her that she should be dominating this competitio­n. This is a competitio­n built for all rounders and out of the big names in Indian women’s cricket, she is THE allrounder, so she should dominate,” Lisa remembers.

“The changes she made were evident. In one of the earlier games this season, she looked to loft the ball over mid off instead of sweeping but got caught. I remember speaking to her after the match and telling her how that was the right call, even if it resulted in a wicket. The execution wasn’t there but we needed that change. Everyone knows she’s going to sweep. So she’s got to show people she’s got other things. She eventually went on to have a wonderful tournament. She was literally carrying the team by herself in some stages,” the former Australian captain beams.

“Her ability to hit straight sixes just shows how adaptable and clever she is. She reads the game very well. We’ve known that with her bowling, but she managed to get that into her batting too.

Not only did she have a scintillat­ing run with the bat, finishing as the fifth highest run scorer with 295 runs (she even held the Orange Cap for a while), she was able to improve her strikerate from 83.33 in season one to an impressive 136.57 this time. That’s no easy jump. Her highest score rose between editions from 22 to an unbeaten 88. She managed only 11 boundaries last time, but registered 34 boundaries and eight sixes this time around. It was almost like watching a whole new player for some parts of the season.

This mental muddle she left behind could also be because of how starkly opposite her playing roles are at the domestic and internatio­nal levels. Deepti enjoys batting up the order and even opens for her state and zonal sides. In the Indian setup, she is preferred lower down, with faith wrested in her ability to clear the ropes. It hasn’t always worked, but WPL 2024 certainly cleared a bit of the fog up for her. A month or so later, Deepti was able to switch back to ‘Test’ mode in the Inter Zonals, with the ability to grind out an innings, wear down an opposition and defend till the end of time.

“I think she has time on her hand. She knows her game and her strengths intimately. She can leave balls that aren’t in her area and she’s got time and patience. She doesn’t care if you’ve set a field to trap her on the off side and you’ve opened the leg side field. She’ll keep leaving and defending till the ball is there to be played. She doesn’t get flustered,” Lisa explains in her assessment of Deepti’s red ball comfort.

“She opens domestical­ly, but in the Indian side, she has been slotted lower and lower which reduces the time she has and now your game is being dictated by the situation and that didn’t quite sit with who she was as a player. Maybe that drove her systems to push her a bit. We did so too. We assured her that she had all the shots and just wanted her to play them.

One thing she said after the first couple of games was, ‘Put me higher, I’ll get the job done.’ And obviously, when things were not working for us, we pushed her up and she did really well. That takes a lot of courage and self belief to be able to deliver and she did it in spades through the season. We were all so happy. Within our team, we had a player of the tournament pick and she won it hands down,” she adds.

Always room to learn

With the ball, even though Deepti finished with nine wickets in as many games in the WPL last season, there were patches where she was getting smashed for runs, particular­ly sixes. She conceded a total of 309 runs in 209 balls last season and improved that to 217 runs off 180 balls this year. She even became the first Indian to register a hattrick in the tournament’s nascent history.

“I usually score the game as I watch it like I would during my playing days and so I looked through my sheets and then sat her down and said, ‘You’re a much better player than this. I get it that the pitch is good, the batters are strong and the boundaries are strong, but you’re better than getting whacked for most sixes in our team,’” Lisa recollects.

Tightening her technique and keeping things simple with line and length along with her general tactical acuity in the game have helped Deepti immensely with the ball.

There also is a learning curve when it comes to handling high pressure situations in a chase that boils down to the lower order that Indian cricket has grappled with for the better part of the decade. In the Inter Zonals, a lack of communicat­ion left Deepti and Richa Ghosh, her East batting partner, on the same side. It was a simple run out for South to effect as Richa tried to put on a stoic mask over what was quite clearly boiling rage below. That run out shook up the skipper a bit. The unforced risktaking began creeping in, runs were a bit nervy, she was reacting rather than taking command even of communicat­ion with her partner. Eventually, Deepti was dismissed, courtesy a sweep shot that the opposition saw coming from a mile away with a considerab­le part of the target yet to be shaved off.

“I feel like the Indians are very emotional players,” Lisa chimes in. “I look at players like Meg Lanning and Alyssa Healy or even someone like Pat Cummins as captain... Jaydev Unadkat is being belted for runs and he comes along smiling saying, ‘It’s alright mate, what’s your plan? We’ll set the field accordingl­y.’ You know when you’re on top of the game is when Indian players start having words, not at you, but at each other almost. It’s not to say it’s a bad thing or a good thing. It’s just there and it sets them apart from the others. Maybe for some, it gets under their skin and they tend to focus on it or it may rile them up. It can work both ways,” she adds.

Evolution as a leader

While she works on staying ahead of the pack with bat and ball, her biggest task was to lead a patched up side on short notice to victory in a tournament held over two and half weeks in the gruelling dry heat in Pune. Across three games, Deepti’s 27 wickets (including three fiveplus wicket hauls) and 157 runs, sometimes in key situations which helped steady the East ship, were not her only contributi­ons. Her leadership was tested against spirited opponents like North and South Zone and she emerged with the biggest seal of success there is, a trophy.

While Deepti’s experience and seniority in the domestic circuit has seen her take on leadership roles before, the WPL helped her level those skills up in a more competitiv­e pool. She found an ally in fierce internatio­nal rival Alyssa Healy who she was deputy to in UPW.

“Alyssa and Deepti’s relationsh­ip… When an Indian player was coming on or a domestic player unseen in the internatio­nal scene, there was a smooth informatio­n sharing between the two and even from people like Rajeshwari Gayakwad and Gouher Sultana about their scoring areas and potential spaces for us to use. So that trust was there. We had a senior leadership group that would get together before every match day. Informatio­n would be shared and Deepti was the only Indian in that group but she was very comfortabl­e in sharing her thoughts. It’s only now that they’re getting to play with people they disliked as rivals. There was a time when Deepti, Alyssa and the senior players were all trying to figure out... ‘okay where do we all sit? How much do we trust one another?’ You’re bringing different walks of life together and trying to get them to click. This year, it was different, it was like a family coming together,” Lisa explains.

That metaphoric­al trust fall has helped Deepti take help, heed advice which she is quick to act on and move away from a certain rigidity that was associated with her.

To have a player of her calibre sharpening the prongs of her trident so imperiousl­y in a World Cup year can only be a good sign for India. Much like Lisa and Co. urge Deepti to do for their franchise, it’s up to her to go out there and finish the job!

 ?? LAVANYA LAKSHMINAR­AYANAN ??
LAVANYA LAKSHMINAR­AYANAN

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