Cricinfo Blogs
cricinfo.com About cricinfoblogs
Beyond The Blues Beyond The Test World Different Strokes From the Editor Girls Aloud Iain O'Brien Inbox
It Figures Pak Spin Shot Selection The Buzz The Confectionery Stall The Surfer Tour Diaries

Cricinfo Blogs Home
Inbox From our readers

« The view from Old Blighty - 5 | | Modi's comedy show »

In Defence of Sreesanth

Posted by Cricinfo - on 05/16/2009

From Ravi Kumar Putcha, Singapore

How do you defend someone who is so overtly aggressive? How do you try to make a case for the talent of the IPL’s much maligned and much abused bowler when it is the sideshow everyone seems to care for? It is not easy, but if players who use performance-enhancing drugs have a right of appeal and if bowlers called for chucking have a shot at rehabilitation what, crime has Sreesanth committed that we are all being so hard on him?

This whole thing started off with Matthew Hayden - 486 runs from 11 matches, the orange cap, and a good match against a guy returning from a long lay-off - and Hayden was off. People should have realised that for a player who called an opponent "obnoxious weed" and who thought nothing of the contradiction between calling India a "third world country" and then running after the money the Indian Premier League offered, even after retirement, calling a struggling quick an "overrated bowler" was no great leap of imagination or faith. Nor is this a big deal for a man who criticized his Indian opponents for batting for their ODI hundreds, only for Cricinfo to prove, with statistics, that the slowest player to go from 50 to 100 in ODIs at the same time he offered this precious gem was, unsurprisingly enough, Matthew Hayden.

And then, of course, there were his graceless barbs directed at Ishant Sharma, who was still finding his feet in world cricket on a tour of Australia. But if this article is about Sreesanth, where does Hayden fit in? He does, you see, because the opponent he dismissed with so much contempt was the same bowler whose bowling proved so vital to India's success at the T20 World Cup in 2007. One of the batsmen whose skin he got under, and dismissed, was Matthew Hayden. But back to Sreesanth.

Like a lot of people, I had never really heard of Sreesanth, nor would I have been able to answer the trivia question that forms part of his Cricinfo player page. When India headed to the West Indies, a rare Test series without Sachin Tendulkar, it was with probably their least experienced bowling attack in ages. Along side Kumble and Harbhajan were three relative rookies - Sreesanth, Munaf and VRV Singh. And yet, some of Sreesanth’s performances stood out - the snorter that got Brian Lara in the decisive final test, the beauty that gave Gayle a pair in that crucial fourth innings of the same test. So when India arrived in South Africa for a Test series, at a time when India's famed batting line up was struggling, the last thing anyone expected was for a nearly unknown Indian quick to lead the bowling to a demolition of South Africa as they were dismissed for 84.

After India had cobbled together a meagre 249 runs, the South African batting line up was laid low by Sreesanth's 5/40, and at one point, with the score reading 45/7, the more hopeful of India's fans, self included, rather naively believed that a follow-on was not unrealistic. As Mickey Arthur admitted after the first Test, India's bowlers taught the SA quicks how to bowl in those home conditions, Sreesanth clearly led the way. Unfortunately, India blew their chances and contrived to lose a series they had started so well. India had it bad, but Sreesanth came away with a good showing. His bowling in South Africa was promising, though he made headlines for his impromptu dance number in response to Andre Nel's sledging, which is probably still on Youtube.

With all this, the series to England should have been the point where Sreesanth "arrived" in Test cricket. After all, so many Indian bowlers have discovered that bowling in England can be so good for their confidence - no, this is not a slight at England's batting, but merely a reflection of how well India's swing and seam bowlers have utilised the conditions to help India win in England, and he appeared to be one of India's better swing bowlers. However, things went totally awry - a beamer to Pietersen and Atherton's subsequent refusal to accept that his apology had been genuine highlighted a series where Sreesanth slipped behind Zaheer Khan and the fast-emerging RP Singh in the quick bowling stakes.

All this while, something else was building up - where his pre-delivery routine drew indulgent admiration from commentators and "fans" alike, his break dancing abilities made him very popular on one of several get-rich-quick Indian TV programs which discovered the "world champs" after India won the Twenty20 cup. But as time went by, and results were not always as one would have liked, his hitherto grudgingly accepted aggression became the focal point for all - "fans" and commentators alike. Players from opposing teams were just as willing to get in and say a few things to him, believing somehow that his overt aggression was in any way worse than the beautifully defined "mental disintegration" tactics.

And there was the break dancing - where it had once been a source of applause and admiration, however grudging, people were beginning to show that there was only so much tolerance they were willing to display. And while some of us, yours truly being in a somewhat minuscule percentage, looked forward to his return at the IPL, the knives were being sharpened. Three matches - one each against the rampaging nice-guy Hayden, Rajasthan, and against Dwayne Bravo, the last being just one over - turned the tide. In between, he was at the receiving end of Harbhajan's anger during the first IPL, an action that seemed to harm the offender less than the one offended against. After Hayden's comments, chat forums were agog with talk that he was overrated. And to make things worse, a nearly unknown Indian movie actress offered her rather self-important sounding tuppence, which included calling him an "insignificant player", the irony of which may have been probably lost on her personally.

To add to his woes, the now widely-read blogger chose to anoint him with a most offensive and unbecoming moniker, probably more out of envy. In an IPL where all but one of India's premier bowlers were struggling to make a mark, this probably damaged Sreesanth more than any thing on the cricket field - and ironically, a cricketer who has been criticised for not being enough of one, was being reviled by someone who sought the comfort that anonymity offered, and whose comments were not in the slightest concerned with cricket, and the cricket-result-loving public lapped up this non-cricketing abuse eagerly.

Having said all that, it is fair to contend that Sreesanth has brought it upon himself. At a time when he should have been focusing on his bowling, he comes across, from the perspective of a cricket fan who does not know him personally, as a man of extremes. When Sreesanth offers praise, it is not always fulsome - it is over the top. When Sreesanth offers aggro, it is ditto. And he seems to fall apart in matches just as spectacularly. It is to his credit that despite all he is having to contend with, he is willing to keep playing and keep trying.

However, there is reason to believe that if Sreesanth can sort out all that is holding him back, he holds tremendous promise. Sample, for instance, the fact that in terms of overall bowling stats he more than holds his own against the current incumbents - the resurgent Zaheer Khan, flavour-of-the-season Ishant Sharma, the extremely promising RP Singh, and other contenders to the quick bowling slots in India's Test team such as Munaf Patel, Irfan Pathan and Praveen Kumar In fact when you do a comparison of these bowlers in terms of their strike rates, wickets per match, averages etc, Sreesanth does very well - so well does he perform, that in a ranking of India's top ODI and test bowlers he would be very close to the top on all of these parameters. But, as Cricinfo points out, he loses out on the one parameter that is so critical to the shorter and shortest versions of cricket - economy rates. In a ranking of India's top 50 bowlers in ODIs, Sreesanth comes in at #50 on this parameter.

In the shorter versions, his career is littered with such instances - 21 runs to Bravo in the recent IPL match, three sixes to Sohail Tanvir in the World T20 finals, an expensive first over to Imran Nazir in the same match and so on. There is, hence, probably a strong case for believing that in the case of Sreesanth, he may be the first of his kind in India - a specialist Test bowler, who needs time to evolve into an ODI/T20 bowler. But more importantly, there is reason to hope that if he can sort out his mental devils, Sreesanth will be able to fulfill the promise he offered in South Africa and in the West Indies. The question though is, with a headline-hungry media, an instantly forgetful cricket watching public, and an unwilling cricket organisation - in the form of Captain and selectors - who will give him the chance? More so, will Sreesanth give himself that chance?

 
Feedback Feedback
Comments Submit your piece >>

Posted by: giri at May 16, 2009 7:06 AM

"what crime has sreesanth committed"? i mean he gets smacked for three sixes and then still sledges hayden. accepted, hayden's "third world country", "obnoxious weed" comments were nonsense and nobody's justifying them, they were condemned by the media. he was even summoned by the CA for his "ow" comments.i dont think anybody should defend sreesanth but at the same time the media tolerates ur war dance when u do well but jumps on ur back the moment u fail.and i dont think anybody believes the kkr blogger's words as gospel truth.

Posted by: Kaushik Lakshman at May 16, 2009 9:41 AM

Good analysis....
Sreeshanth has been a pretty good bowler except at present. Hayden hates him no doubt, but then Hayden seems to despises practically anything to do with this 3rd world country, be it Bhajji or Ishant. dont know y people hate him for his aggression. After all this current lot of Indian cricketers have leant to b aggressive from their Aussie counterparts && mayb tht theyperform better against the World champs than the remaining teams. Thgh Sreeshant shud keep his temeper in check as now it is affecting his game..
But he is a fantastic bowler..Give him some time.. He has come back from an injury lay off. He has proved himself in the past. Remeber the T20 semi against OZ in the last WC...He took 2 wickets for 12 runs in 4 over single handedly winning tht match wen the Aussies were looking comfortable.

Posted by: Dinks at May 17, 2009 6:29 AM

I don't dislike Sreeshanth, because I am a great believer that if you dish it out you must be able to take it. I think he must be very annoying otherwise his own team mate would not have slapped him. But I disagree that they preform better against the Aussies than any other team. I think that accolade should go to South Africa.

Posted by: Naveen at May 17, 2009 7:16 AM

Loved this piece! Ppl seem to have really short memories. The IPL is not yet over, and hope Sreesanth comes back with a few good spells in the next couple of matches. Have added this blog and made this post the featured post in our blogroll site for cricket blogs www.cricket.superblogroll.com. Do check it out for a one-stop-shop site for reading on.

Posted by: Ajith at May 17, 2009 8:33 AM

I am very happy that someone wrote an article in support of sreesanth.
As sreesanth said,the best is yet to come.

Posted by: Dan at May 18, 2009 1:26 AM

Nice article. very well thought off! Sreesanth will hopefully make a comeback from his injuries, sooner than later. All we need for the pace bowling cupboard to look barren is one inevitable injury to the top two pacers. Compared to Munaf or RP, Sree is way ahead as a test bowler. We dont miss him right now because Zack and Ishant are not burnt out yet nor have they had a serious injury.

Posted by: Yogesh at May 19, 2009 4:01 AM

Sreesanth, Zaheer and Ishant can be a fabulous bowling attack. But if the captain needs to answer more questions about the bowlers words and actions than his bowling, you know with whom the blame lies. After being whacked all round the park if you still indulge in gimmicks, you look a fool. And that is what Sreesanth repeatedly does. The problem is he keeps requiring such Hayden-like dosages to bowl well.

Posted by: Nagesh at May 19, 2009 7:19 AM

Ravi, lovely article. As with other writeups of yours to which we as friends of yours have been privy to, this is beautifully constructed and well said. Its not a fair world unfortunately like you pointed out. Hope the bowler in Sreesanth wins... even if that means he becomes a pure test bowler. In fact that may be the best thing to happen to Indian test cricket.

Posted by: Avid.Cricket.Watcher at May 19, 2009 8:05 AM

Good reading. I vividly recall Sreesanth's bowling in the 1st test in SA (Donald was very impressed with his bolt-upright seam position) as well as in the T20 SF where he clean-bowled both Gilchrist and Hayden, and was easily the bowler of the match. So I don't believe his talent is over-rated. But I really feel unless he seriously improves in temperament, and learns to control his emotions (rather than vice versa, as has been the case) he might well become an also-ran. That would indeed be a pity, given his talent.
PS: I was really put off by Hayden's infamous comments in the past, and maybe Sreesanth remembers those, but still it is quite pathetic to sledge a batsmen on his dismissal after being smashed for 20 runs in an over. But then, fast bowlers are rarely models of decency! (Except Brett Lee, perhaps)

Posted by: BASS 1298 at May 19, 2009 1:11 PM

I would first like to thank th writer for defending sree.I personally feel that he is never an over rated bowler.If he is so he could have not survived in Indian cricket for a such a long time.The only thing is he gets a bit too emotional that too in cases of Australians.He is badly injured and he has made his come back in a t20 format which is an in and out batsmen's game.It is impossible to get a 5 wicket haul in the very first match.Even the players who are playing regular international cricket like Ishanth,Munaf,Irfan,Zaheer are bruised and battered.There are some exceptional cases like R.P who has been out of the world and taking 4 wkts in his come back match, but I don't think R.P has such a serious injury.So all cheers to shree and hope he takes the wkt of Hayden in the next match.

Posted by: P.Satish at May 20, 2009 8:00 AM

Interestingly, Bhajji's slap hasn't had an effect on Sreesanth and am glad it hasn't. Bhajji himself has a major attitude problem which includes whinging about all and sundry except his own bowling when things are bad.

Coming to Sreesanth, the media plays a very very important role in creating perceptions. And currently Sreesanth is the bad boy flavour of the season. He will now be expertly dissected whenever things don't go his way, his superb spells in the last two games conveniently forgotten.

Hayden here is pretty much behaving like a schoolyard bully. Instead of newcomers Ishant and Sreesanth, he should try picking on someone with his experience like Kumble. Of course, he would find its a whole new ball-game when he bangs his quite swollen head against that wall.

Posted by: Andrew at May 21, 2009 10:21 PM

So is this an article sticking up for sreesanth or an article designed that way but to actually have a go a t Matthew hayden for things done a year and a half ago (while also conveniently forgetting that the indians played an equal part in that fiasco). At the end of the day sreesanth maybe a good bowler but like Andrew Symonds in Australias case you need to measure his potential on the field to his fluctuating form and potential problems off the field. As for the comments about Hayden. He had the record to defend him while unproven youngsters were abusing him. Thats why he comes back at people like Sreesanth and Sharma. When they have a great long term record he would be the first to praise them.

Posted by: Looch at May 22, 2009 12:44 AM

Sreesanth and Hayden are both play the game aggresively. I think it amusing to see that the comments condemn Hayden for this yet they jump to the defence of Sreesanth for the same attitude. The main difference is that Hayden has acheived much over a long period of time whereas Sreesanth has a very average record and is an inconsistent performer and is known for his behaviour rather than his cricket and this will count against him in the future, as the author succintly put in his last sentence.

Posted by: Biju at May 25, 2009 4:18 PM

Who cares about the comments from Hyden-Sree is still a capable bowler.Gavaskar observed that after Kapil and Hardly he has not seen a better bowler like Sreesanth who bowls with perfect seam position.You can rate his bowling with one bowl which bowled Dhoni in their last match.We can see the sign of his return of form in the end matches.I don't think he has attitude problem -I am sure he will come back to test cricket soon.Good luck to him.

Posted by: Vikas Pallan at June 6, 2009 6:41 AM

Sree has a huge attitude problem and Dravid once famously said he gives him white hair. There is no need to be aggressive, he can make the ball do the talking. I think he may be suited for test matches that too if he could fit in into the team with the bowlers we have - Zaheer, Ishant, R.P, Munaf and Pathan, and these guys let the ball do the talking not the tongues. I am not supporting Hayden but Sreesanth must be brought back to ground and somebody must tell him that he needs to respect others.

Posted by: sam at July 1, 2009 8:42 PM

Can everyone just leave Sreesanth alone. He is an extraordinary cricketer with just a very big & colourful personality which might clash with people at times but we all know that india needs him coz he's an awesome & fierce bowler:)

Posted by: vibh_ch at July 22, 2009 8:13 AM

Very well compiled article about a unique player and character.One thing that fascinates me about Sreesanth is that he never loses his heart.Remember Jberg and that Lords test where he batted with MSD for the last wicket to save the match and ultimately win the series against England.Another thing so unique about him is that he is probably the only one in India who can bowl well on any wicket in tests,whereas others become ineffective when conditions do not assist swing.Mind you,he is also a swing bowler.Zaheer is the one who has come of age and can bowl well anywhere.Ishant will one day get there.Also,I don`t mind if he becomes a test specialist and does not play ODIs.This will not cause burnout.Its better not to play that damn T20s.

Posted by: Faraz at October 24, 2009 1:40 PM

he will be on the action soon

  Post your comment
Posting Guidelines >>
Name:
Email Address:
Comments:
characters left
About this blog
'Inbox' will feature submissions from you with us playing gatekeeper as we do with the rest of the site. We will set no rules apart from ensuring a certain quality that you have come to associate with Cricinfo. You may write on the aspects of the game that you hold dear; about matters that rile you; about players, teams and trends; you may share your memories and views, and you may so do so in 100 words or 500. The only tip we will give you is to repeat a line from our style sheet: Brevity is not just the soul of wit, it is the heart of all writing. Welcome. (Editor, Cricinfo)
Submit your piece >>
Categories
About American cricket Ashes Australian Cricket Bangla cricket Batting Bowling Cricket through the decades Crowds English cricket Extras Fans Fielding IPL Indian cricket League cricket New Zealand cricket Pakistan cricket Pitches Rankings Rules T20 World Cup Twenty20 Umpiring West Indies Cricket World cricket
Recent Posts
A cricketing renaissance Grandmasters of cricket Where are my slippers? The genesis of a cricket nut Mystery and Magic: Iverson, Ramadhin, Gleeson and Mendis Mystery of the missing wrist-spinners Finetuning D/L method for Twenty20s The chinaman bowler - odd man in Chris Martin: A Rabbit's Tale The art of swing
Archives
November 2009October 2009September 2009August 2009July 2009June 2009May 2009April 2009March 2009February 2009January 2009December 2008November 2008October 2008September 2008August 2008
RSS Feeds RSS Feed
© Cricinfo 2009