Published>Sat, Jan 23 10 10:49 AM
Christchurch, Jan. 22 -- The monotony of asking cricketers, even senior team players, of who their favourite is, gets to you after a point. Sachin Tendulkar, is a point-blank answer, and this was especially so when New Zealand toured India last year, and people like Ross Taylor fell in line. So it did come as a bit of a surprise that a spinner from India came here to play the under-19 World Cup with dreams of meeting Daniel Vettori. Gaurav Jathar, like his hero, does a lot more than just bowl left-arm spin and is hoping his dream will come true. "If the manager or someone arranges it that would be great. I would really like to meet Vettori," said Jathar on the eve of India's quarterfinal against Pakistan. Jathar first picked up a cricket ball, when he was only five-and-a-half years old. Then, he bowled quick. "It was a bit of a tragedy. When I was about 13, I realised I was getting too tired trying to bowl quick, so I changed." Taken under wing by Paddy Shivalkar, perhaps the best left-arm spinner never to play for India, Jathar made steady advances through the ranks. A useful contributor with the bat and a live-wire fielder, Jathar is a typical example of a player beating off more talented but less well rounded competition. "In one-day games everyone has to contribute. Even in these conditions, which help fast bowlers, a spinner can help by containing batsmen or getting breakthroughs," he explains.
Source: Web Search
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