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Oct 01, 2012, 01.56 PM IST
Aussie bowling legend Dennis Lillee, whose tenure as the director of the MRF Pace Foundation ends, tells Forbes India that hard work helps you get to the highest level in cricket and harder work ensures your stay there.
Aussie bowling legend Dennis Lillee, whose tenure as the director of the MRF Pace Foundation ends, tells Forbes India that hard work helps you get to the highest level in cricket and harder work ensures your stay there
Dennis Lillee
You wouldn’t be able to do all your other work at the maximum if you didn’t have the mental toughness. Really, you need that because you are going to bowl a lot of overs in the sapping heat. Your wings will ache, your feet will ache, you will be stiff and sore and then you have to front up again the very next day if you are playing a Test match. Then there’s the travel, playing all your T20 tournaments and the need to front up for them. All of that comes from mental application. The only way you can get that is to have a very strong heart, I think.
They are great examples of people who don’t give in. That’s what mental application is. You just don’t give in, no matter what the condition or the situation of the match is. They are running in, charging in and giving a 110 percent.
Bloody hard work! I am a very competitive person. I couldn’t stand losing even a game of Monopoly. You got to have it in you. You have to train super hard.
You are not created or produced as a fast bowler. You are actually born to be a fast bowler. That skill is then honed and training methods are applied. It’s not something where you wave a wand. But the next group that’s coming up has been trained younger by me and they have very good talent. Rituraj Singh and Varun Aaron have been good finds. Both are very good bowlers.
Brett Lee and Peter Siddle bowl at a certain pace throughout; these guys train incredibly hard aerobically. I can’t tell how hard the Indian bowlers train. There are many more components to bowling fast than just having an action. Some people sometimes lose the fact that what gets them there is hard work and what keeps them there is harder work.
I like the T20 game. To answer if having all that much cricket is good to the game or not, is not up to me. It’s up to the players and administrators.
I plan to do some coaching online with a panel of coaches that I’ve trained and respect. We’ll train schools and cricket associations right up to the first class level and Tests if they want to participate. More Forbes India stories The Real World of Business May Need an Academic Lesson The Man Behind Titan's Success: Bhaskar Bhat Giving Higher Education a Boost
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