Not gifted to be a cricketer

Saif Ali Khan on why he couldn’t add to his father’s legacy

Saif thinks the 30s were too late for him to think about a career in cricket. PHOTO: IANS

KOLKATA:
Describing himself as a ‘late bloomer’, Saif Ali Khan said on Tuesday that he failed to follow his father Mansoor Ali Khan’s footsteps to become a cricketer as he was not gifted to be a sportsperson.

“I am a late bloomer. I sort of came into my own in my 30s, which I think was far too late for a cricketing career. I played school cricket. But I don’t think I have a god’s gift kind of natural genius that my father had or all our players have,” said Saif, who attended the Indian Premier League gala opening ceremony.

“It’s a gift which you can spot early on. By the time you are 10 or 11, people can see the genius in you. Your reflexes are better than most people. But I don’t think I had that gift. My gifts lie in other areas,” said the national award winning actor.

Talking about his late father, Saif hailed the former India captain for playing with one eye.

“My father stopped playing international cricket when I was five-years-old but I have watched him play. I remember him as a stylish batsman but his greatest feat, of course, was playing with one eye, which is quite incredible,” he said.




Picking defending IPL champions Kolkata Knight Riders as his favourite team, Saif said he would have recruited explosive West Indies opener Chris Gayle, star India batsman Virat Kohli and mystery spinner Sunil Narine if he had an IPL team.

“I think it is great that cricket, as a game, has so many forms. There is the incredible form of Test cricket which I find amazing. Then you have the ODIs and the T20 which shows cricket’s flexibility,” said Saif, describing Twenty20 cricket as an interesting and exciting format. 

Published in The Express Tribune, April 9th, 2015.

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