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India v England, 1st match, Champions Trophy
Pathan dismisses the blues
The Verdict by Dileep Premachandran at Jaipur
October 15, 2006

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Good times are here again for Irfan Pathan
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Less than a month ago, Irfan Pathan's nascent career appeared to be in
danger of slamming into the buffers. While his team-mates finished
practice and went into the dressing room to prepare for a winner-take-all
match against Australia at the Kinrara Oval, Pathan was encouraged to bowl
at one stump with Jeff Thomson in attendance. His body language was poor,
and there was no zip in his bowling, and the little spell in full view of
the media and the crowd fuelled endless debate about whether he should be
retained in the squad.
Luckily for him, the 14 for the Champions Trophy had been named much
earlier, and Pathan, despite bowling six insipid overs for 54 runs in
Malaysia, had a berth at the expense of Sreesanth, lively and hostile in
the one outing he was given. Pathan's slump was all the more perplexing
because he had enjoyed such a stellar season in 2005-06, contributing
weightily with the bat and almost guaranteeing a breakthrough each time he
was handed the new white ball.
He had cut a swathe through top orders, picking up 49 wickets from just 25
games, but the long journey to the Caribbean appeared to take away his
allround mojo. In seven subsequent matches, he could score only 88 runs,
and his seven wickets came at a cost of 33.28 apiece. More worryingly, the
economy rate had ballooned to 6.13, and he was struggling to nudge 75mph
on the speed gun.
Though they wisely rested him for the last two matches in Malaysia, the
team management needs to be commended for not giving up on an individual
whose fortunes are inextricably linked to India's one-day form. When he
bats and bowls well, he gives the team enviable balance and potency, amply
illustrated by 21 wins from 29 games last season. With no other quality
allround replacement on the horizon, benching him necessitates weakening
either the batting or bowling, and against teams like Australia, that
doesn't bear thinking about.
It needs some spring sunshine to alleviate a winter's depression, and for
Pathan, the glimmer of hope was perhaps a sighting of Andrew Strauss, who
he had perplexed consistently on England's tour of India earlier this
year. From the first delivery he bowled, he was swinging the ball away,
with the speed gun showing figures closer to 80 than 70. The combination
of uneven bounce and swing was a dangerous one, but it still needed a
wicket to put the spring back in his stride.
When it came, it was the most priceless one of all. Andrew Flintoff had
come up the order to try and inject some life into England's
Egyptian-Mummy Power Play displays, but when he played all around Pathan's
stock ball into the right-hander, the sense of relief was palpable. With
the burden partially lifted from his shoulders, Pathan then troubled Kevin
Pietersen as well, cramping him for room with deliveries that darted in,
and beating the outside edge with the odd one that moved away.
Though he didn't get his man, the dismissal of Strauss had something of
the pre-ordained about it. Throughout his forgettable 32-ball stint in the
middle, Strauss had been moving about his crease like a shoeless man on
ice. The Light Brigade charge summed up his desperation, and epitomised
the team's cluelessness on a pitch that demanded the sort of application
shown by the admirable Paul Collingwood.
The only way Pathan's day could have improved would have been with a
dashing 50 in a perfunctory run chase. But though he played three peachy
drives, that wasn't to be. And it was perhaps just as well, given that it
would only have invited the sort of "He's back" headlines and hype that he
can well do without.
In any case, it wasn't as though he had scripted the win all on his own.
It helped immensely that Munaf Patel was so incisive at the other end.
Having done nothing to inspire confidence in his first few outings in
coloured clothes, Munaf has been a revelation since, dropping a little
pace and gaining much by way of control. He was a real handful on a tricky
surface and while Ian Bell's wicket might have been fortuitous, his
McGrath-esque refusal to give the batsmen anything to hit helped Rahul
Dravid tighten the noose.
The captain played his part, on a day when pretty much everything clicked
on the field. Even when Pietersen threatened a revival with his muscular
approach, Dravid kept a slip in, and the combination of Munaf and Sachin
Tendulkar rewarded him suitably. By the time both new-ball bowlers had
left the fray to gulp down energy drinks on the boundary rope, the damage
was done, with Harbhajan Singh and Ramesh Powar only required to
administer the last rites. Given England's suicidal batting, that was a
formality.
Dileep Premachandran is features editor of Cricinfo
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