Certain strokes give us a window into a player's character. Take Mahela
Jayawardene's late cut. Jayawardene watched the ball turn towards him,
waiting until it seemed it must inevitably cannon into the stumps,
before, at the last possible moment, caressing it towards the boundary.
It was undeniably a thing of beauty, an act of bravura, but above all,
it was a touch shot. Jayawardene was the most intuitive of cricketers,
whether at the crease or as captain, and this single stroke revealed his
instinctive approach for all to see.
On rare occasions, a rendition of a stroke is so forceful, so
compelling, that it remains in the mind, a lasting testament to the
player who conceived it. At Old Trafford,
during his epoch-marking 189 not out in May 1984, Viv Richards picked
up a good-length ball by Derek Pringle from outside off stump and
flicked it nonchalantly over long-on for six. That tableau - Richards'
casual flick of the bat, the long-on fielder scrambling helplessly after
a ball that sailed serenely over him, Pringle's head slumping between
his shoulders - perfectly encapsulated Richards' mastery of England that
day.
Sanath Jayasuriya played such a match-defining shot during Sri Lanka's 1998 Test victory at The Oval.
Despite Jayasuriya's first-innings double-hundred and Muttiah
Muralitharan's 16-wicket haul, the detail that lives most vividly in my
memory is a stroke played in the second innings. With a paltry target of
36 runs, Sri Lanka's second innings was a formality. That single shot, a
six over point played with both feet off the ground, not only revealed
Jayasuriya's mindset - uninhibited and dismissive - it displayed his
unorthodoxy, his daring, and his calculated savagery.
Player, bat, and ball moved at different speeds and in different
directions, but Jayasuriya managed to time the impact of bat on ball to
perfection, an extraordinary triumph of hand-eye coordination
Jayasuriya was no mere slogger: 6973 runs in Test cricket, including a
triple-century against India, attest to a fine technique and
temperament. But he was unorthodox, relying on hand-eye coordination, a
strong bottom hand and fearsome power, rather than the textbook.
Coaching manuals imbue in batsmen the necessity of a steady base from
which to play, of keeping the head still at the point of impact of bat
on ball. Only when leaping like a gaffed salmon to avoid a throat ball
is head movement deemed desirable.
At The Oval, Jayasuriya was himself in motion a couple of feet off the
ground when he brought his bat down at speed to the exact point where it
met the ball. Player, bat, and ball moved at different speeds and in
different directions, but Jayasuriya managed to time the impact to
perfection, an extraordinary triumph of hand-eye coordination. Having
conquered the timing, his idiosyncratic technique took over. His
dominant left hand flayed the ball to the point boundary, a shot only a
strong man could manage. The much-lamented Tony Greig once observed,
"Jayasuriya must get tired, carrying all those muscles around."
The final element in that shot was the audacity of his ambition. By
1998, Jayasuriya was an established world-beater, a tag he had first
grabbed with his savage assaults during the 1996 World Cup. Arjuna
Ranatunga needed someone to execute Sri Lanka's blitzkrieg policy of
exploiting the fielding restrictions at the start of the innings, and
the planets aligned to give him Jayasuriya. In the quarter-final,
against England, Jayasuriya scored 82 from 44 balls. By the time he was
out, in the 13th over, he had reduced his team's target to just over
120 runs, which Sri Lanka knocked off with almost ten overs to spare.
Jayasuriya carried that attitude with him for the rest of his career.
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