Kuldeep Yadav: I never doubt my skills

Kuldeep’s two wicket-haul against Pakistan finally yanked him out of a middling show in recent times, and the chinaman bowler says it's important to back one's own game when the chips are down.

Published : Jun 17, 2019 17:15 IST , manchester

Kuldeep Yadav: "I have been bowling well from the first match, I don’t ever doubt my skills. This is a 50-over game, it is a very long format, it is not like a T20."
Kuldeep Yadav: "I have been bowling well from the first match, I don’t ever doubt my skills. This is a 50-over game, it is a very long format, it is not like a T20."
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Kuldeep Yadav: "I have been bowling well from the first match, I don’t ever doubt my skills. This is a 50-over game, it is a very long format, it is not like a T20."

Sunday’s adrenaline-sprinkled but rain-marred World Cup clash between India and Pakistan at Old Trafford, had entered a decisive phase. Pursuing 336, Sarfaraz Ahmed’s men needed a pivotal partnership and Fakhar Zaman and Babar Azam were precisely doing that, nudging the single, blocking the good deliveries and slamming the loose ones.  

Kuldeep Yadav then steps in. A gentle amble leads to a whirring left arm and as the delivery curves and dips, Babar stays rooted to the crease, his legs and bat are not in sync and through the gap, the white ball slides in and knocks the stumps. The bails light up, M.S. Dhoni roars and Kuldeep, the Chinaman spinner, is back in vogue. Later he scalps Zaman too and with his two for 32 yield, Kuldeep had prised out Pakistan’s heart.

READ| I'm not a mystery bowler, says Kuldeep Yadav

Later, speaking to the media in the ICC mixed zone, Kuldeep recalled Babar’s wicket: “It is my first World Cup match against Pakistan, so the expectations were a lot. The ball I bowled was a dream ball. The team needed a wicket because Pakistan was in the middle of a good partnership. Babar and Fakhar bat well against spinners, rotating the strike and attacking when needed. Babar is a good player of spin. Taking his wicket was very important and when Fakhar got out almost immediately, they came under pressure.”

Kuldeep’s effort finally yanked him out of a middling show in recent times. In the Indian Premier League, turning out for the Kolkata Knight Riders, he played nine games, bagged a mere four and had an economy rate of  8.66. In the World Cup, he had a one for 46 against South Africa and a none for 55 while facing off with the Aussies. By his high standards – an overall tally of 90 wickets in 47 ODIs, the latest skid looked even more pronounced.

Thankfully the Uttar Pradesh spinner regained his sizzle against Pakistan. Explaining his recent performances, Kuldeep said: “I have been bowling well from the first match, I don’t ever doubt my skills. This is a 50-over game, it is a very long format, it is not like a T20. Sometimes you bowl well and can still get hit, you may not get wickets. So at that time, it is very important to back yourself. In the match against Australia, I kept the scoring in check. Although I didn’t get wickets, their required rate kept going up. When the ball leaves your hand nicely and  slowly, the wickets also start coming.”

With Kuldeep seemingly back in the groove and striking a tandem with fellow spinner Yuzvendra Chahal, India has an advantage in the middle-over battles. 

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