cricinfo.com About cricinfoblogs
Blogs home
First Class, first person Blues Brothers Rob's Lobs Tour Diaries Pak Spin Girls Aloud
Beyond The Test World On The Circuit What's New The Surfer It Figures The IPL Buzz

Cricinfo Blogs Home

« Déjà vu for Ali Asad and Imad Wasim | Where time becomes a loop »

New Zealand's Kanpur connection

Posted by George Binoy on 02/27/2008 in Under-19 World Cup





New Zealand U-19 bowlers Trent Boult and Anurag Verma before their semi-final against India © George Binoy

There were two players born in Kanpur playing the semi-final between India and New Zealand. One was Tanmay Srivastava, India's No. 3 batsman, while the other was New Zealand medium-pacer Anurag Verma, whose family migrated when he was nine years old. And by coincidence, Tanmay bowled Anurag during the final overs of New Zealand's innings and Anurag duly returned the favour by having Tanmay caught in India's chase. Were they aware that they were born in the same city? You bet.

Anurag's family moved to New Zealand in 2000 and he says that he never played serious cricket while he was in India, only after-school games with friends. After his shift to New Zealand, a friend asked him to play for his team on Saturdays, and he's been playing ever since.

"Everything was quite different at first in New Zealand but I adjusted pretty well," Anurag says. "When I started playing cricket I didn't make representative sides. I didn't make my first regional side until the Under-15 level for Northern Districts. Then I moved on to U-17 but didn't make it the first year. I did play the second year and then broke into the U-19 side in 2007-08."

If India thought they could talk shop on the field in Hindi without the New Zealand team getting wise to their plans, they thought wrong. Anurag can converse fluently in Hindi and says they still speak it at home. His early years in India made Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid his favourite cricketers and he still looks up to them and follows their progress with the senior Indian team. When he's asked the inevitable question - whom does he back when India plays New Zealand - Anurag has this to say.

"It doesn't really bother me," he says with a laugh, "but I'd go for New Zealand first. I'll be supporting New Zealand first when India visit in 2008 but it wouldn't really bother me. I wouldn't mind if Sachin scored a 100 and New Zealand won."

Incidentally, Anurag also has the scalp of an ex-Test cricketer to show off. He played in a Twenty20 game against a Masters XI in New Zealand and picked up Matt Horne's wicket. "He's played around 35 Tests, so I was pretty pleased!"

Contributors

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan
Andrew McGlashan
Paul Coupar
John Stern
Dileep_Premachandran
Anand Vasu
George Binoy
Andrew Miller
Will Luke
Charlotte Edwards
Sidharth Monga
S Rajesh
Kumar Sangakkara
Edward Craig
Nagraj Gollapudi
Jenny Thompson
Isobel Joyce
Urooj Mumtaz
Cri-Zelda Brits
Lawrence Booth
Cricinfo

Categories
2007 World Cup Champions Trophy DLF Cup England Women in India England in Australia, 2006-07 England in India, 2005-06 England in New Zealand 2007-08 England in Sri Lanka, 2007-08 ICC Women's World Cup Qualifiers, 2007-08 ICC World Twenty20 India and South Africa in Ireland, 2007 India in Australia 2007-08 India in Bangladesh, 2007 India in England, 2007 India in Pakistan 2005-06 India in South Africa 2006-07 India in West Indies 2006 Indian Premier League Kumar Sangakkara diary Quadrangular series, Ireland, 2007 Sri Lanka tri-series 2006 Under-19 World Cup World Cricket League
Recent Posts
Hectic and surreal English interests Momentum is over-rated The aftermath of The Slap Indian Foreign Legion? Slapgate - the IPL's first controversy Warne, a pocketful of sunshine Storm in the cheering corner Random thoughts from the first leg Expect the unexpected
Archives
May 2008April 2008March 2008February 2008January 2008December 2007November 2007September 2007August 2007July 2007June 2007May 2007March 2007February 2007January 2007December 2006November 2006October 2006September 2006August 2006July 2006June 2006May 2006March 2006February 2006January 2006
cricket links
The Guardian The Daily Telegraph The Times The Independent The Age Sydney Morning Herald The Australian NZ Herald SuperSport BBC Rediff
Web Feeds
© Cricinfo 2007