Page 108 - IPL1
P. 108

After that, the bouquets came and went almost as a matter of
                 course – a state of affairs lent an extra piquancy by a turbulent
                 private life. England were routinely hammered in Ashes contests.
                 South  Africa  could  not  make  head  nor  tail  of  his  variations
                 and  supremely  competitive  aggression.  Even  the  Pakistanis,
                 supposedly  well-versed  in  the  arts  of  back-of-the-hand  slow
                 bowling, struggled to pick him on their patch. Only the Indians –
                 and Tendulkar in particular, a bowler Warne would admit he had
                 nightmares about – played him with any degree of certainty.


                 But his stint as captain/coach of Rajasthan Royals laid to rest any
                 notion that Warne was incapable of success in India and helped
                 win  over  a  nation  that  may  previously  not  have  appreciated
                 what all the fuss was about. Warne’s contribution to one of the
                 sporting stories of the year lay not just in the wickets he took
                 – and the occasional runs he scored – but in the way he helped
                 the most unfancied team of the lot play to their potential and
                 frequently above it.


                 It  would  have  been  fascinating  to  be  a  fly  on  the  wall  after
                 the Royals went down in their opening match by nine wickets
                 to  Delhi  Daredevils,  but  whatever  it  was  Warne  said  to  his
                 demoralised side obviously did the job. Only two more games
                 were  lost  after  that  –  one  of  them,  to  Kings  XI  Punjab,  after
                 qualification for the semi-finals had already been assured – and
                 it was no surprise when Rajasthan held their collective nerve to
                 win the final against Chennai Super Kings off the last ball. It was
                 a victory made in Warne’s image.


                 Needless to say, his own contribution was exceptional. Not only
                 did he claim 19 wickets with his leg-spin – and some of them
                 through sheer force of personality – but he crucially hit 16 off
                 three balls at the death to help Rajasthan win their third match
                 of  the  tournament,  against  Deccan  Chargers.  Had  that  result

                 been reversed, they might never have generated the momentum
                 that took them all the way to the final. It was a typical piece of
                 Warne showmanship, and the affection in which he was held by
                 his team-mates was demonstrated by the mass pitch invasion
                 which ended up with the captain being enveloped as he tried to
                 shake hands with the vanquished Andrew Symonds. It was an
                 image to define the tournament.
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