A tribute to fielders
Prem Panicker, in his blog Smoke Signals , pays tribute to the unsung heroes who rarely get the credit they deserve for their impact on the outcomes of cricket matches.
Siddhartha Talya
Prem Panicker, in his blog Smoke Signals, pays tribute to the unsung heroes who rarely get the credit they deserve for their impact on the outcomes of cricket matches.
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Conventional wisdom is that fielding – especially in context of teams such as India, stereotypically lethargic in the field — has really come into its own only in modern times. Really? Think of a close catching cordon that reads: Syed Abid Ali, Sunil Gavaskar, Ajit Wadekar backed by S Venkatraghavan at gully and Eknath Solkar – that short leg specialists’ specialist – in the leg trap, aided and abetted by Syed Kirmani behind the stumps. Now name me a modern-day Indian equivalent to match that line up. [And since Mark Waugh's name came up in Rob's post, compare contemporary Aussie lineups against one that reads the Chappell brothers, Ian Redpath, Doug Walters, Paul Sheehan and Ashley Mallett, and try to top that cordon for close catching.]
Siddhartha Talya is a senior sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo
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