Suryakumar Yadav How makes professional cricket in to gully game – Suryakumar raining sixes… How to play like street cricket?

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Suryakumar Yadav Tamil News: “Suryakumar Yadav is telling jokes!” Speaking in Tamil commentary, Abhinav Mukund, the former opener of the Indian team, mentioned when Suryakumar Yadav hit a six and registered a century. Another former India opener S Ramesh, who was seated next to him, said, “Hardik Pandya is also in a daze. Rahul Dravid watching this will be surprised that we have never played those shots in our time. ” He said that.

Here’s the shot. Just before the release, Suryakumar crossed the offside on bended knee and said he was going to sweep him to square-leg. The bowler adjusts to push it wide outside the off stump. But Surya quickly corrected his original thinking. Somehow with great fluidity with the bat, he slices the ball over cover point for an outrageously efficient six.

This is another scenario that emphasizes a point made earlier in these pages. That professional cricket is slowly becoming the tennis-ball cricket of the gullies. In our childhood, good batsmen used to play these shots against seamers with a tennis ball – lap, reverse lap, sweep, this Surya shot (changing shots at the last minute), and the yorker was like sending a length ball over the infield. For all areas with wrist whips. Even today it happens in the world without that industry.

Many don’t think it’s even possible to do all this in serious hard-ball cricket. How chasing a big score on the fifth day of a Test match was considered impossible.

“Oh, the pitch has deteriorated, they can keep the fielders closer to the boundary, they can bowl wider, wider than the limited overs game,” even from the fans. Now all that ‘wisdom’ has become a bhuthakaram.

The only difference is how completely industrialized all the brilliance of gully cricket is. Now there is a method to achieve that intelligence. It’s like they bottled that amateurish feeling and perfected it in the labs.

The main thing they use is ‘form’.

During the series against the West Indies, Suryakumar asked former Caribbean big hitter Darren Sammy, “What did (bowler) Alsari Joseph do wrong?” Surya hits a very good pace back-off-length delivery that is angled on the off-stump for a six over long-off.

The shot has been fully appreciated in these pages before.

In short, how modern batsmen keep their form, stretch their upper body, extend their arms fully, try to maintain balance even at that tipping over point – and wham. It’s about positioning first – and then how to hold the rest of the body to allow the violence to blossom scientifically.

There is no longer a vishwarupa to see the six like in the old days. In the beginning it rains six days. There is a breathless admiration for how batsmen combine various small movements (and difficult silences) to brilliantly come together to execute the vision. Position, form.

If you want to see the next big shot in serious leather-ball cricket, check out YouTube videos of local tennis ball cricket in Pakistan and India. There are several of them, and one shot is crazier than the other. It first becomes a possibility in that world, and then we see a polished professional version on our televisions.

Professional cricket is now gully cricket on steroids. What’s next?

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