Page 92 - IPL1
P. 92

B


 efore the start of the DLF IPL, Jaipur was best known
 for  its  history,  its  culture  and  its  colourful  buildings,  glazed
 in  pink  in  1876  by  the  Maharaja  Ram  Singh  to  welcome  the
 future King Edward VII: the colour was linked with hospitality.
 Following the achievements of Rajasthan Royals, another coat
 of pink paint may be in order, this time to let Shane Warne know
 he is welcome to return to this distinctive city in the north of
 India any time he likes.


 If Jaipur has been described as the ‘richly colourful capital of a
 richly colourful state’, it may never have been more colourful
 than during Warne’s tenure as captain of the Royals – a team
 that  started  out  as  no-hopers  before  going  on  to  lift  the  IPL
 trophy in what can only be described as living proof of cricket’s

 glorious uncertainty. As Rajasthan Royals lost their first game to
 Delhi Daredevils by nine wickets with nearly five overs to spare,
 even  the  most  optimistic  camp  insider  was  wondering  how
 humiliating the tournament would turn out to be. In the end,
 Rajasthan, comfortably the most frugal of the franchises, were
 the ones dishing out the humiliation rather than receiving it.


 Warne hardly needed confirmation that he was one of the game’s
 all-time legends. He retired from Test cricket in January 2007 as
 the game’s leading wicket-taker – a mark that has since been
 passed by Sri Lanka’s Muttiah Muralitharan – and was named by
 Wisden in 2000 as one of the 20th century’s five leading players,
 along  with  four  Sirs:  Jack  Hobbs,  Don  Bradman,  Garry  Sobers
 and  Vivian  Richards.  But  his  captaincy  credentials  had  been
 tested all too rarely. In 11 one-day internationals as Australia’s
 leader, he had presided over 10 wins, and he had helped turn
 Hampshire from a bunch of amiable losers into one of the most
 adventurous teams in English county cricket. Now he proved
 that Australia’s loss was Rajasthan’s gain, cajoling and inspiring
 a group of young Indians to heights they may never have known
 they could reach, and getting the very best out of a seemingly
 underwhelming  list  of  overseas  players.  The  only  non-Indian
 captain at the start of the tournament, he stood out in more
 ways than one.


 Warne’s  own  contribution  transcended  the  captaincy,  and
 the  19  wickets  he  took  with  his  aggressive  brand  of  leg-spin,
 still  a  force  to  be  reckoned  with  after  all  these  years,  halted











 80
   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97