Gulf News

The lure and allure of sixes at the Indian Premier League

- SHYAM A. KRISHNA Senior Associate Editor

We want sixer…We want sixer. That’s one of the oft-repeated demands from spectators during T20 games. During IPL matches, the stadium announcer works the crowd into a frenzy, urging them to demand sixes. Seriously? Do you have to ask for sixes?

This is T20, and boundaries are the name of the game. Sixes come without asking. Powerplays are designed just for that. Batters can play lofted shots without the risk of being caught on the boundary since only two fielders patrol the fence. And the six, or the good old sixer, have a pet name now: maximum. Prefix that with the name of the sponsor, and the cash registers will start ringing.

Crowd into raptures

It’s a far cry from the days when Test cricket was the only gig in town. Those days, you’ve to be lucky to see a six in a day’s play. Well, the demand was there. In the seventies, young ladies in the stands would ask for sixes. And Salim Durrani, the India all-rounder who seemed to have stepped out of a movie set, would oblige them. That would send the crowd into raptures.

But then times were different. Those were the days of Sunil Gavaskar and Geoff Boycott. A time when orthodox shots and a refined technique were cherished. A time when Gavaskar dropped dead a Malcolm Marshall express delivery with a solid back-foot defence, eliciting gasps of admiration from the crowd. A time when coaches and coaching manuals advised budding cricketers to roll their wrists when they play the square-cut or a pull. A time when the ball had to be played along the ground. That’s why sixes were a rarity.

West Indians were the biggest six-hitters in the late seventies. Roy Fredericks, Alvin Kallicharr­an, Gordon Greenidge and Vivian Richards were some of the best exponents. They all played the hook and pull so well and so viciously that the ball vanished into the crowd in an arc from fine-leg to square-leg.

Cricket has changed. So did the spectators’ tastes. When stands are bare during Tests, and when people come in droves for one-day matches, it’s clear that cricket has become a batsmen’s game. The crowds want to see runs. The quicker, the better. And sixes are the best way to send the scoreboard and pulses racing.

Beyond recognitio­n

When One-Day Internatio­nals (50-over games) face a threat to its existence due to the increasing popularity of Twenty20 games, you know cricket has changed beyond recognitio­n. T20 matches are the new addiction.

Imagine a T20 match where only 100 runs are scored in an innings. It means bowlers have held sway. For a purist, it would have been a battle of attrition since batters have to pit their skill and technique against the domination of bowlers. Such lowscoring games are killjoys for spectators brought up on a diet of T20 games. Batsmen have become more adventurou­s to rack up runs in T20 matches. They are fearless and ready to take on the fielders on the boundary.

So T20 pitches tend to be placid. And when boundaries are shorter, even switch-hits can become sixes, as Glenn Maxwell showed us.. Bowlers have had to adapt. Pace bowlers now possess a variety of deliveries in their armouries, and a slower one is a wicket-taking delivery. That’s why leg-spinners are a success in T20 matches. Leg-spinners buy wickets. Tossed up deliveries are the lure. So the crowd gets to see sixes and wickets. A win-win!

The IPL Phase 2 in the UAE is yet to see a 200-plus score. It no longer rains sixes in Sharjah. But there have been some absorbing battles. The IPL may be winding down, but the T20 World Cup is coming up. More sixes could be in store.

The IPL Phase 2 in the UAE is yet to see a 200-plus score. It no longer rains sixes in Sharjah. But there have been some absorbing battles.

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