The Hindu - International

Richa Ghosh’s heartbreak — of lone wolves, fine margins and the power of the pack

She was the oddson favourite among the press corps covering the match to pull off a heist the way Harmanpree­t did the night before, but alas, sport giveth and sport taketh in equal measure

- Lavanya Lakshminar­ayanan

ow do you console a player who fought tooth and nail to get her team to a win only to fall short by a run? What are the right words? The few seconds of silence from Royal Challenger­s Bangalore coach Luke Williams as he lauded Richa Ghosh’s efforts in the debrief after a crushing onerun loss to Delhi Capitals at the Arun Jaitley Stadium here on Sunday said it all.

After Harmanpree­t Kaur’s storm of an innings against Gujarat Giants, an interestin­g conversati­on ensued among journalist­s walking out of the Feroz Shah Kotla premises a day prior. “Barring Harmanpree­t, who can pull off a heist like this?” rang the motion. Richa was the unanimous choice and what an ending it would have been to that script if she had pulled it off against one of the best sides in the league in a match where her team needed a win to secure its survival. Alas! Sport giveth and sport taketh away in equal measure.

HCrestfall­en

When Shafali Verma and Jess Jonassen pulled off that run out off the very last ball, Richa and Shreyanka Patil at the other end froze, not knowing how to process what had just happened. Shreyanka, squatting at the striker’s end, had her face buried in her palms while Richa, was flat on the ground after a dive that went in vain, perhaps hoping for the ground to swallow her whole. The world went on around them; DC players shook the umpires hands, broadcast teams brought out their standees for player interviews, the postmatch presentati­on space was set up and groundsmen came on to begin their duties for the day. But these two stood still.

Alice Capsey walked up to Shreyanka, who sobbed herself into a ball, while Jemimah sat down with Richa, comforting her India teammate. She was joined by Meg Lanning who gave Richa a few pats on the head. From a competitor as fierce as her and one who is not verbose in praise or brickbats, this is as good as it comes. But nothing would unshatter the pair. Needing 17 off the last over, a cramping Richa and Disha Kasat had a mountain to climb mentally. Lanning turned to her trusted soldier Jonassen who, for years, has struck fears in opponents across the world with her ability to dump pressure in the bin.

“I knew that at the start of the over, if I could set it up without going for a boundary in one of the first two balls, then we were sort of well and truly on the front foot. But, getting hit for a massive six down the ground was not ideal, and then I gave it too much air for her in the second last ball,” Jonassen said after the game.

Lanning and Jonassen spoke before every ball. Field tweaks were made, instructio­ns were screamed across the field. After that six over Jonassen’s head which brought the target down to 11 off 5, Jonassen fired into Richa, allowing no space to make anything of the ball. Dot. Richa then ran two, struggling to finish her run having kept wickets for 20 overs before coming on to bat. Jonassen then went slow, with Richa managing to get it over to long off. The pair ran yet again as Jonassen waited for the throw at the nonstriker­s’ end. She clipped the stumps just after the batters crossed, sending Disha back to the pavilion.

While DC celebrated the run out, Lanning — in quintessen­tial Doctor Strange style — calculated all possible elements and ran to the umpire to check if the pair had crossed. Had that gone their way, it would be curtains for Richa. But the 20yearold lived to bat some more.

In walked Shreyanka. Richa then dispatched a length ball to midwicket and uncomforta­bly scrambled for two once more, her partner darting across but constantly egging her on to finish the run. RCB and the collective nervous system of the Kotla needed a big hit and Richa delivered, this time creaming the ball over the longest part of the ground to bring the requiremen­t to two runs off the last ball.

That also brought Richa her fifty. S Meghana, who was puzzlingly dropped for this game, turned around to hug Renuka. Sophie Devine was thoroughly entertaine­d as she thumped the seat in front of her in admiration.

Lanning and Jonassen plotted once more, this chat a tad longer than the others. It’s safe to assume that all 23,453 people in the stands were on their feet, perhaps chewing away what was left of their fingernails.

Jonassen went in full on the stumps, targeting Richa’s toes. Richa took a step back to give herself room and smacked the ball which ended up slicing its way to Shafali Verma at backward point who sent it straight back to Jonassen. The Aussie allrounder first thrashed the stumps at the nonstriker’s and then hurled the ball to the stumps at Shreyanka’s end too. While DC celebrated, the review confirmed what RCB dreaded most. The side fell short yet again, by inches this time. This bunch, the Indian youngsters, have seen far too many heartbreak­ing losses. The T20 World Cup in Melbourne, a fiverun loss to Australia in the semifinal of the 2022 Women’s ODI World Cup and countless others in bilaterals and domestic T20 cricket. Richa has been a part of many of those, but this will hurt. It will hurt for what could have been, for a chapter it would have added to the book of Indian batting pedigree.

“You have to accept that that’s sport. It’s part of what you have to accept that sometimes you win and sometimes you lose,” Ellyse Perry, who has a knack of betraying no emotion good or bad, said in her assessment of the game.

“She’ll be a better player in the future for it. There’s only an upside. I hope she wakes up tomorrow, the sun comes up and she feels better. She all but got us over the line. No one deserves to win or lose a game of sport. It just happens. We’ve got another match in a couple of nights and she’s a big part of the team,” she added. Richa found a sympatheti­c shoulder in Jemimah who chose to be optimistic in the role this night will play in the bigger scheme of things for Richa, the India player. “I think Richa is such a young star and this exposure… only the WPL could do that. I told her that this experience is going to help you in the World Cup. You might just go on to hit the winning runs in the World Cup and help us lift the trophy,” she said.

Cricket’s core validated

If you brush the clouds of emotion aside, what remains is a ruthless persistenc­e from the Delhi Capitals, something that took the team through to a memorable

 ?? R.V. MOORTHY ??
R.V. MOORTHY

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