been too many great cricketers from the state. It is not a cricketing powerhouse in the Ranji
Trophy circuit either, like Mumbai and Tamil Nadu. It was not difficult for Kumar to earn his
spot in the Uttar Pradesh Ranji Trophy team. Another Kumar from Meerut had already been
doing a great job in Ranji Trophy - Praveen Kumar. Fortunately for Bhuvneshwar, Ashish
Winston Zaidi, a former fast bowler, was coaching the Uttar Pradesh Ranji Trophy team then.
Zaidi never played for India. But he managed to get truckloads of Ranji Trophy wickets. In fact,
he is 14th in the list of the highest wicket takers in Ranji Trophy. Among pace bowlers, only
Madan Lal has taken more wickets than him. Both Praveen Kumar and Zaidi nurtured Kumar.
They understood his strengths: he could swing the new ball. They understood his weaknesses
too: that he could operate only at 120- 130 kmph mark. Wisely, they did not try to rectify his
weakness. They never tried to make his bowl quicker. Perhaps, they had seen what happened to
Irfan Pathan, who used to produce outrageous swing; but lost it when he tried to bowl quicker.
As experienced bowlers, they knew that swing bowlers do not need express pace. They plot the
downfall of the batsman with their wile and skill. In the formative years, Bhuvneshwar Kumar
was a natural in-swing bowler. Praveen and Zaidi taught him to bowl out-swing without any
noticeable changes in the action. He would keep in- swing balls as his stock delivery and resort to
out-swing to surprise the batsmen. That had been a method Praveen Kumar tried and tested.
Bhuvneshwar would perfect it later. When Praveen Kumar went to International duty,
Bhuvneshwar assumed the leadership of the Uttar Pradesh attack. He flourished as an opening
bowler. Domestic batmen began to talk about the other Kumar from Uttar Pradesh too. And his
batting was a real plus. He used to come at six or seven and score a composed 40 or 50. Once he
even scored a match-winning century in the Duleep Trophy semi final, after coming into bat at
number eight.
Battle against perception
With some good performances with both bat and ball, he became a vital cog in the Uttar Pradesh
and North Zone teams. But tougher battles were awaiting him. He had been seen as someone
who was good enough for domestic cricket, but not quite good for international cricket. You
know such lot. They were, and still are, stuck in that rat trap of perception. Zaidi was one;
Kanwaljit Singh was another. Subramaniam Badrinath is a current example. Even MS Dhoni,
had he not been a wicketkeeper, may have found himself in this trap. Bhuvneshwar was tailor-
made to become a victim of this perception. He was a fast bowler who looked like an IIT
student: skinny, medium height, no muscles, no broad shoulders, and not quick enough. Even
spinners had better physique. Such fast bowlers tend to toil day in, day out in domestic cricket
and disappear one day silently.
Cricket statistics screamed for his selection; but his vital statistics suggested otherwise. We will
never know what kept him going in spite of such widely prevalent perception in Indian cricket.
Perhaps, Anil Kumble may have inspired him. In his early days, cricket experts had dismissed
Kumble as a fast bowler with a spinner's action. But Kumble now practically owns all the
bowling records in India.
Criss-crossing Indian cricket