Chennai Super Kings v Trinidad & Tobago, CLT20, Chennai

Super Kings flummoxed by Narine's variety

Sunil Narine's subtle variations proved too much for Chennai Super Kings

Nitin Sundar at the MA Chidambaram Stadium

October 2, 2011

Comments: 14 | Text size: A | A
Michael Hussey: Struggled to read Narine's turn

After coming unstuck in the dying moments twice in two games, Trinidad & Tobago produced a bowling performance of almost indescribable variety to keep their Champions League campaign afloat. Leading the gang of spinning assortments today was Sunil Narine, modestly classified as a purveyor of right-arm offbreaks by ESPNcricinfo. Anyone who saw Narine operate against Chennai Super Kings would consider that an outrageous understatement.

For a mystery spinner, Narine's bowling action is daringly open. He holds the ball high over his head in his right hand as he gets into delivery stride, giving the batsman a good view of his grip. The deception begins right there: there's little in his grip to suggest what he is doing with the ball. His finger positioning variations are so subtle, and his release so quick, that the TV commentators could only guess what he was up to, even after watching slow-motion replays. The home batsmen fared much worse, on a pitch so dead that it began to haunt them.

Under the conditions, T&T's score of 123 was competitive, and Narine sensed his kill straight away. M Vijay's propensity to swing across the line compulsively made him easy prey, and Narine needed only three flat offbreaks on the stumps to get past him.

Suresh Raina then succumbed to a more evolved three-card trick. The first one was the sliding offbreak, which Raina played inside the line of. In his next over, Narine produced his mystery delivery - a cross between the Mendis-Ashwin carom ball and the orthodox legbreak. Delivered with a loose wrist, the ball was released with a corkscrew twist of two fingers that made it grip, turn into the left-hander and bounce disconcertingly. Raina lunged forward and drove loosely to get an inside edge. He was had the next ball, playing early to a tossed up delivery outside off, clearly concerned that he hadn't picked which way it was going to turn.

Narine then squared up S Badrinath with the legbreak, and nearly had him lbw with an offbreak before training his guns on MS Dhoni. The man who tamed Muttiah Muralitharan with consummate authority in the World Cup final was reduced to meek pokes and dabs from the crease. Dhoni stabbed unconvincingly at a couple of the mystery legbreaks, before scooping a full delivery right back to Narine and end his agonising stay. Narine finished with figures of 4-0-8-3 - his victims being CSK's three best Indian batsmen - exceptional work, even on a sluggish track.

Sunil Narine celebrates a wicket, Leicestershire v Trinidad &Tobago, CLT20 qualifier, Hyderabad, September 20, 2011
Sunil Narine (right) removed Chennai Super Kings' three best Indian players © AFP
Enlarge

"I call it [the variation] the knuckle ball," Narine revealed later. "In Trinidad we play wind-ball [tennis ball] cricket, and you look to spin that ball. I decided to do it in practice one day and it wasn't working out that well. But I kept practising and it came out as a good ball."

Narine's nonchalant explanation was par for the course, since unconventional variations are a way of life in this T&T attack. Samuel Badree once again rolled out four overs of unhittable googlies and straighter ones to finish with an economy rate of 3.50; Kevon Cooper backed up his batting heroics with a series of offcutters and backspinners that kept catching Dhoni and co by surprise; Ravi Rampaul had an ordinary day, but made the most important incision when he got Mike Hussey edging, and Sherwin Ganga managed to keep the in-form Dwayne Bravo quiet enough.

Hussey said the variable bounce on the track undid CSK's chase, and revealed that Narine's action remained indecipherable. "A few of our batsmen found it difficult to read which way he was turning the ball," Hussey said. "Sometimes it is difficult if you haven't seen much of a bowler before, especially in T20 where you need to keep the run-rate going.

"If we play against him more we'll get used to his action and which way he's turning the ball a lot more. Much like Ajantha Mendis when he first came on, he was very difficult to read. But then after a while, batsmen start to read him a bit better."

Given the factory line of spinning talent T&T has produced in recent years, though, Hussey and his mates might be faced with a new set of mystery-men the next time they run into them.

Nitin Sundar is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo

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© ESPN EMEA Ltd.

Comments: 14 
Posted by gmoturu on (October 03 2011, 21:56 PM GMT)

what is wrong with people talking so bad about Dhoni. people will have bad days and cricket is not a single player's game. give him fit players and he will take care of the rest. and stop worrying about his batting. he WILL score when he has to. the whole issue is playing lot of cricket (domestic and international). as long as BCCI is greedy and wants to make more money, no matter how many world class players India will produce India won't be No. 1 for too long.

Posted by   on (October 03 2011, 19:28 PM GMT)

No body can out perform CSK easily but at times we are bound to give away the match from our hands easily (eg CSK Vs MI match in CLT20 this yr)... I feel we need another striking fast bowler in our side ... better if he is from local talent pool

Posted by   on (October 03 2011, 19:24 PM GMT)

Had T&T included Dwayne Bravo, Pollard & Gayle on their side... They would have walked away easily with the CLT20 cup or Any T20 cup for that matter beating any side with ease :) FYI I am from Chennai :P :P but still love the way T&T are approaching every game ... Hope they go on to Win the title this time...

Posted by Raj12345 on (October 03 2011, 17:29 PM GMT)

Dhoni + Raina always defeat here after.

Posted by   on (October 03 2011, 16:26 PM GMT)

K.K -Cricket, I love you Indian Fans trying to pick WI teams. FYI a few Trinidadians had questioned Kevon Cooper's selection. So then would you also have picked Mathurin? If you have the power, see if you can get these guys places in the IPL. They need the exposure and the money.

Posted by elsmallo on (October 03 2011, 15:04 PM GMT)

Does anyone else find it terribly sad that players like Dwayne Bravo and Pollard are not competing for Trinidad as they should be?

Posted by KK_Cricket on (October 03 2011, 12:33 PM GMT)

Dont quite understand why these 2 or 3 players like Narine, Badree and Cooper are not a part of West Indies team.. Next T20 world cup is in Sri Lanka and these 3 lads in addition to Gayle, Bravo and Pollard can make a formidable force.. but for this the WI selectors need to select and give these guys enough chances.. I am Indian but would definitely like to see more competitive teams and these guys will do world of good to struggle Windies team..

Posted by G.Vinoth on (October 03 2011, 12:33 PM GMT)

Glad to see Spin attacks(Bishoo, NArine) like this from carribean after a pace attack(walsh,ambrose)

Posted by G.Vinoth on (October 03 2011, 12:26 PM GMT)

@T.SB... Funny yo... did yo born day before yesterday and yo doesn't know anything abt MSD other than yesterday's match... lol... @Rahul Reddy: Yeah Dhoni didnt bat properly in yesterday match... lets tak that as easy guys... Not everytime a player can bat... i would say, its one of tougher day's Dhoni had... He is still a better player in World Cricket... So, stop criticising him like this by seeing an single match... think past what he has done... and look forward for future, for Dhoni's action... We Chennai, Always Love U Dhoni... CSK is still the best...! and no one can beat in the world!

Posted by   on (October 03 2011, 11:40 AM GMT)

They won because of players and not because of Dhoni.They lost to T&T because of their players and not Dhoni.But Dhoni is the biggest culpritof that game with 7(22).

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Nitin SundarClose
Nitin Sundar Sub-editor Nitin spent his formative years perfecting the art of landing the googly, before blossoming into a book-cricket specialist. More excellence followed in the underarm version of the game before, like the majority of India's misguided youth, he started taking studies seriously. After four forgettable years of electrical engineering, followed by a rigorous MBA and 16 months in the strategy consulting industry, he began to ponder life's more profound issues. Such as the angle made by Brian Lara's bat with the horizontal at the peak of his back-lift. A move to ESPNcricinfo followed and Nitin is now a prolific nurdler in office cricket, with a questionable technique against the short ball.
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