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Players to Watch out for in CHALLENGER SERIES


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Know your challengers Cricinfo staff October 21, 2007 spacer.gifVirat Kohli Phrases such as "most talented youngster" have followed him since his junior days and Kohli is doing his bit to live up to it. His 90 against Karnataka in the Ranji Trophy, an innings that helped Delhi avert the follow-on, was an illustration of his mental fortitude: his father had died in the wee hours of the morning, but he insisted on resuming his innings to guide his side to safety. The 2005-06 Ranji season, his first, produced 257 runs at 36.71, and he put together a string of good scores for India Under-19, against their England, New Zealand and Sri Lanka counterparts. Last season, Twenty20 Runs: 179, S/R: 131.61 Pinal Shah Shah, the Baroda wicketkeeper, had scored a first-class double century before he represented India in the Under-19 World Cup in Sri Lanka last year. Stable behind the stumps, Shah is an aggressive batsman, which gives him an edge over other young wicketkeepers. In the Challengers, though, with the presence of Mahesh Rawat in the India Red side, Shah might be looked at as a specialist batsman, if he plays. This will be the start of his third first-class season. Last season, List A Runs: 249, Ave: 62.25 Last season, Twenty20 Runs: 106, S/R: 147.22 Paresh Patel Twenty20 is perceived as a bowlers' graveyard, but Paresh, a left-arm spinner from Orissa, used this format to resurrect his career, which was threatening to peter out after a forgettable debut season in 2005-06. Paresh entered the first-class scene in late 2005, which was a reward for some consistent performances at the age-group levels, but ended the season with a solitary wicket in six games. He hadn't been picked for 15 months since, but the inaugural domestic Twenty20 offered him a chance, which he grabbed gleefully. Seventeen wickets in eight games at 10.64 - the second-highest wiclets tally and the best average among the top eight wicket-takers - pushed him into the reckoning. Last season, Twenty20 28.3-0-181-17 Siddharth Trivedi A member of the Under-19 team that reached the semi-final of the World Cup in New Zealand in 2002, Trivedi, the Gujarat medium-pacer, was an early starter in first-class cricket. In his first-class debut, in 2002-03, he took a five-for against UP. After an impressive first season, he was rewarded with the Border-Gavaskar scholarship and later a place in the Challengers next season, where he played only one match and ended with 1 for 34 in four overs. When Greg Chappell took over as the India coach in 2005, Trivedi was a part of the 30-member conditioning camp. He has since been part of the A team that played the Top End series in Australia and New Zealand in 2006. Last season, List A Wickets: 9, Ave: 27.88, Economy: 4.32 Last season, Twenty20 26-0-202-6 Karan Goel Goel, 20, is an attacking opening batsman who was the leading run-getter in the inaugural domestic Twenty20 Championship last season, guiding Punjab to the final. A batsman who can bowl part-time offbreaks, Goel was chosen as the player of the year by the Punjab Cricket Association. Stronger on the off side, he rates the cover drive as his favourite shot. He started playing under the tutelage of his father, a university-grade cricketer, before chiseling his skills under coach Charanjit Singh. He is currently working with the Punjab coach Daljit Singh. Last season, List A Runs: 406, Ave: 45.11 Last season, Twenty20 Runs: 313, S/R: 107.93 Mahesh Rawat Rawat is a wicketkeeper-batsman who played for Haryana before shifting to Railways this season. Solid both behind and in front of the stumps, he made his first-class debut in 2003-04. However, it was in 2006-07 season that he hit a purple patch, rattling two centuries and a half-century in the Duleep Trophy at an average of 93.66. He is an efficient wicketkeeper and a dependable lower-order batsman who has even opened in one-day games. He was a part of the India A team that toured Kenya. Last season, List A Runs: 91, Ave: 91 Last season, Twenty20 Runs: 110, S/R: 103.77 Shrikant Mundhe Mundhe is a right-arm medium-pacer and a lower-order batsman who has played for Maharashtra and India Under-19. In his debut match for Maharashtra U-14s, in January 2002, Mundhe scored an unbeaten 59 batting at No. 10. In six first-class matches he has snared 16 wickets with a career-best match-winning 5 for 18 against Saurashtra during the Ranji One-Day Trophy in early 2007. He has represented India U-19s in just one game, against their Sri Lankan counterparts, also in 2007. But an impressive one-day season has brought him into the reckoning for the Challengers. Last season, List A Wickets: 16, Ave: 13.06, Econ: 4.69 Last season, Twenty20 14-0-105-5 © Cricinfo

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Trivedi's another Bose. Medium pace, moves the ball a bit but can't hit the deck hard enough (unlike Bose) or produce the pace to be an international force. The ones who interest me the most from this list are the big Mumbai 4 - Rahane, Rohit Sharma, Abhishek Nayar and Iqbal Abdulla. Abdulla showed in the Irani that he's got the technique and shots to be a very capable lower order bat - perhaps even a future allrounder. Rohit and Rahane are just class w/ the bat, and Nayar's been in destructive form w/ bat lately, and while his bowling's medium pace, it's generally tight and a good second string. Watch Yo Mahesh as well, coming off some very good India A form last year. Oh, and that Arjun Yadav fella in the India Blue team sounds like a real talent - but don't take that from me, take it from daddy Shivlal...

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