da prosport bet: Once heralded as the next big brown hopes of spin, Danish Kaneria and Harbhajan Singh now find themselves losing the magic that made them great

da spicy bet: Osman Samiuddin14-Dec-2007

That uncertain feeling: is Kaneria a stock or shock bowler? © AFP
Shane Warne has gone, Anil Kumble and Muttiah Muralitharan will go soon: cherishthem while you can, for a greater trio of spinners, twirling together in one age,you will not see, perhaps ever.Cherish them especially because beyond them, though good spinners exist, great onesaren’t obvious. Stuart MacGill’s future has become bleak, as quickly as it becametangible, Daniel Vettori has captaincy to tackle, and Monty Panesar much to learn.And there are Danish Kaneria and Harbhajan Singh, a pair from whom were once expected great things, not least spin leadership post-Warne, Murali and Kumble.They fit the profile. Both are still young, Harbhajan about six months older at 27. Theyare experienced enough. Kaneria made his debut over two and a half years afterHarbhajan, in December 2000, but with 51 Tests is only nine behind him. Betweenthem, they also have 468 Test wickets, shared almost equally. Yet, currently theyseem likelier to lead their art into numbing oblivion.Part of the reason the India-Pakistan series was fizz-less was that Kaneria andHarbhajan were so poor through it. Apart from a spell apiece, both carried the stingof butterflies, devoid of threat, mystery or guile, and never more so than on the lastdays in Delhi and Kolkata, days on which a spinner earns his bread. Quality spinhas never been – and never should be – as robotic, as automated and witless as thesetwo made it.Sadly, it has been this way a while. Wickets are not the problem: Harbhajan took 10and Kaneria 12 in the series, enough to maintain career averages comfortably. But increasingly, the wickets are taken at such expense, at such intervals, and mostly when it matters so little, that they are as useful as the appendix. All spinners buy wickets, but the best make sure they don’t without a fair haggle.It wasn’t this way. In 2000-01, Harbhajan was the kingpin,Kumble out of the picture. And after devouring lambs early, over 2004-05 Kanerialooked set to carry on the mischief of Abdul Qadir. But since then, odd spells andperiods apart, there has been broad decay, a disrobing of their mystiques.Fittingly, their career figures are similar and so too the complexities fuellingtheir fall.Watching Harbhajan now is like watching the final, dark years of Saqlain Mushtaq,after he had OD’ed on ODIs. The flight is gone, the is the (first), and the whole process more rushed, more unthinking. It has served a purposeover one day, not so much over five.Doubts over his action haven’t helped. Though he maintains a cool unconcern, havingthe essence of your professional existence questioned can’t be helpful. And neitherwas the era of Greg Chappell, when there was less confidence – justifiably? – placedin him than under Sourav Ganguly.What role, too, did Harbhajan’s finger injury at a crucial time in 2003 play, allowing Kumble to become India’s main spinner again, and subsequently fogging up Harbhajan’s role: once he was the spearhead, what exactly is he now? Kumble’s sidekick or leadingspinner in his own right?This uncertainty of roles has stunted Kaneria too. It’s difficult to tell whether heis a shock or stock bowler. Ideally, he should be able to switch, but much of thework he has done over the last 18 months has been as part of an attack so light, it wouldstruggle to rid the crease of a feather.

Harbhajan found himself out of favour in Greg Chappell’s regime – perhaps with justification © AFP
Warne was great, but having Glenn McGrath with him made him greater still. Kaneriapropping up Mohammad Sami, Shahid Nazir and the obligatory crocked fast bowler isone thing; Kaneria complementing Mohammad Asif, Umar Gul and Shoaib Akhtar another entirely.Some say he experiments too much. It was once said of his googly, by Richie Benaud,that it was the best-disguised he had seen. But he uses it so often now that the Pakistan Post delivers it a day early to batsmen. And even South Africans picked itwithout alarm recently, a death knell to the credibility of any wrong’un. Otherssay he doesn’t experiment enough. Very belatedly, he unveiled a promising, zippyflipper in Delhi, only to barely use it again in the series.He is, commendably and distressingly, self-sufficient, rightly proud to be where heis, what he is, through his own making. But he also isn’t keen on learning fromothers, petulantly thinking it an admission, somehow, of weakness. Right now, maybe alittle advice, some mentoring would help. There is no shortage of his kind to callupon.Horrendous pitches have helped neither. It’s not, as Kaneria says, that they don’tspin in the subcontinent; it is that they don’t bounce, and though Harbhajan and he are different kinds, both thrive on bounce. Perhaps there are other, more complex factors,altogether. Spinners, after all, are rarely uncomplicated cricketers. But spinnersalso age well, so there is hope yet that they will emerge. India and Pakistan needthem to do so, but cricket needs them to do so even more.

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