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RANJI RAVES

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Posted: Jan 19, 2008 at 1247 hrs IST
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If anyone was researching the impact of Twenty20 on the game, checking the statistics of the 2007-2008 Ranji season would certainly help. As the domestic season kicked off within months of India winning the Twenty20 World Cup, big hits were the order of the day. A total of 155 sixes and 1850 boundaries were recorded before the Ranji final. That’s 251 more boundaries in comparison to last season.
Baroda’s Yusuf Pathan heads the list of batsmen with the highest strike rate of 110.12. With the exception of Hyderabad’s VVS Laxman, Karnataka’s Sudhindra Shinde and Bengal’s Laxmi Ratan Shukla, all batsmen with a strike rate of more than 60 are below 25 years of age. A total of 11 batsmen have managed 100 or more runs through fours and sixes. Tamil Nadu’s Murali Vijay heads the slam bang lists with 22 fours and seven sixes. Vijay’s seven hits over the fence, in fact, are the highest number of sixes hit in an innings this season’s Ranji matches.
And this urgency at the domestic level saw a few old myths shatter. Batsmen known for sedate and solid batting styles were — as Delhi opener Aakash Chopra puts it — letting their hair down. A few rare sightings this season were: Mumbai skipper Amol Muzumdar hitting a six, the usually restrained Chopra reaching 50 before his more aggressive opening partner Gautam Gambhir and Mohammad Kaif repeatedly hitting the ball out of the ground. Kaif’s eight big hits makes him the third on the highest 6s chart.
And the charge of the boys from the small towns of India continued this season, with bowling seeming to be their forte. Five of the top ten wicket-takers this season hail from places like Una, Davanagere, Rajkot, Meerut and Ghaziabad. After years of batting-dominated seasons, in 2007-2008 the bowlers repeatedly hit the headlines. With 27 outright victories, it seems that the days of marathon innings which led to lame first-inning leads are finally over.

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Trials and travails
Saurashtra happens to be the only team this season that had an “all games away’ schedule. They started from the heights of Dharamshala, came down to less chilly but certainly wintry Delhi and moved to Jaipur for the first three games. This was followed by their biggest journey of the season — a 2112 kms journey down to Mysore. Saurashtra played the quarter finals at Mumbai, celebrated new year at home and got knocked out in the semi-final at Baroda. All that meant they logged roughly 7000 kms for the season. But not once did any of the players complain of jet leg, airlines delay or getting stranded at the airport. They couldn’t have. Team Saurashtra travel by train.
Gujarat won the Plate final on an empty stomach. With Railways bowlers threatening to run through their rivals and Gujarat making a mountain of the 150 runs molehill target, the dressing room was tense. Gujarat captain Parthiv Patel recalls: “We skipped lunch, we didn’t change the position in which we sat and not a word was uttered during the final stages of the game.” But with the score reading 131/7 and Railways getting a sniff of victory, there was a lot being said on the field. Gujarat leggie Jay Desai, who scored the most important 17 runs of his young career, says Murali Kartik and Sanjay Bangar did their best to psyche him. “Things they said, I can’t repeat,” is Desai’s way of describing sledging.
But Desai had a final say and the last laugh too. After hitting a four off Kartik, the 20-year-old found his voice. “ Jaa ball leke aa,” he said to the veteran. Moments later he was perched on the shoulders of his teammates as Gujarat had won the Plate final.
With domestic Cricket still getting used to 15 camera live telecasts, a few slip-ups are always on the cards. The in-camera toss for the Ranji semi-final between Baroda and Delhi at Indore saw match referee Rajendra Jadeja from Saurashtra in a head-tail confusion. Delhi skipper Gautam Gambhir flipped the coin and his counterpart Connor Williams called heads. Heads it was, but Jadeja announced it was tails. Connor was shocked but the presence of television commentator and a veteran of such occasions, Arun Lal, saved the day. Lal’s intervention ended the confusion as Connor opted to bat.

... contd.

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