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Online edition of India's National Newspaper Sunday, September 02, 2001 |
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Kumble fit and raring to go
By G. Viswanath
MUMBAI, SEPT. 1. The `Smiling assassin' is all ready to step back
onto the playing fields. Almost a dozen years of hard work and
the resultant wear and tear had rendered Anil Kumble's bowling
hand dysfunctional for nearly 10 months.
After being forced to be a spectator for an inordinately long
time, which he spent recuperating from the shoulder injury,
India's principal wickettaker in the 1990s is all set to return
to international cricket. The leg-spinner, who will turn 31 on
October 17, has informed the Board of Control for Cricket in
India (BCCI) that he is ``fit and available'' for selection for
the full tour of South Africa in October-November.
The BCCI Hon. Secretary, Mr. Jaywant Lele, confirmed Kumble's
readiness to travel to South Africa for the tri-series featuring
India, Kenya and South Africa and the three-Test series. ``He has
informed me about his fitness. He (also Javagal Srinath) will be
examined by physiotherapist Andrew Leipus in Bangalore on Monday.
The thing is, he (Kumble) has started bowling and taking wickets,
too,'' said Mr. Lele.
Kumble, who has taken 550 wickets in international cricket (276
in 61 Tests and 274 in 208 one-day Internationals), has been
considering his return to the Indian team for the tour of South
Africa. As a first step he put his shoulder to a sort of `litmus
test' in the Karnataka State Cricket Association Diamond Jubilee
Invitation tournament (in Bangalore) and in the Buchi Babu
tournament (in Chennai). These two tournaments saw his return to
matches of competitive nature after a lapse of nine months.
Only Kumble can say whether he has completed the full course of
the rehabilitation of his shoulder. The first diagnosis in
Sharjah (after the first match of the Coca-Cola Trophy against
Sri Lanka on October 20, 2000) apparently pointed to a mere
bruise of the shoulder bone. But as it transpired, it turned out
to be more serious causing Kumble to miss the inaugural Test
against Bangladesh (in Dhaka) and the subsequent home series
against Zimbabwe and Australia and thereafter the away series in
Zimbabwe and Sri Lanka.
Since January, he has seen the Johannesburg-based expert Dr. Mark
Ferguson at least twice, underwent surgery and committed himself
to a rehabilitation routine before he decided to wear the
flannels in the tournaments in Bangalore and Chennai. In his
spare time he worked out the modalities of the gradation/contract
system the BCCI will be introducing soon. But it has been almost
a month of anticipation for the country's leading wickettaker,
whose diligence appears to have paid off.
Kumble may not have exerted and put his shoulder to full use, but
the fact that he took four wickets in an innings (for KSCA in the
Diamond Jubilee tournament) and five in another (in the Buchi
Babu) on his comeback trail is obviously good news for Indian
cricket. Should things go well for him, India's captain for the
tour of South Africa (Sourav Ganguly is expected to be named
captain by the selection committee here next Thursday) will have
at his command a bowler who has a proven record, just short of
the spectacular, against South Africa.
In his last Test for India, Kumble took six for 143 in the first
innings of the second Test against South Africa at the
Chinnaswamy Stadium 17 months ago. He very nearly won for India
the first Test at the Wankhede Stadium, but, on that eventful
day, Mark Boucher swung the match in South Africa's favour. He
took 18 wickets in four Tests in the `Friendship series' of 1993,
13 in three Tests in the home series in 1996, eight wickets in
three Tests of the away series in 1996-97 and then 12 wickets in
two home Tests in Mumbai and Bangalore in 2000. His tally against
the Proteas is 51 wickets from 12 Tests.
The national selectors are to meet here on two days (Sept. 6 to
pick the captain and on Sept. 7 to pick the 15-member Indian team
for the tri-series). That he has proved his fitness by playing in
two tournaments should clear the way for his selection alongwith
off-spinner Harbhajan Singh. But the first time in many months,
the selectors will have a decent lot of seamers and medium pacers
to pick from in Javagal Srinath, Venkatesh Prasad, Ashish Nehra,
Zaheer Khan, Ajit Agarkar, Rakesh Patel, Debasis Mohanty and
Harvinder Singh.
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