Big hitter takes the big stage
Dimitri Mascarenhas can bash 'em with the best of them. And now he's got the perfect stage to do it on
Andrew Miller
11-Sep-2007
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If the opinions of a certain Shane Warne had had any influence on the decisions
of England's selectors, then Dimitri Mascarenhas would not have remained a
secret of the county circuit for so long. A nearly man in England's one-day
reckoning for most of the 2000s, the closest Mascarenhas ever looked like
coming to international honours was his selection for the Hong Kong Sixes in
2004.
Perhaps that now counts as a premonition, for Mascarenhas will be back on
truncated international duty in the coming fortnight, and this time the eyes
of the world will be watching. He may have been drafted into the ICC World
Twenty20 as a late replacement for the injured Ryan Sidebottom, but after
his feats against India in the week just gone, his name will be one of the
very first that Paul Collingwood scribbles down on his team-sheet to face
Zimbabwe on Thursday.
Warne always said that Mascarenhas could strike a cricket ball - in fact, he
likened his style to that of the Australian one-day allrounder, Ian Harvey,
who was nicknamed "Freak" for his ability to make things happen with bat,
ball, and in the field. But Mascarenhas' exploits in the sixth and penultimate ODI
at The Oval went way beyond even the expectations of his
devoted captain.
Yuvraj Singh was the bowler - an unusual choice for the 50th
over of a one-day international, but then again, throughout England's
innings India's spinners had been the most economical option available to
Rahul Dravid. For one and a half balls, Yuvraj seemed an inspired choice.
Mascarenhas swung expansively at his first delivery and missed, and though
he connected with the second, the shot was stunningly snaffled by a diving
Piyush Chawla at cow corner.
But Chawla's momentum matched that of Mascarenhas's bat - he skidded over
the ropes in his follow-through and the umpire signalled a maximum. There
would be no more misjudgments to hold the batsman back. For the third
delivery Mascarenhas took a stride outside leg and mowed Yuvraj for the
flattest, fastest blow of the innings. The next ball was looped onto leg
stump, so Mascarenhas went up and under, and lofted his shot high into the stands at
midwicket.
With 300 now on the board, anything else was a bonus. So Mascarenhas opened
his shoulders to their maximum possible width and drilled Yuvraj towards
the hospitality boxes in the Laker Stand. With the crowd on their feet and
the scoreboard spinning off its axis, Yuvraj came around the wicket to
disrupt Mascarenhas's rhythm, but to no avail. The final ball of a historic
over was slapped contemptuously in the same direction as the rest.
Mascarenhas had given an inkling of his abilities in the second game of the
series at Bristol, when his 52 from 39 balls had carried England to within
nine runs of India's vast 329. Then as now, he struck five sixes in his innings. Only once has one of his international boundaries bounced
before reaching the rope. He could not have timed his charge to the
Twenty20s more gloriously.
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But Mascarenhas' game is about more than just big hitting. In the decisive
seventh match of the NatWest Series, it was his stone-cold seamers that
broke the back of India's challenge. With Matt Prior standing up to keep the
batsmen honest, Mascarenhas bowled his ten overs straight off the reel, grabbed three
vital wickets, including Robin Uthappa and the luckless Yuvraj, and didn't
concede a boundary until his 51st delivery.
As Jeremy Snape's selection for the Twenty20s will testify, it is those
bowlers who can take the pace off the ball who tend to thrive in this most
frantic form of cricket. Mascarenhas can thump it with the best of them, is
an asset in the field with his sparky, athletic demeanour, and in domestic
Twenty20 games for Hampshire he has taken 30 wickets in 24 matches,
including the format's first hat-trick - against Sussex at Hove in 2004.
He's got the knowhow and he's brimming with confidence as England touch
down in Cape Town. Mascarenhas' journey has taken him from a family
heritage in Sri Lanka to an upbringing in Melbourne and Perth, to a
fulfilling but under-rewarded career with Hampshire at the Rose Bowl. In the
coming fortnight he has the chance to underline the suspicion that England's
limited-overs renaissance is more than just a flash in the pan. If that
happens, then Warne for one will say: "I told you so."
Andrew Miller is UK editor of Cricinfo