Gambit Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 The return of Munaf Patel Back up to speed Sidharth Monga August 16, 2007 "If people call my home and get the answer 'He is at his second home'," Munaf Patel says, "they know I am in Chennai, at MRF." Indeed, the pace academy seems to have become something of a home away from home for Munaf - much like a boarding-school kid who does not want to go home during vacations because he won't be able to play there. Whenever he finds the time, Munaf comes to Chennai. He has been doing so for five years now. It is easy to see that Munaf is at home at MRF. In Chennai he is a relaxed man. If he has much on his mind, he doesn't show it. He has bonded with the students at the school; he has picked up some Tamil; he knows the names of the kids who come for autographs. ("They come every year," he says.) After a period of play with the children, who are clearly having a ball after a day at school, he gets to the nets. The nets are housed in the premises of the Madras Christian College High School. The ground is quite nondescript, and even the immediate neighbours would likely not be able to provide directions if one asked for the MRF Pace Academy. It is just the kind of place for an international fast bowler in rehabilitation. In a career of just over a year, Munaf has broken down twice - in fact, since November last he has largely been a passenger with the team. He did not play a single full Test on the South Africa tour. He then missed the four-ODI series against West Indies but returned in time for the World Cup, which for India lasted just three matches. He then broke down with a back injury in Bangladesh. The selectors, this time, decided to be stern and sent him back home. Before the England tour Munaf was declared fit at the bowlers' conditioning camp in Mysore. And then he was found to be less than match-fit just before the team was picked. Munaf cannot not know that he has got himself a reputation for dubious fitness. The comments made by Sandeep Patil in 2004, when he coached the India A team that Munaf was a part of, began to ring true last year. "Munaf was a big disappointment," Patil had said. "He developed a shoulder injury. The physio checked him and said everything was okay. But he could not bowl and finish his spells. I see it as more of a mental problem than physical. He played one-and-a-half matches in a one-and-a-half-month tour." "He has let us down," a national selector was quoted as saying by The Times of India recently. "We cannot keep picking him again and again just on promise. He has to back it up with fitness and play out a full series." *** At the academy, head coach TA Sekhar is happy with what he sees. He does not believe Munaf is a walking magnet for injuries. "He does have a fast twitch to his muscles, which gets him the pace, but he is not a special case." At the nets Munaf works up a good pace; he is visibly faster than any of the others there, Irfan Pathan included. The mind goes back to a recent article written by Mike Selvey in The Guardian, bemoaning the lack of fast bowlers in world cricket. "Where are the genuine pace aces?" Selvey wrote. "There is [brett] Lee certainly, [steve] Harmison when he can be roused and Shane Bond when fit. The three slingers - [Fidel] Edwards, Shaun Tait and Lasith Malinga - are rapid, but that is about it really, isn't it?" A little over a year ago Munaf would perhaps have been part of that roster. Back then he was hitting about 140kph consistently, impressing all who saw him. During the Champions Trophy last year, though, a new Munaf was on display - running in from wide of the stumps and moving towards them in the final leap; more accurate, economical, but down on pace. Although he had developed into India's best one-day bowler, the change surprised everyone - not least Sekhar. "To me, he was asked to bowl like [Glenn] McGrath, that's where the problem started," Sekhar says. But that doesn't explain Munaf's brittleness, does it? It does, according to Sekhar - at least the latest back injury. "The idea behind fast bowling is to have all your movements towards the batsman," Sekhar says. "He ran in straight, but he jumped towards fine leg, just before the stride. The batsman suddenly was at a different angle. "Naturally and biomechanically, if your force doesn't go in the right direction, problems are bound to happen. McGrath can do it because he is bloody strong. Munaf is strong but not that strong. When you are bowling that way, you have to rotate to bowl. Naturally there is a twist. Initially it would have been stiffness, then pain; then he is not able to bowl." Munaf has now eliminated that final sideways movement, but just why did he do it in the first place? "I thought line and length was more important in one-day cricket," he says. "I was feeling good with that action; the team was getting good support too. I was feeling good because that inward jump made the away-going delivery more effective." One wonders if the presence of a specialist bowling coach then would have helped, if the tinkering with the action was what caused the injury. "But now," says Munaf, "as Sekhar sir has advised, I am running in straight and going for full pace. I enjoy it, people watching also enjoy it. That pace is natural; that I won't lose. I can raise it whenever I want to. "I feel bad that I have got injured twice in a short career," he says. "It's worse to see the team do well from outside. The worst feeling was getting injured in South Africa. I played next to nothing. The wickets were such that I felt we could have won the series had I played." "Rustic" is a tag that gets naturally attached to Munaf. There is a somewhat patronising school of thought that says he is the sort that needs to be guided constantly, that his brittleness lies in his mind and not his body. One of the reasons for coaches and selectors to have developed such an opinion could be that Munaf has frustrated by showing promise and not being able to live up to it. Munaf thinks otherwise, though. "They must have seen something to say that. But only I know what's happening in my back or my shoulder. That they can't see. If I am talking to you right now, how will you know if I have an internal injury? "It has not helped that I have got injured twice in a year and a half. But before that, I have only got injured once in domestic cricket." Munaf seems to know his game better than people give him credit for. At MRF he can be seen correcting other bowlers, advising them. Pathan, who is also at MRF, looks for Munaf's approval of the way he is loading, going into his delivery stride. In fact, Munaf is referred to as "coach" at the academy. "When he talks to them, he is also looking to learn something," Sekhar says. "He is looking to improve himself whenever he sees other bowlers." Munaf has fulfilled his first short-term goal: to get fit and selected for the one-dayers in England. He is also reportedly close to signing for Worcestershire, where Zaheer Khan spent the last season and came back an improved bowler. The time of agony is over, and his first chance comes against the team who were at the receiving end when he made his debut at Mohali last year. With the other fast bowlers doing well in England and a few more looking to make comebacks, Munaf will hate to create vacancies again - through injury most of all. http://content-www.cricinfo.com/columns/content/current/story/306819.html More BS or is he going to go flat out this time instead of bowling like a pensioner? Link to comment
varun Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 "I thought line and length was more important in one-day cricket," he says. "I was feeling good with that action; the team was getting good support too. I was feeling good because that inward jump made the away-going delivery more effective." One wonders if the presence of a specialist bowling coach then would have helped, if the tinkering with the action was what caused the injury. "But now," says Munaf, "as Sekhar sir has advised, I am running in straight and going for full pace. I enjoy it, people watching also enjoy it. That pace is natural; that I won't lose. I can raise it whenever I want to. omg omg omg.. let it be true ! Link to comment
King Tendulkar Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 PLEASE LET IT BE TRUE! I remeber him bowing 90+ against england and scaring cr#p out of him! Come on cant wait to watch him in action in a few minutes:D Link to comment
suma25 Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 Is he gonna play tooday against scotland Link to comment
King Tendulkar Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 Yes he is playing. Just needs oil in his joints and I feel he will be back to full speed and stop doing his impersonation of the tin man in the wizard of oz! Link to comment
Holysmoke Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 Do u guys think he will last 10 overs? Saala he is almost like Louis Saha. Link to comment
The Outsider Posted August 16, 2007 Share Posted August 16, 2007 If this guy can sort out his fitness/attitude issues, our fast bowling attack appears set for a few years. Link to comment
Chandan Posted August 17, 2007 Share Posted August 17, 2007 Yesterday I think he wasn't going all out. Though I couldn't see the speed (could any of you see it mentioned), it was obvious that he was not bowling flat out. I hope he keeps that pace for tests! Link to comment
Ram Posted August 17, 2007 Share Posted August 17, 2007 Anything over 140 clicks would be awesome for me. If Munaf was a fit and in full throttle for the English series , we could have won even more handsomely. Link to comment
PaiN_KiLLeR Posted August 18, 2007 Share Posted August 18, 2007 tough luck folks ... he is still the same 120 kmph trundler as he showed us today against england lions Link to comment
apocalypse Posted August 18, 2007 Share Posted August 18, 2007 he has no pace and was bowling as if without any commitment. I remember today there was a caught and bowled chance and he dint even bother to try for it Link to comment
novpj Posted August 18, 2007 Share Posted August 18, 2007 he looked like $hit - all these india time adn cricinfo articles are crap they just hype players like munaf and Pathan and create false hope. Munaf should be sent back home base don his performance in last 2 matches Link to comment
caught & bowled Posted August 18, 2007 Share Posted August 18, 2007 I can not understand a 22 year old with a dream "job" that billions others would be glad to do, being so lethargic and disinterested Link to comment
bigdhoni7 Posted August 18, 2007 Share Posted August 18, 2007 pathan should be recalled back up. a 3 left arm swing bowling team will destroy england. Link to comment
fineleg Posted August 19, 2007 Share Posted August 19, 2007 MP's bowling and looks like his NO ATTEMPT to catch the ball for dismissal suggests he should be sent back to India. Where is the commitment from MP? Link to comment
Holysmoke Posted August 19, 2007 Share Posted August 19, 2007 Frankly, he's never looked to me like he had any. But that might just be his lazy movements, etc etc Link to comment
fineleg Posted August 19, 2007 Share Posted August 19, 2007 120 kmph is certainly trundling. Link to comment
Shehezaada Posted August 19, 2007 Share Posted August 19, 2007 let's get to the first ODI atleast yaaro! Link to comment
THX_1138 Posted August 19, 2007 Share Posted August 19, 2007 pathan should be recalled back up. a 3 left arm swing bowling team will destroy england. the last time this three left arm pace attack teamed up, a sissy pakistani batting lineup plundered it for 600 odd runs. Link to comment
fineleg Posted August 19, 2007 Share Posted August 19, 2007 let's get to the first ODI atleast yaaro! We will get to it, but I will be surprised if we find out Munna bhai's lousy attitude has changed for the better. I can tolerate a mistake, or a poor shot or a bad ball - but people without 100% commitment to the team and with lazy attitudes should be given the boot :turtle: Link to comment
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