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Arnold lends solidity to Lankan flair
By S. Dinakar
COLOMBO, AUG. 6. He is cool when the going gets hot. Someone who
can turn a game around without too many realising it. Deceptive
and dangerous, lean and hungry, Russel Arnold certainly is.
Ask the Indians, who were swept away by Arnold's canny strokeplay
on Sunday's final at the Premadasa Stadium. They didn't quite
realise what hit them as Arnold put his foot on the accelerator
during the end overs.
It was a stunning onslaught from a man not known for big strokes.
But then, batting in the one-dayers, even during the climactic
stages of the innings, is not just about the booming blows.
It also about playing to one's strengths, picking the ones and
the twos and dismissing the deliveries on the `slot' ruthlessly.
The Lankan left-hander knows this only too well, possessing the
ability to adapt to varying situations.
One doesn't have to look beyond his 45-ball 52 in the summit
clash to see the point. It was an effort where his cricketing
acumen surfaced once again at the crunch and Man of the Moment he
surely was. In a side bristling with flair, he brings in a bit of
steel.
There was nothing spectacular in the knock, and that's exactly
why his essay becomes even more special. Arnold took his time to
settle and when the Indian pacemen provided him with the width,
his strong strokeplay square of the wicket on either side came to
the fore, with the southpaw invariably finding the gaps through
telling cuts and flicks.
No wonder he averages a stunning 40 in ODIs - 62 matches, 55
innings, 1,640 runs, strike-rate of 75.5. Statistics that are
truly revealing.
Earlier in the Coca Cola Cup tournament, Arnold's unbeaten 90-odd
in the league encounter against New Zealand, after the Kiwi
pacemen had made early inroads into the Lankan line-up, once
again underlined his character.
The left-hander was associated in two valuable stands, first with
the classy Marvan Atapattu and then with the exciting Suresh
Perera, the first opening a small door for the home side from a
situation of despair, and the second powering Lanka through that
opening. A contest was won and Arnold had played his part.
Valuable performer
Add his useful off-spin bowling that fills in a breach when one
of the front-line bowlers goes for runs and his often brilliant
fielding at point - he is swift on the ball, and can hit the
stumps with unerring accuracy - and you have a real valuable
performer.
Lanka's wily Dav Whatmore had words of praise for him the other
day when he said, ``you can see what he brings to the side.''
Arnold surely adds a lot to the outfit. A Tamil Christian, his
mother hails from Jaffna, the 27-year-old Arnold, a product of
St. Peter's College, Colombo, might have taken off slowly, yet is
rapidly making up for lost ground and years.
Arnold's Test debut came against Pakistan in 1996-97, yet it was
not until the World Cup '99, that he became a permanent feature
in the National side. He has not looked back really since then.
Interestingly, he began his Test career as an opener, but the
Lankan think-tank realised quickly the importance of having a
solid batsman lower down the order.
Arnold has a vital role to play as the link between the
specialists and the lower order. And he can, both, present a
broad blade, or gather runs at a hectic pace.
Walking in at the middle-order the man has only one hundred
against his name in ODIs (103 against Zimbabwe) yet that innings
provides us with a glimpse of his character. Adversity only
stokes Arnold's combative instincts.
The Lankans were tottering at 103 for seven in the Bulawayo one-
dayer when Arnold, with only tail-enders Pramodaya Wickremasinghe
and Muttiah Muralitharan for company, accumulated his runs with a
blend of caution and aggression, reaching his century with a
rousing six.
Has grown in stature
And since then, Arnold has only grown in stature, making runs and
getting them at the crunch. He appears to have developed a
special liking for the Indians too.
Remember the Champions Trophy in Sharjah, October 2000, when
Arnold made two half-centuries, his 62-ball 52 in the final once
again taking the game away from India. That was a day when he
swept the Indian spinners with ridiculous ease.
Surprisingly, his Test record (1,216 runs at 29.65) is inferior
to his one-day average, and is certainly paradoxical considering
that Arnold is basically a stayer. An intense cricketer, perhaps,
he relaxes just that little bit mentally in the ODIs, enabling
him to strike the ball more freely.
He is also known to be a bit of a talker on the cricket field,
and is not the kind to be rattled by sledging. Turning out for
the famous Nondescript Cricket Club in Colombo, he has over the
years, developed a combative attitude, especially in the heat of
the battle.
His sharp cricketing mind suggests he is a strong candidate for
captaincy as and when the time comes. Yes, the future beckons for
Russel Arnold. Right now, he can afford to relax and smile, with
a bat in hand.
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