| 25.5.2008
A few players supposedly past their
sell-by dates have been showing the young ones how it's
done this past month and some
Old
dog, old tricks: Sanath Jayasuriya blazes away © Getty
Images
When
I was a young lad my father, Martin, would often wander
round the house singing, "The old grey mare, she ain't
what she used to be, ain't what she used to be, ain't what
she used to be." A catchy phrase will always capture
the imagination of a young kid and in this instance I was
also encouraged by not having to slave over a song sheet
to learn the words. While nowadays the brutal truth of those
words is regularly brought home to me, occasionally an "old
grey mare" strikes back and it's glorious to behold.
The
IPL has provided us with two exhilarating examples. First,
36-year-old Adam Gilchrist hit a blazing century off a mere
42 balls and then Sanath Jayasuriya, two years Gilchrist's
senior, followed suit and belted a hundred off 45. Jayasuriya
and Gilchrist, the two super-slugging openers of their era,
are on the way out but they haven't forgotten that adoring
fans are deserving of an encore.
It
was Jayasuriya who first decided fast bowlers needed to
be jolted out of their cosy existence, and inspired by his
deeds, Gilchrist followed suit and added to the accelerating
ulcer rate among quickies. It takes a hell of a lot of skill
to constantly attack new-ball bowlers with what appears
at times to be reckless abandon, but it also requires considerable
nerve.
One
of the finest fast bowlers I faced, Andy Roberts of the
West Indies, probably best summed up the mindset of the
opening batsman. When I once chided him about "dumb
fast bowlers" he responded by saying, "Ian, the
only people sillier than fast bowlers are the opening batsmen
who face up to them."
Jayasuriya
first captured the world's attention in a duet with Romesh
Kaluwitharana against India in the 1996 World Cup. Sachin
Tendulkar had fulfilled Indian expectations with a sublime
century that posed a stiff test but the dynamic duo silenced
the ecstatic Delhi crowd by racing to 42 in only three overs.
Jayasuriya went on to score a brazen 79 off 76 balls to
lead an improbable Sri Lankan victory. It sent shivers down
the spine just watching on television.
However,
that was nothing compared to watching Jayasuriya live in
Singapore a few weeks later. He decided to go solo, smashing
balls into the treetops and lofting good deliveries out
of the ground, with one finishing on the steps of City Hall.
In the process he made some good fast bowlers distinctly
apprehensive. Pakistan's Aaqib Javed only half-jokingly
said he wouldn't turn up for the next tournament if Jayasuriya
was playing.
By
the end of the tournament Jayasuriya had set the record
for both the fastest 50 and 100. Every time he batted people
put down their drinks and jostled for a vantage point because
they didn't want to miss a ball of this mastery. On the
final night Jayasuriya walked through the Singapore Cricket
Club bar and everyone rose to applaud him, including four
ex-international captains and that is a memory that will
stay with me to the end (or until I get Alzheimer's).
Gilchrist
had that same ability to empty bars and fill cricket grounds.
In the 2007 World Cup final he launched a daring assault
on the Sri Lankan attack (perhaps as a personal tribute
to Jayasuriya) and played an innings that single-handedly
placed the trophy in Ricky Ponting's grasp for the second
successive time. Most cricketers only dream of making a
century in the World Cup final but Adam Gilchrist scored
exactly 100 of his exceptional 149 runs in boundaries. It
was a skilful innings and an amazingly daring display in
such an important game.
As
an "old grey mare" Gilchrist now has the satisfaction
of posting the fourth-fastest century in a Twenty20, a game
supposedly for the young and restless. Occasionally the
old can become restless. Just ask Shane Warne.
At
38 years and retired from all forms of cricket bar IPL,
Warne has taken the tournament by storm, leading the Rajasthan
Royals into the semi-finals with inspiring leadership and
aggressive play. Following his success there are murmurings
of him making a comeback for Australia. Hopefully this is
a figment of someone's imagination.
Warne,
Jayasuriya and Gilchrist are all going out gradually and
in style, providing some wonderful entertainment in the
IPL competition. It's not that making a comeback to international
cricket would be beyond Warne, it's just that with what
he's currently doing it would be out of tune - a bit like
Martin's singing all those years ago.
Courtesy - cricinfo
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