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regular-article-logo Monday, 18 November 2024

Centurion tries to stay in the present: Sarfaraz Khan Test numbers a perfect reply to his detractors

Particularly after his game-turning 150 and 177-run partnership with Rishabh Pant on Saturday, Sarfaraz certainly deserves a place in the XI for the Pune Test

Our Bureau Calcutta Published 20.10.24, 11:41 AM
India’s Rishabh Pant plays a shot on the fourth day of the first test cricket match between India and New Zealand, at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium, in Bengaluru, Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024.

India’s Rishabh Pant plays a shot on the fourth day of the first test cricket match between India and New Zealand, at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium, in Bengaluru, Saturday, Oct. 19, 2024. PTI photo

If Shubman Gill recovers from his stiff neck for the second Test in Pune from October 24, the Indian team management will be in for a dilemma. Axing Sarfaraz Khan to accommodate Gill in the XI will be unfair to the former.

Particularly after his game-turning 150 and 177-run partnership with Rishabh Pant on Saturday, Sarfaraz certainly deserves a place in the XI for the Pune Test.

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For someone who used to be criticised even a year ago and also body-shamed for not having the ideal physique like a lot of international cricketers today, Sarfaraz’s Test numbers so far (350 runs at an average of 58.33) are a perfect retort to his detractors. The 26-year-old, though, prefers to keep himself grounded.

“I always keep this in mind that tomorrow is uncertain. It’s happened in the past that while thinking about tomorrow, my present was hampered. So, I try to stay in the present,” Sarfaraz said.

A standout component of his 195-ball innings studded with 18 boundaries and three maximums was how prudently he tackled the short-pitched stuff from the New Zealand pacers. On the back foot, the Mumbai batsman produced the late and upper-cuts with ease as all three quicks looked futile with the old ball.

“I like playing the balls that rise high,” Sarfaraz said. “I have a bouncy wicket back home (in Mumbai), and I play regularly there. The bounce easily allows me to cut it.

“They (New Zealand) were trying to ball short at me outside off-stump, and I played accordingly. It was fun.”

Talking about his partnership with Pant, Sarfaraz said: “I was trying to give him the strike while the left-arm spinners were bowling. I knew he would hit them out. We were trying to create pressure from both ends as I was also countering their pace attack well.”

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