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Washington Sundar: The man with the golden arm floors New Zealand

Washington revels under pressure. As a batsman, he made telling contributions against Australia at the Gabba and against England in Ahmedabad. On Thursday in Pune, he turned out to be the man with the golden arm.

October 24, 2024 / 20:40 IST
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Washington Sundar claimed 7/59 to break the backbone of New Zealand batting. (BCCI Photo)

By midway into the final session on Day 1, the narrative had changed. “What an inspirational selection this is,” Sunil Gavaskar said on air. Ravi Shastri had a word of praise for the people who were instrumental in Washington Sundar's selection. Out there in the middle at the MCA Stadium ground in Pune, the Tamil Nadu off-spinner wore a sheepish smile after completing his maiden fifer in Test. He would go on to claim 7/59 to break the backbone of New Zealand batting. From 197/3 at one stage, the tourists folded up for 259 in their first innings.

In a must-win game, after losing the Bangalore Test, India made three changes to their playing XI. Fit-again Shubman Gill returned to the side at the expense of KL Rahul. The team management rightly rewarded Sarfaraz Khan's excellent 150 in the first Test and retained him. Akash Deep for Mohammed Siraj was also expected, given the latter’s downturn in form of late. But Washington for Kuldeep Yadav raised many an eyebrow. The hosts have opted for a turner for the second Test and Kuldeep is a bowler who can make things happen.

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On the face of it, Washington’s inclusion felt like a defensive move. It was as if India had been regressing to a 7-4 (seven batsmen and four bowlers) combination, on the heels of 46 all out. Washington’s CV describes him as an all-rounder, but by his own admission, he is a specialist batsman who can bowl off-spin. Only a few days ago, after scoring a century in a Ranji Trophy game, batting at No. 3, the 25-year-old called himself a “specialist batsman”. From that perspective, Washington running through New Zealand’s batting was as exhilarating as it was unexpected.

Rachin Ravindra was his first wicket. After scoring a magnificent century in the first Test, the southpaw yet again was threatening to take the game away from India. Washington dismissed him with a ripper - a delivery bowled from wide of the crease landed on good length and turned just enough to go past the outside edge to hit the off stump.