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'Durability key to success of pink ball trial' – WV Raman

da leao: WV Raman, the India Green coach, has said playing with the pink ball will test the adaptability of players as they enter a relatively less-trodden territory

Arun Venugopal22-Aug-2016

Harbhajan Singh felt the seam wasn’t “great” on the Kookaburra ball, and only people who have played with it for a long period of time will be able to adjust•Getty Images

WV Raman, the former India batsman and coach of India Green, has said playing with the pink ball will test the adaptability of players as they enter a relatively less-trodden territory. In what will be a maiden first-class match in India with a pink ball, India Green will take on India Red in the Duleep Trophy opener, beginning on Tuesday in Greater Noida.’Better off with pink ball trial in T20s’ – Harbhajan

da pinup bet: Harbhajan Singh, who opted out of the Duleep Trophy to spend time with his recently-born daughter, was concerned with how the spinners would come to grips with the Kookaburra ball. He pointed out that the experiment to use the red Kookaburra in the Duleep Trophy in 2006-07 had proved to be unsuccessful.
“It is going to be a nightmare for the spinners,” Harbhajan told ESPNcricinfo. “The seam is not that great on the Kookaburra ball, and only people who have played with it for a long period of time will be able to adjust. When I was new, I felt this was quite hard to grip because it slips from your hands. It was only after a few years that I got used to it and started bowling well with the Kookaburra ball. A pink Duke ball would be much better or pink SG ball has a lot more to offer for the bowlers. I hope this experiment will be a good one.”
Harbhajan also felt the pink ball would be put to better use in the shorter formats, especially Twenty20 cricket. “Pink ball in Twenty20 will add some more excitement: it’s a different format, a fast game with a lot of colour,” he said. “If you can trial pink ball in Twenty20 cricket as well, nothing like it; we might end up playing IPL with pink ball. The only problem would be coloured jerseys.”

Raman felt it was difficult to form an opinion of the ball after just one practice session, but said players would be a “lot wiser” after the first game. “One thing is the visibility of the ball is going to be good. So I don’t think that is going to be a problem,” he told ESPNcricinfo. “But, in the match, there is a possibility that the breeze can be on and off which means the ball sometimes can swing, sometimes not swing. Even while fielding the ball might swirl a bit [for] the tall catches, sometimes it may not swirl. You never know.”While the pink ball has piqued the curiosity of players and fans, the BCCI’s ambition of staging a day-night Test with a pink ball during a long home season hinges heavily upon the successful trial of the ball during the tournament. Raman said the durability of the pink Kookaburra ball in Indian conditions would be a big factor in determining its success.”The one big challenge is to see how long the ball lasts in our conditions,” he said. “We have not seen a lot of wear and tear if there is a whole lot of dew and moisture in a day-night four or five-day game. That means the wear and tear that you expect on the last and penultimate days of a five-day game may not be there.”There are a lot of unknowns. One thing for sure – the adaptability of the players will be tested. It will be interesting to see the unknowns unfold, based on which players will have to adapt. That will make it quite exciting to watch.”Raman also felt the pitch itself might not be a huge contributor to the wear and tear of the ball. “It is more of the outfield being good enough to preserve the colour and the hardness of the ball,” Raman pointed out. “I think, according to the manufacturers, that is what they are looking at – [if] the venues and the outfields are conducive to the ball retaining its colour, hardness and shape. We have to wait and see.”Robin Uthappa, the Karnataka batsman who has played with the pink Duke’s ball in the Karnataka Premier League, said fast bowlers and batsmen would be faced with equal challenges. “Back then it swung a lot, there was a lot of extra bounce,” he said recently. “It will be a very good challenge for the fast bowlers and top-order batsmen. We will have to wait and see how we shine the ball; how we can maintain that kind of ball. A lot of these finer details you will only really understand once you have really played with it for a certain while.”From a top order batsman’s perspective I am just trying to understand how much the ball is going to swing. It will be interesting to see how different is it, how long is this going to swing – is this going to swing like the SG ball where it doesn’t swing the first few overs and then swings for the next 35-40 overs, or will it be that Kookaburra ball where it swings the first 20 overs and after that it doesn’t do much. The more we practice with the ball the more understanding we have.”