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Chakravarty A: Killer Kiri the Bowler
Syed Mustaffa Hussain Kirmani was a bowler with a lot of
variety in his repertoire. I was fortunate to watch all of
his great bowling spells which he bolwed at Jhumri Talaiyya.
I recollect one Spell against Kim Hughes' strong Australian
batting side.
There was some unseasonal snow in Jhumri Talaiyya and the
mat was overprepared. The wicket gave an appearance of being
hairy and slippery. The Indian batsmen were thoroughly
outdone by Hughes and Border bowling inspired spells.
By afternoon of the first day, Australia started their first
innings. Rick Darling played a good square drive of Kapil
and soon things were looking bleak for India. In a daring
move, the skipper Venkataraghavan (with whom I have played
first class cricket for TN) gave the ball to Kirmani.
Kirmani has rightly been called the Ambassador among fast
bowlers. He takes about 20 paces run up. He has a very
assertive run up to the wicket a nice shoulder on delivery
stride and it is always a toss-up between whether the ball
he balls will slip or the bowler himself. The sight of him
running in, arms flailing, long hair waving in the air, was
enough to shake the stoutest of batsmen (with laughter) :
even Vishy has been known to be wary of Kiri.
Kirmani has this knack of finding the gap between the
batsmen's arms and, going on through that gap, finding the
next one between the inner arm and the batsmen's body. In
fact, there have been occasions when the ball, seeming to
have a life of it's own, has gotten carried away and found
the gap between the stumps too, leaving the batsmen heaving
a sigh of relief and neccesitating the Indian captain's
having a quiet word with Kiri on his tendency to overdo
things a bit. Like a true team man that he is, Kiri got down
to his task with a smile, and soon the ball was all over the
place. He was doing everything with the ball, except making
it sing ( a reflection of the Indian film industry's then
music draught, the poetic among the spectators felt). He did
get a bit of stick from the tail enders, especially from
Lawson, who is a good driver; but he carried on undaunted
and went on to take a total of fifteen wickets in the match.
As usual Kiri's fifteen wicket haul brought victory to
India.
P.S.:I have only watched, repeatedly, video clippings of the
above spell, and so there might be some errors in what I've
written.
P.P.S.:The above is what it explicitly appears to be : a
work of fiction. Any explicit resemblance to actual
characters is just so much artistic license. Any implicit
resemblance to actual "characters" is, of course, totally by
intention.
Thanks to Anand Chakravarty (achakrav@uceng.uc.edu) on r.s.c.
Contributed by The Management (help@cricinfo.com)
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