HomeNewsCricketKedar Jadhav, and the hard thing about cricket

Kedar Jadhav, and the hard thing about cricket

Batting under pressure is inherently difficult. A seasoned player like Jadhav struggled to get his bat on the ball. No other sport can make a pro look like a beginner.

October 08, 2020 / 16:57 IST
Story continues below Advertisement

Some people love to criticise cricket as a sport played by a handful of countries and one that has a lot of breaks during a game. They take potshots at cricketers’ supposedly lower fitness levels compared to other athletes.

These comments are okay up to a point, like when you want to rile up arrogant cricketophiles. In truth, many of the complaints against the sport are no longer valid. Few countries may play it but look at the population of some of those countries. The players are extremely fit too, as the game has become faster. As for breaks, they also exist in sports deemed more physically challenging than cricket, such as tennis and basketball.

Story continues below Advertisement

The old chestnut about “playing five days without result” is the most irrelevant dig of all, as Test cricket is no longer the game’s most popular format.

Over and above everything else, cricket is an intrinsically difficult sport. Ask Kedar Jadhav. On October 7 in the IPL, walking in to bat when Chennai Super Kings needed a gettable 39 from 21 balls, Jadhav scored an embarrassing 12-ball 7. He conceded eight dot balls.