It’s not that I am a big fan of Yuvraj Singh. But
today when I heard he had pulled himself back from the brink against the
stiffest competition I felt very happy. The reason being he had done it when everybody
had started writing him off.
He has been inducted in Indian squad for one T-20
and three one day matches against Australia.
World cup 2011: Yuvi was declared the player of the
tournament. Within days of the victory he discovers he is suffering from
cancer. This deadly attack kept him out of field for 299 days.
Then he was “offered a chance” in a T-20 in September
2012 against New Zealand. Many so-called experts said it was an emotional
offering to Yuvi by the selectors not that he had earned his place.
And Yuvi could not prove the cynics wrong.
In that T-20 though he made a respectable 34 but in the
following three Test matches and eight one day matches he could clock meager averages
of 25 and 20 respectively. In pre-cancer era his averages used to be 34.57 and
36 in the two formats.
All the time Yuvi remained out of field many players
got chance to play for India. And they are so talented they proved they are
integral to the team. Shikhar Dhawan, Murli Karthik, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina
are just few examples.
Yuvi is middle order batsman and all the spots in
the middle order were occupied. There came a time when there were two or three
genuine candidates for one place. And Yuvi was in hospital beds.
He came back and after the “emotional offer” that he
failed to capitalise over he was dropped from the squad owing to fitness and
form problems. He played his last international match on January 27 against
England at Dharamsala.
He was dropped and it was the time perhaps he lost
hopes and developed disinterest towards cricket. This is what I realised seeing him play in a match at Ranchi this year’s IPL.
In practice session he was behaving as if he is really a prince and he could do whatever and none could say anything to the brat. In the match it appeared he was doing
some favour to Pune Warriors just by being on the filed. He was not a willing
player, I felt. He had lost all the passion.
I thought to myself, “Why is he doing like this? he is such a big talent, an asset to our country. If he could play to his potential.”
I don’t know what happened after that. He went
to France for a 42 day training along with another misfit and out of form (and team as
well) Zaheer Khan. And when he got to the ground he played like real Yuvi.
He scored 123, 40 and 61 in three List A matches
against the West Indies followed by a quick-fire 52 against the same opponent
in a T-20 game. He carried on with his good form in the Challenger Trophy for
India Blue where he scored 84 against India Red and a 29 in the final against
Delhi.
And now he is where he belongs to. He has made this
comeback when no body thought. And who doesn’t like a hero who rises from ashes
like a phoenix?
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