Lol, probably not; I just feel he has a lot of talent and that it is being wasted. He does not need to be chucking them down at 145kph to be effective, but he does need to be bowling around 135-140kph to maximise his effectiveness; he also has the rare gift that how fast he bowls does not affect his accuracy negatively either and it is a shame to see it wasted.Was just thinking - it seems Manraj will keep this thread alive throughout his CW time.
I hope he meets a bowling coach at an English county who can really point him in the right direction and also help his fitness too.I don't disagree for a second, I've thought since I first saw Munaf that he had the potential to be the next in the line that goes through Kapil Dev and Srinath, and it's always a crying shame to see ability being wasted through things like injury and mismanagement.
Is it only mismanagement though? Based solely on this, and a couple of other, interviews, so I might be being unfair, but he seems to be a rather immature person who has a sense of entitlement where his work ethic should be.I don't disagree for a second, I've thought since I first saw Munaf that he had the potential to be the next in the line that goes through Kapil Dev and Srinath, and it's always a crying shame to see ability being wasted through things like injury and mismanagement.
Dravid lazy.. how did you figure that out.This is just half of the problem in Indian cricket. The real talent lies in these small-towns, where life isn't easy, in a way. That breeds tougher cricketerss. However, they don't have the access to refine their skills that their big city counterparts do. The relatively weaker city players go to gyms, follow diets, (some) have biomechanists helping them, play in world-class (more or less) facilities and everything they need to become world class players, but the raw material isn't quite there. Not to mention, city cricketers seem very lazy (Jaffer, Munaf, Ganguly, Dravid, Kumble, Srinath, Nehra, Sehwag) in comparison to their small-town counterparts (Kaif, Raina, RP Singh, Joginder, Piyush Chawla, Praveen Kumar, Dhoni, Sreesanth).
We'd love to see an attack of Brett Lees for India, not because Bing's express pace, but also he's very effective even without the ball- athletic mover on the field, razor-sharp reflexes, strong throwing arm, and also a more-than-useful lower-order batsman. With a team full of Yuvraj and Lee clones, you'd have a World Champion team.
This is where an organisation like the National Cricket Academy is crucial. The country's top players (not the best-placed) should be put together after a conscious effort to scale the entire area of the country. The facilities in Bangalore are world-class, and the raw material is out there, everywhere in the country, not just the big metros. Put the two together and you'd have a breeding ground for quality cricketers.
Munaf is from the fringes too (a village in Gujarat, Ikhar, to be precise).This is just half of the problem in Indian cricket. The real talent lies in these small-towns, where life isn't easy, in a way. That breeds tougher cricketerss. However, they don't have the access to refine their skills that their big city counterparts do. The relatively weaker city players go to gyms, follow diets, (some) have biomechanists helping them, play in world-class (more or less) facilities and everything they need to become world class players, but the raw material isn't quite there. Not to mention, city cricketers seem very lazy (Jaffer, Munaf, Ganguly, Dravid, Kumble, Srinath, Nehra, Sehwag) in comparison to their small-town counterparts (Kaif, Raina, RP Singh, Joginder, Piyush Chawla, Praveen Kumar, Dhoni, Sreesanth).
We'd love to see an attack of Brett Lees for India, not because Bing's express pace, but also he's very effective even without the ball- athletic mover on the field, razor-sharp reflexes, strong throwing arm, and also a more-than-useful lower-order batsman. With a team full of Yuvraj and Lee clones, you'd have a World Champion team.
This is where an organisation like the National Cricket Academy is crucial. The country's top players (not the best-placed) should be put together after a conscious effort to scale the entire area of the country. The facilities in Bangalore are world-class, and the raw material is out there, everywhere in the country, not just the big metros. Put the two together and you'd have a breeding ground for quality cricketers.
Dravid lazy.. how did you figure that out.
Imho he's probaly one of the most hard working Indian cricketers.
Maybe Dravid isn't lazy, but all these city cricketers in question, compared to their Australian/English/Protea/Kiwi counterparts, seem very lazy, soft and don't try too hard.Munaf is from the fringes too (a village in Gujarat, Ikhar, to be precise).
Kumbke & Dravid are not lazy by any stretch. Perhaps "lithe" is the adjective you meant.
Munaf should really consider a career change if his current career could harm him.Yesterday
Today
How quick the media turns on Munaf! However, both keep the same purpose of showing how Munaf is not the bowler who started playing Test cricket and he certainly is bowling within himself. However, he is so very talented (even a mug can see that) that he needs to be nurtured, no matter how much of a pain he is.
However, I have to agree with his decision to bowl within himself due to the simple fact that he cannot go through a Test series or ODI series without getting injured. He should be the test of the NCA's fitness schemes.
Still think so TBH.Was just thinking - it seems Manraj will keep this thread alive throughout his CW time.