3 July 1996
"India hasn`t adapted well; and there seem to be internal problems"
By Shobha Warrier
Dennis Lillee is back in business, at the MRF Pace Foundation in
Madras. His brief, as always, being to train youngsters in the
art of bowling with pace and fire.
Though the original idea was that the MRF Foundation would be
used to develop a pace battery for India, it has in time expanded to include wannabe Lillees from various other countries. And Lillee works them to the bone - when I landed at the
foundation nets, the Aussie pace ace was yelling at some Indian
trainees who, in his opinion, weren`t really bending their backs.
Lillee, never one to mince words, got the Indian hopefuls together and harangued them. Be more like the overseas boys, he
said at the top of his voice. Look at the Lankans, the South
Africans, they really work hard, they really bend their backs and
that is why they are improving. You don`t work, so you won`t improve...
I stood by and watched, as Lillee (extreme left, with former India paceman T A Shekhar and some of his wards) - who had fixed
4.30 pm as the time for my appointment - kept monitoring his
wards till way beyond 6 pm, when fading light forced him to call
a halt to the day`s practise session.
He then hunkered down on a nearby bench, and proceeded to
field my questions... Excerpts follow:
The Indian team now touring England is doing rather badly -
what do you suppose could be the reason?
Well, there are always many reasons for something like this.
For one thing, when you tour overseas it is difficult to do as
well as you can at home because, often, you are uncomfortable in
another country. Then the playing conditions, the nature of wickets, all these things vary - and these are factors that go
against any touring side. The touring team that does well is
the side that adapts fastest to the conditions - and it appears
to me that the Indians haven`t adapted well at all, not as
quickly as they should have. Again, they seem to have some
internal problems - I don`t really know...
Both Javagal Srinath and Venkatesh Prasad have trained under
you. Are you happy that they are now doing well in England?
No doubt at all. Srinath and Prasad are good role models for the
youngsters in this country, the ones who would like to play for
[Image] India in future. They have been bowling well, and in a
sense they serve as an advertisement for this academy, people
can see that it actually works, that someone from here can do
well for the country.
Is there scope for Srinath and Prasad to improve further?
Why just them, there is scope for anybody to improve.
Throughout my career, I was always trying to become better, I always felt that I had the scope to improve further - right up to
the last ball I bowled. Most cricketers you talk to will say
there is room for improvement - even a Sachin Tendulkar, a Brian Lara, they are all trying to improve, all the time. To come
to specifics, it is difficult to say precisely where Srinath and
Prasad can improve. Some say they bowl too much, too long spells.
Frankly, I haven`t seen them lately because we don`t get to see
your cricket coverage in Australia, so I would rather not make
any specific comments. Generally speaking, improvement comes
in three ways: physical, technical, and mental. And there is
always scope to improve in all three ways.
I noticed just now that you were comparing the attitudes towards work of your trainees from different countries... could
you elaborate?
See, MRF decided to throw this academy open to all, so that
budding pace bowlers from all over the world could get a chance
to use my expertise. The general response from other countries,
from the youngsters coming from oversease, has been good, very
good. They see it as an opportunity, and tend to grab it with
both hands. They work hard, they are good role models to the
young Indian lads - I think they inspire the Indian boys with
their own work ethic.
Who would you say are more hard-working, the Indian boys or the
others?
This is my personal opinion, okay? I think the overseas boys certainly work harder than the Indian boys, though of late the
Indian youngsters are also improving, some of them have
learnt to work hard. Overall, though, it seems to me that the
overseas boys have a better attitude towards hard work and are
more dedicated than the majority of the Indian lads. Individually, there are some Indian boys who work as hard as the
foreigners, but as a group, Indians don`t show that much application.
What is the optimum age for beginning to train as a fast
bowler?
That varies, there is no hard and fast rule. I believe they
shouldn`t start too soon, they should not train too hard too
soon. Around 17 or 18 is the ideal time to start work, but
they shouldn`t be bowling flat out till they enter the early
twenties - and even then, they should be careful not to overbowl. Today, there is a tendency to overbowl the young lads
beacause they are fit and strong and enthusiastic. But that can
be the very worst thing for them, as they are growing and at
that stage, are likely to be prone to lasting physical damage.
India has always won its greatest victories with spin. In
that context, how important are fast bowlers to a team?
Very important. There has to be someone to use the newball, and
not waste it. Sure, a terrific spinner is good, but no team can
hope for lasting success without a quality fast bowler or two in
its ranks.
You have in the past criticised Indian wickets, and said that
they were a main drawback in producing fast bowlers...?
Yes, I have always felt that one way Indian cricket will improve is when the pitches here become closer in standard to
the pitches abroad. Here the tracks are flat, but when your
players go abroad they play on wickets that not only encourage
strokeplay, but also offer something for both the fast bowler
and the spinner. And inevitably, India struggles. It would be
easier if you had similar pitches here.
Do you think the emergence, the stardom, of spinners like
Shane Warne, Anil Kumble and Mushtaq Ahmed will take the
spotlight away from the pace bowler?
Well, I don`t know. Sure, there are superstar spinners today, but
you still hear about the match-winning fast bowlers - Akram,
Younis, Ambrose, the others.
What is the reason, according to you, that the fast bowler fascinates the spectator?
Maybe because the fast bowler is exciting to watch. The hair at
the back of your neck sort of prickles when a good fast bowler is
running in to bowl - it is elemental, and that is perhaps why it
is fascinating.
Of late, obituaries are being written on Test cricket. Even at
Lord`s, the spectators were more interested in watching the
Euro Soccer matches on the giant screen, than in watching the
cricket out in the middle...
Sure, Test cricket today has competition from sports like soccer,
tennis, basketball, whatever, but I don`t think Test cricket
will die, I believe it will survive.
But it isn`t just other sports competing for attention, even in
cricket, the one-day variety draws crowds today but the five day
variety seems doomed to die?
I don`t think I agree, I think Test cricket is also very popular round the world. Young people, the ones who get bored fast,
do tend to watch more of one day cricket, but the real test of
a player`s and a team`s ability remains the five day game.
True, the five day game is the true Test - but if nobody
watches it, will it survive?
Well, sure, it might die, who knows? Though I really don`t
think it will happen anytime soon.
Which form of cricket gives you the biggest high?
Test cricket, but of course. No question about it. It is the
true test of a cricketer`s skill, that is what it is all about.
Okay, its been some time since the World Cup but this question is still being hotly debated. So - was Australia justified
in refusing to play its World Cup match in Sri Lanka?
Oh, well, if I was a cricketer, I wouldn`t like the thought of
my head blown off, would you? I`d answer your question by saying, you know it was dangerous to go there.
But Indian and Pakistani players went and played in Colombo and
proved there was no danger. So was Australia merely scared of
playing against Lanka after the controversies of Lanka`s tour
Down Under just prior to that?
(Chuckles) Why would Australia want to miss out on the points
they could have got for a win? Look, I think it is upto the country, any country, to sort out its own problems and not put the
problems on the visitors. Don`t you agree?
Fair enough, but some countries did go and play cricket
there...
Okay. But that does not mean that everyone has to go there.
Just because I put my head in the fire, does that mean you have
to? That`s the analogy I`ll use. You don`t have to do whatever
someone else is doing. Australian cricketers and the Australian cricket board felt it was unsafe to go there. It was
their decision, and I stand by it. In my opinion, if I were the
cricketer in the same situation, I would have refused to go.
I believe Australia is now agreeing to play one day games
there...
Okay, maybe the board and the players have decided that it is now
safe to go there, so they agreed to play. In January, do you
remember how many people were killed in the bomb blast in Sri
Lanka? What if your son, your brother or your husband were asked
to play there, would you have been happy? No? Then judge Australia also by the same yardstick. There, too, there were mothers, sisters, wives protesting that they did not want their
loved ones to go to Sri Lanka at the time. Look, if it was my
son, I would not have wanted him to go, okay?
Pix: Sanjay Ghosh; Pic of Srinath by Pradeep Mandhani
Source :: Rediff On The NeT (https://www.rediff.co.in)