This first appeared on Sportskeeda
The customised ‘wall of fame’ is the only raison d'être of my existence in an otherwise nondescript and dingy hostel room. Made up of carefully torn Sportstar posters that I managed to sneak in from the hostel common room, the assortment boasts of Sachin kissing the World Cup, Alonso atop his mean machine, Graeme Smith with the test championship mace et al. And in the midst of this league of extraordinary gentlemen (and a pretty lady in Azarenka holding aloft the 2013 Australian Open Trophy) stands a marauding de Villiers, ‘the man with the magic willow’.
The customised ‘wall of fame’ is the only raison d'être of my existence in an otherwise nondescript and dingy hostel room. Made up of carefully torn Sportstar posters that I managed to sneak in from the hostel common room, the assortment boasts of Sachin kissing the World Cup, Alonso atop his mean machine, Graeme Smith with the test championship mace et al. And in the midst of this league of extraordinary gentlemen (and a pretty lady in Azarenka holding aloft the 2013 Australian Open Trophy) stands a marauding de Villiers, ‘the man with the magic willow’.
Bursting into the international arena at a relatively tender
age of 20, he has carved out a niche for himself that few others could have
dreamt of. Speaking of dreaming, I remember reading an article on AB on how he
dreamt of being the world’s best batsman. Nine years after he first made an
appearance in SA colours, he is third in the list for test batsmen. And as far
as the best one day batsman goes, the answer is shorter than ABC.
It would be no exaggeration if one was to say that he is the
most versatile cricketer in the modern era, if not in the game’s history. He
bats at any random position, can roll his arm over, keeps wickets and is
probably the best outfielder in the world at the moment, with regular
comparisons drawn with Jonty Rhodes himself. That apart, he also plays tennis, rugby and
golf; not bad at all who has been amongst the world’s best batsmen for some
years now. Plus he dabbles in music as well. Maybe if they handed out HR jobs
in cricket, AB would be the top catch.
Supreme in defence, and outrageous in his shot-making: the
man dons quite a large number of hats. He bats for four hours to save a test
match, and in the very next fixture, he scores a rapid fire 169 to pave the way
for a famous win. It is virtually impossible to recount a phase in his career
when he was tagged out-of-form apart from the 2006-07 season. That’s much like
our own Dhoni, only classier.
"I want to be the best, but I don't give a damn about
statistics. You will have your end goal in mind, but you have to work hard to
get there; ball by ball, innings by innings”. Consistency, gained over
perseverance, is a defining characteristic for this rock star. Many felt he
would go the Gibbs’ way, a rare talent who was satisfied with lesser and
disproportionate success. He was identified as someone who was limitless in
prowess, and was destined to roam unchartered territory.
Breaking the Gibbs’ mould, he set himself apart. His rise as
one of South Africa’s most prominent players bears testimony to this fact. As
an alluding remark, he averages roundabout 50 in both tests and ODIs. That is
probably second to only Amla.
But it is his outrageous and mind-boggling ability to pick
up the length early and execute previously unheard of strokes that have
endeared him to his legion of fans. McCullum is close, but for most, no one
beats AB. After all, not everyone can spank a Steyn delivery over midwicket, or
drive him off a Yorker over extra cover for six. And you just don’t reverse
sweep seamers for sixes.
One would be forced to believe that there is a touch of
arrogance and rashness imbibed with such attempts at shot-making, but no, not
in his case. His is the case of a naturally talented athlete with surplus
benediction. As they say is the case
with Sachin, AB has this god-gifted ability, polished and reworked over and
over again with a headstrong work ethic.
As far as the IPL goes, almost all of RCB’s batsmen have
been forced to operate furtively under the gargantuan presence of the
belligerent Gayle-force. But nothing can undermine the value that AB brings
into the team. Last night was a perfect case study. Battling a Gayle no-show
and an average score in sight, he unleashed a fury of stroke making that would
have left even Gayle gasping, belting 26 off Dinda’s last over. It was nothing
short of a contemptuous mocking of the hapless bowler without the perpetrator
having any ill will, for how often do you see fast bowlers being swept off one
knee?
“He's developing a new MCC manual of his own" is what Amla
had to say of AB’s stroke making. For now, it is quite evident that ABD is
rewriting C for Cricket.
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