NEW DELHI, OCT 04 :
Indian sports is replete with stories of blood, sweat and sacrifices and Shaw’s story is no different from others.
There is an element of inevitability involved in certain occurrences and Prithvi Shaw’s century as the youngest Indian Test debutant is one such instance.
It’s a matter of conjecture whether the West Indies attack could be rated as ‘Test class’ but the moment Shaw hit his first boundary, it seemed as if he was destined to succeed.
At 18 years 329 days, Shaw showed that he always had the game to match the unbelievable hype that had surrounded him from the time he was a four-feet boy trying to jostle with the middle-aged uncles in order to get inside the early morning train from Virar to Bandra.
“He batted like someone who has played 50 Test matches. He is an unbelievable talent and hopefully if he is nurtured well, he will serve Indian cricket for a long long time,” chairman of selectors MSK Prasad told PTI after the teenager’s smashing hundred on debut.
Indian sports is replete with stories of blood, sweat and sacrifices and Shaw’s story is no different from others.
Shaw’s journey
But the outstanding aspect of Shaw’s journey is his quick progression from one level to another. He didn’t jump levels but seamlessly crossed one after the other.
A 546 in Harris Shield for Rizvi Springfield School, the debut hundred in a Ranji Trophy semi-final, leading India U-19 to World Cup trophy, a hundred on Duleep Trophy debut and some eye-catching knocks for India A before his big day arrived. He was ready to take on the world.
Every year, Mumbai waits for its ‘next Sachin Tendulkar’ but once the 11-year-old started making waves, they got their ‘first Prithvi Shaw’
“I remember when I first saw Prithvi as a nine-year-old. For a kid standing barely at four feet, the impact of the bat hitting the ball was so different. He was a special talent,” Makrand Waingankar, a veteran cricket analyst, who had considerable influence on Shaw in his formative years, said.
“I remember him scoring a double hundred as a 12-year-old in an U-14 T20 tournament organised by Gymkhana. I feel proud that I could do my bit in his progress,” he added.
“He got his first sponsorship deal of ₹ 36 lakh from SG (famous cricket equipment manfacturers) when he was hardly 12 years. NRI oncologist Dr Sameer Pathak, a big fan arranged for a cricket scholarship in UK. He studied four months at the Cheadle Hulme School and played club cricket. His progress was closely monitored,” Waingankar said.
The pace of life in Mumbai is different from Delhi, Kolkata or Bengaluru and probably that is one of the reasons why grit (’khadoos’) is associated with its cricketers.
“When a little boy is taking a 4 am train from Virar to Bandra, trying to get into those insanely crowded compartments where at times people protest if they see huge kitbags, it prepares you for a tough life.
“The option of failing is nullified,” said Prashant Shetty, the man who was Shaw’s coach at the MIG Cricket Academy (Bandra).
“He came when he was nine years old and when he turned 10, our head coach Kiran Mokashi sir instructed to put him in the senior nets. He was facing those 18-20 year old boys. Our only instruction to them was not to bowl bouncers as he was too small and not try to injure him. We got a customised chest guard for him so that he doesn’t get hurt,” Shetty recalled.
So what was it that made him special apart from temperament, Shetty recalled: “His back-foot play. When you have 9 or 10 year olds coming at cricket camps, you will see the reflex action is to come forward. For Prithvi, it was playing off the back-foot.”