Rajput outlines Afghanistan's five-day plan
Having seen his side gain Test status, head coach wants charges to improve their temperament
MUMBAI:
While Afghanistan celebrate their lofty status as a Test-playing nation, far away in Mumbai, head coach Lalchand Rajput is busy plotting how to instil a five-day temperament into a team more attuned to the hard-hitting nature of limited-overs cricket.
In a historic decision on Thursday, the International Cricket Council (ICC) granted Afghanistan and Ireland full membership, putting them in an elite group of 12 sides permitted to compete in the longest form of the game.
Cricket gained popularity in Afghanistan when refugees residing in Pakistan after fleeing a homeland ravaged by the Soviet-Afghan War took the sport home with them in the 1990s.
They first played among the sport's minnows until gaining one-day international status seven years ago, and in June 2013, the ICC granted Afghanistan associate membership, the second tier behind the Test-playing countries.
"It's a great achievement for them. Every country would like to be called a Test-playing country," said former India cricketer Rajput. "They have been working hard for the last couple of years. And this is the reward which they got after consistently performing, especially the last year has been very good. We started beating Test sides, we beat Zimbabwe, we beat Ireland. It's a big thing for the sport in Afghanistan."
A former Mumbai batsman with a first-class average of close to 50, Rajput was manager of the India team that won the inaugural World T20 in 2007.
In June last year, he was named head coach of Afghanistan, replacing former Pakistan captain Inzamamul Haq.
"Everybody was keenly waiting for this ICC meeting to happen," Rajput, who played two Tests and four ODIs for India, said on Friday. "They were all very excited that now they will all be called Test players. Every cricketer's dream is to be a Test cricketer, that's the real test. This is a big, big thing for them."
Having already played in multiple World T20 events, the Asian side made a stellar debut in the 50-over World Cup in Australia and New Zealand in 2015. They have also been impressive in the Intercontinental Cup, a first-class competition for associate members.
BIG HUNDREDS
"This is a big challenge. Being from Mumbai, we know this attitude of 'kharoos' (stubbornness) in the region's cricketers and that has to be imbibed in the Afghanistan players," the 55-year-old Rajput added. "Because you have to have a price on your wicket, you can't throw your wicket easily. Plus the temperamental aspect, the mental toughness you know. And playing big innings, that's very, very important."
Rajput feels the Afghan players are natural hard hitters of the ball and his job is to make them understand the need to spend more time in the middle instead of chasing quick runs.
"In the Intercontinental Cup we used to get out early, the maximum score used to be 250-300. But this year, we played against Ireland and you will be surprised we got over 500 runs for eight wickets declared," he said. "The captain (Asghar Stanikzai) got 145 and another guy got a hundred. So they are getting into the mode of scoring big hundreds. Slowly and steadily we will be there, we will improve. I can't change it overnight, it will take some time. But we are going in that direction."
Turning to matters with the ball, 18-year-old leg-spinner Rashid Khan looks a real prospect and he recently took 7-18 in a one-dayer against West Indies after a strong showing in the last edition of the Indian Premier League (IPL) T20 tournament.
Former captain and off-spinner Mohammad Nabi also gained exposure to the world's top batsmen as Rashid's teammate at the IPL's Sunrisers Hyderabad franchise.
"We have the bowling. But yes, we have to look at options as well because in Test cricket you require people to take 20 wickets," the coach added. "In one-day cricket you have to bowl tight. So the mindset has to be to take wickets rather than bowling tight."
While Afghanistan celebrate their lofty status as a Test-playing nation, far away in Mumbai, head coach Lalchand Rajput is busy plotting how to instil a five-day temperament into a team more attuned to the hard-hitting nature of limited-overs cricket.
In a historic decision on Thursday, the International Cricket Council (ICC) granted Afghanistan and Ireland full membership, putting them in an elite group of 12 sides permitted to compete in the longest form of the game.
Cricket gained popularity in Afghanistan when refugees residing in Pakistan after fleeing a homeland ravaged by the Soviet-Afghan War took the sport home with them in the 1990s.
They first played among the sport's minnows until gaining one-day international status seven years ago, and in June 2013, the ICC granted Afghanistan associate membership, the second tier behind the Test-playing countries.
"It's a great achievement for them. Every country would like to be called a Test-playing country," said former India cricketer Rajput. "They have been working hard for the last couple of years. And this is the reward which they got after consistently performing, especially the last year has been very good. We started beating Test sides, we beat Zimbabwe, we beat Ireland. It's a big thing for the sport in Afghanistan."
Afghanistan, Ireland await verdict on Test status
A former Mumbai batsman with a first-class average of close to 50, Rajput was manager of the India team that won the inaugural World T20 in 2007.
In June last year, he was named head coach of Afghanistan, replacing former Pakistan captain Inzamamul Haq.
"Everybody was keenly waiting for this ICC meeting to happen," Rajput, who played two Tests and four ODIs for India, said on Friday. "They were all very excited that now they will all be called Test players. Every cricketer's dream is to be a Test cricketer, that's the real test. This is a big, big thing for them."
Having already played in multiple World T20 events, the Asian side made a stellar debut in the 50-over World Cup in Australia and New Zealand in 2015. They have also been impressive in the Intercontinental Cup, a first-class competition for associate members.
BIG HUNDREDS
"This is a big challenge. Being from Mumbai, we know this attitude of 'kharoos' (stubbornness) in the region's cricketers and that has to be imbibed in the Afghanistan players," the 55-year-old Rajput added. "Because you have to have a price on your wicket, you can't throw your wicket easily. Plus the temperamental aspect, the mental toughness you know. And playing big innings, that's very, very important."
Rajput feels the Afghan players are natural hard hitters of the ball and his job is to make them understand the need to spend more time in the middle instead of chasing quick runs.
Afghanistan, Ireland become Test-playing nations
"In the Intercontinental Cup we used to get out early, the maximum score used to be 250-300. But this year, we played against Ireland and you will be surprised we got over 500 runs for eight wickets declared," he said. "The captain (Asghar Stanikzai) got 145 and another guy got a hundred. So they are getting into the mode of scoring big hundreds. Slowly and steadily we will be there, we will improve. I can't change it overnight, it will take some time. But we are going in that direction."
Turning to matters with the ball, 18-year-old leg-spinner Rashid Khan looks a real prospect and he recently took 7-18 in a one-dayer against West Indies after a strong showing in the last edition of the Indian Premier League (IPL) T20 tournament.
Former captain and off-spinner Mohammad Nabi also gained exposure to the world's top batsmen as Rashid's teammate at the IPL's Sunrisers Hyderabad franchise.
"We have the bowling. But yes, we have to look at options as well because in Test cricket you require people to take 20 wickets," the coach added. "In one-day cricket you have to bowl tight. So the mindset has to be to take wickets rather than bowling tight."