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Why 300 Test wickets was no tall order for Ishant Sharma

Ishant started as a pace sensation and went on to play Test cricket inside just six months after making his Ranji trophy debut in November 2006. He had a dream run in his first 34 Tests, then struggled for a while before picking up the pace again from 2015 under Virat Kohli. If he can maintain his form and fitness, he should be able to hit the 400 mark.

February 09, 2021 / 22:49 IST
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Ishant Sharma got his 300th in his 98th Test.

“You haven’t heard of ‘Lambu’ and you claim to follow Delhi cricket,” said a bemused Lalchand Rajput when this writer confessed that he hadn’t heard of teenager Ishant Sharma. That conversation happened on a pleasant afternoon in the first week of June 2006, in Bangalore’s Chinnaswamy stadium, where India’s Under-19 squad was getting ready for the upcoming tour of England. Frankly, the chat with the then India U-19 coach had started with the mention of the prodigious Virat Kohli, who was also part of the same team.

While Rajput was convinced about Kohli’s class (he reckoned that Kohli was as good as Sachin Tendulkar), what surprised me was his prophecy of ‘100-Test material’  for young Delhi pacer Sharma, since only the great Kapil Dev has managed to play that many as a pace bowler from India.  “Sirf dekhne main hi lamba nahi balki lambi race ka ghoda hai Ishant,” added Rajput.  Almost a decade and a half later, Ishant has proved that sometimes longevity itself is enough to grant greatness. Just two short of 100 Test matches, Ishant’s entry into the elite club of 300 wickets as an Indian pacer is an exceptional accomplishment.

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The first Test against England in Chennai may not have been a memorable one for Virat Kohli’s team because of a shocking defeat but the 32-year-old Sharma will always look at this match with a lot of fondness when he hangs up his boots. After all, he was all set to celebrate this personal milestone a year ago in New Zealand. In the first innings of the Wellington Test in February 2020, he had taken a five-wicket haul and the remaining three in the second innings looked inevitable. However, the Indian batting collapsed spectacularly in the second innings of the Test and he got to bowl just a solitary over in the second innings and then missed the tour of Australia because of an unfortunate injury.


One remembers telling Ishant that he was on the verge of a special feat when he was about to take the team bus after finishing his customary press conference in Wellington after the day’s play. Typically, he smiled and just said “Abhi toh bahut khelne hai, bhaiya (I still have a long way to go).”

As good as Zaheer?

Ishant started as a pace sensation and went on to play Test cricket inside just six months after making his Ranji trophy debut in November 2006 (incidentally, that year also marked Kohli’s debut in first-class cricket). Zaheer Khan has retired but his numbers in Test cricket are strikingly similar to Ishant’s figures. In terms of average (32.94 and 32.32) and economy (3.27 and 3.16), the Delhi pacer is better than Zaheer but Zaheer’s strike rate (60.4) is better than Ishant’s(61.1). Both have the same set of five-wicket hauls (11) in an innings and a 10 wicket haul (once) in a match. While Zaheer finished with 311 wickets in 92 matches, Ishant got his 300th in his 98th Test.