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Ind vs NZ – 2nd Test – Washington Sundar bursts out of nowhere and announces his all-format chops
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Ind vs NZ – 2nd Test – Washington Sundar bursts out of nowhere and announces his all-format chops

Washington Sundar was not supposed to be in Pune for the second Test against New Zealand. He would be in Coimbatore with his Tamil Nadu teammates for the Ranji Trophy. Three days ago, he was not part of the Indian Test squad. Before Thursday, he had last played a Test match three-and-a-half years ago. As it turned out, he made a fortuitous return to Test cricket, achieving the best figures of his career: 7 for 59.

“It was all God’s plan,” Washington said.

Washington. Pune. God’s plan. Sound familiar?

In 2017, Washington was not going to be part of the IPL, but after an injury to R Ashwin, he bowled Steven Smith during a trial with Rising Pune Supergiant, and they picked him to replace the senior offspinner. At the age of 17, Washington emerged as a powerplay specialist in T20 cricket.

Seven years later, at the site of his T20 emergence, Washington showed he could develop into an all-format player. Ravi Shastri certainly saw it coming and told ESPNcricinfo that he would become India’s “most important all-rounder in all three formats of the game”.

But even Shastri couldn’t have seen Thursday coming.

It is quite unusual for this Indian team to make additions to their squad in the middle of a home Test series unless there are concerns about player fitness or availability. While there were indications on Tuesday that Washington could play on a low-bounce, black-soil pitch in Pune – he had a long spell bowling alongside Ashwin in the nets – it still felt like a challenge that he would replace Kuldeep Yadav in India’s attack. . And no one could have expected him to do that and then surpass Ashwin.

Washington eventually exactly matched Ashwin’s career-best Test figures, with the senior offspinner clapped off his potential successor at the end of New Zealand’s innings.

At the start of the day it was all about Ashwin. Midway through the seventh over, bowled by Jasprit Bumrah, Rohit Sharma signaled to Ashwin that he was ready to bowl. Ashwin got his fifth ball to turn and pin New Zealand captain Tom Latham lbw. Ashwin then had Will Young caught down the leg side with another breakaway that turned. It felt like Ashwin and India were onto something. Fans seeking shelter from the sweltering heat quickly filled the stands.

Washington didn’t quite have the same effect on the Pune crowd, but he quietly worked his way back to Test cricket. There were signs of rust, especially when he bowled short and wide off stump to Young with the leg side packed with six fielders.

Then the ball came to Rachin Ravindra.

Washington went wide from the edge of the wicket and put more spin on the ball, which first led to it dropping and then turning. There was also an inner drive, which took Ravindra in the wrong direction. The ball slid around the outside edge and hit the top, providing a flashback to Ashwin’s dismissal of Alastair Cook in both innings of the 2018 Edgbaston Test.

For much of his career, Washington’s bowling has been tailored to the demands of white-ball cricket, and is generally characterized by speed through the air and flatter trajectories, often with undercut. Of late, he has been working on transforming himself into a more conventional offspinner. After IPL 2024, where he finished with zero wickets and zero runs in all two matches for Sunrisers Hyderabad, he called up S Sriram, the former India and Tamil Nadu all-rounder who has worked as a spin consultant with Australia and Bangladesh, for his input. about how he could become an all-format bowler. Sriram had already worked with Washington at Royal Challengers Bangalore and suggested a few technical adjustments.

“So one thing we talked about was his run-up speed, you know, getting more energy into his run-up instead of just strolling, and more overspin,” Sriram, who followed Washington’s spell from Chennai, told ESPNcricinfo. “He also had a little finger problem recently, so he was recovering from that. So one of the things we talked about is always going back to that overspin, which gives him more bounce. And overspin is only possible if you have done.” that momentum in the run-up.

“If you don’t have momentum in the run-up, it’s very difficult to get that overspin. One of the things we discussed was obviously that bounce was his main weapon. And how he can use that to his advantage in both white ball and red ball cricket.”

In his next over, Washington got the ball to drift away from Tom Blundell before diving and tearing through the gate. Washington is usually a man of little emotion, but this wicket meant so much to him that he pulled out an animated fist pump. Washington was picked primarily to counter a left-handed lineup from New Zealand. This was proof that he could also take down the right-handers.

“I think once he gets the seam angle right and the release right, and with the revs, the drop and the drift will automatically take care of themselves,” Sriram said. “He used the shine to get the drift at the right seam angle. And when the seam is upright, it drops. Like Blundell’s, it fell on him a bit. He went to play with the spin, but the light drift and drop got the wicket.”

Washington then continued to hit the drier, long band on the pitch with laser-like precision and kept the stumps in play. He was rewarded with another five wickets in nine overs.

“I think he was settling in in the first two periods,” Sriram said. “He found the right pace and the right kind of rhythm too. But once he got those two wickets around tea, his confidence grew too. It just happened so quickly for him, which made it look casual. But it wasn’t. so casual.”

Gautam Gambhir welcomed Washington back to the locker room with applause and a big smile. Like Shastri, Gambhir sees Washington as a player of all sizes. He had entrusted him with the Super Over in the Pallekele T20I in July, and Washington responded by bowling India to victory from nowhere.

Gambhir then promoted Washington to number 4 in the next match – the first ODI in Colombo. He didn’t score too much in that game, but his batting potential is clear: he already has three Test fifties to his name, including match-turning interventions in Brisbane and Ahmedabad, and his call-up for Pune came after a Ranji Trophy 152. while he hit number 3.

Sriram is hopeful that Washington will mature as an all-rounder under Gambhir, with whom he worked as an assistant coach at Lucknow Super Giants.

“Yes, I think this will also benefit Gauti,” Sriram said. “Because I think he always rates him highly. Whatever little conversations I had with Gauti in LSG, he always rated Washy very highly. And he is someone, I think, he will use him very well as an all-rounder. Both with bat and ball, he will promote him with the bat at certain times And he will also use him best with the ball and give him the ideal situations where he can succeed in all formats of the game.

Perhaps that is God’s long-term plan.

Deivarayan Muthu is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo