Sarandeep Singh: Prasanna is my idol
Santhosh S - 24 November 2001
Sarandeep Singh has done nothing wrong after making his Test debut
against Zimbabwe at Nagpur in November 2000 where he claimed six
wickets. The young Punjabi off-spinner though finds himself out of the
national team. Sarandeep Singh should have been the one to play
against Australia but sadly due to a quirk of fate, Harbhajan Singh
got the nod ahead of him. What followed in that series is a part of
cricket folklore.
Having said that, no credit should be taken away from Sarandeep Singh,
for he has done what he is supposed to do - claim wickets. National
selector Madan Lal is more than impressed with this young bowler's
performance in the domestic circuit, "Sarandeep Singh should play for
India very soon, the boy has taken a lot of wickets, what else can we
ask him to do?"
Earlier this year, Sarandeep bowled exceedingly well in the Irani
Trophy against Baroda claiming eight wickets. He has followed that up
by picking wickets in good numbers, playing for his adopted state New
Delhi during the current Ranji season; the shift from Punjab
necessitated as he is employed by ONGC which is based in the Indian
capital. The young spinner is also excited by the opportunity this
gives him to be with the legendary Bishen Singh Bedi.
Sarandeep Singh, who flew in very late on the eve of the three-day
match against England in Hyderabad, picked up five English wickets
giving away 98 runs on day one, a feat witnessed by the five national
selectors. In an exclusive interview to CricInfo, Sarandeep
said, "I was very nervous flying in to Hyderabad, I did not have any
chance to prepare for such an important match in my career. I knew
that nothing other than performance would do me any good in my efforts
to make a comeback into the Indian team.
"I kept thinking about it, planning how to bowl against the English
batsmen. I decided it would be a good thing to bowl a good line, as I
had not seen the wicket. When I saw the pitch on the match-day, it
looked a good pitch for batting. There was a little bit of turn and
bounce early on as the pitch was fresh.
"Soon it became very easy for the batsmen, the pitch was definitely
slowing down and I had to think of new strategies. I tried changing my
line a bit and also varying my pace. You can get easy wickets in
domestic cricket by bowling on one side of the wicket but against
international batsmen, you have to do that extra bit. They don't give
away their wickets that cheaply."
Sarandeep was thankful to Board President's XI skipper Jacob Martin,
who bowled him in short spells. Martin also made sure that his bowlers
bowled from both ends, and by the end of the first day Sarandeep had
claimed five wickets while Murali Kartik had three.
When asked about how he felt being left in the wilderness after a good
debut, Sarandeep replied in a voice filled with sadness, "Really
nothing is in my hands. I had hoped to play against Australia, but
then it is all for the selectors, all I can do is keep giving good
performance and hope for the best."
"I always send my best wishes to Harbhajan Singh for he is
representing the country. I believe in working hard and performing
well. I am working on my batting too; if I could contribute 30-40 runs
in the lower order, it will brighten my chances of winning an India
cap. It is going to be a challenge to bowl with Harbhajan Singh and
Anil Kumble, they are such great bowlers. I will give more than my 100
percent for India," he added.
About his stint at the National Cricket Academy in Bangalore, he said,
"I had never seen Erapalli Prasanna before I went to the NCA. It was a
great experience for me to spend time with him. He taught me about the
importance of bowling on different types of wickets, to be mentally
prepared always as most of the game is actually played in the mind. I
learned new tricks and understood the importance of having a strategy
bowling to different batsmen. I was taught to never bowl what the
batsman thinks that you are going to bowl. Prasanna is my idol."
Sarandeep Singh might soon be playing for India, if one goes by what
Madan Lal says. Given the fact that the tracks in India will favour
spinners and the distinct inability of most of the English batsmen to
tackle spin, the coming days should finally bring good news for this
humble lad from Amritsar.
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