| Nehra rips through England in India’s best pace show ever
He began the day sitting in the dressing-room,
waiting for the results of his fitness test as his possible replacement
warmed up outside. He ended it with 6 wickets for 23 runs, the third-best
bowling figures in world cup history.
In between, Ashish Nehra bowled 10 inspired,
lethal overs in one single spell to destroy England almost singlehanded,
and to redefine the face of Indian cricket: roll over batsmen, the pace
attack is winning the matches. For when was the last time all wickets
(bar one run-out) fell to Indian pacers?
Harbhajan, Dravid, Yuvraj and Kaif rush to Nehra after he despatches Michael
Vaughan. (Reuters) Perhaps Nehra took heart from the brilliant speed and
swing of Srinath and Zaheer, who kept beating the English batsmen —
13 times between the 6th and 10th overs. But they could only pick up one
wicket between them when Nehra walked in for his spell.
Zaheer and Srinath may have swung the ball
a bit too much, so that it missed the all-important edge. Nehra was a
shade slower than the two and found the conditions perfect, pitching the
ball bang on the blind spot and then moving it away. That was his stock
ball — for the batsmen, the shock ball. What made the delivery deadly
was the speed: at 140 kmph, it gave the batsman little time to pull away
from the shot he’d been induced into.
He had to wait till the second for his first
wicket, the prize scalp of English skipper Nasser Hussain: an away-swinger
that took the edge and went behind to Dravid. Four more wickets were taken
in this manner but the best was the one that felled Paul Collingwood.
The all-rounder was squared up by a delivery that moved in the air towards
leg and middle and then took off towards the off, kissed the bat and sped
towards the strategically placed lone slip. The one incoming ball which
fetched Nehra a wicket was to Alec Stewart; the England ’keeper
had no time to move as it hit him on the pads in middle and leg.
Nehra’s a bowler who’s suffered
more than his share of injuries since a promising debut against Zimbabwe
two years ago. It was against Zimbabwe, ironically, that he surprised
everybody by clocking over 140kphs. That prompted Ganguly to give him
the new ball against Namibia. But after bowling just one delivery he injured
his ankle and had to leave the field. He spent the next three days in
limbo and almost didn’t make it today. Then he heard destiny calling.
Republished from
The Asian Age
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