Varun Chakaravarthy reaping the fruits of shifting to overspin from sidespin
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Gwalior: Mystery spinner Varun Chakravarthy says he is reaping the rewards of putting overspin on the ball instead of sidespin following his successful India comeback.
The 33-year-old, whose India career came to an abrupt halt after an underwhelming debut in the 2021 T20 World Cup, took three wickets against Bangladesh in the series opener here.
As the great Nathan Lyon has shown over the years, putting overspin on the ball generates sharp bounce and turn, which aided Varun on Sunday night. His googly to get rid of Jaker Ali showed the former architect's total control over his craft.
"I used to be a sidespin bowler, but right now, I have completely shifted to being an overspin bowler," said Varun after playing a big role in India's seven-wicket win.
"It's a minute technical aspect of spin bowling, but it took me more than two years. I gradually tested it in the TNPL and IPL. While the mental aspect also had to be worked on, the major chunk of effort I put in was on my technical side."
Despite doing well in the IPL and domestic cricket over the past two seasons, Varun a recall to the Indian team eluded him and that only made him hungrier. Now that he is back in the Blues, it feels like a rebirth.
"Whenever there was a squad that was announced, I used to feel like, 'Why is my name not there?' and I used to keep thinking about that. So that kind of brought the motivation within me that I should not leave this.
"I should go all out and make a comeback, so I started playing a lot of domestic games and giving importance to it. That kind of helped me," said the soft-spoken cricketer.
A catch was dropped in Varun's first over that eventually went for 15 runs with Bangladesh skipper Najmul Hasan Shanto and Towhid Hridoy going on the offensive against the spinner in the powerplay.
However, skipper Suryakumar Yadav trusted Varun to bounce back and he did that by having Hridoy caught at long-on in his following over.
"Yes, in the first over the catch could have gone my way but that's how T20s are played. I felt the reverse-sweep six was a good ball but it still went for a six, so it's all mixed emotions."
He played the series opener ahead of leg-spinner Ravi Bishnoi who too has had done well fairly well in the limited opportunities that he has got after the T20 Word Cup, reflecting India's robust bench strength. Varun acknowledged the fierce competition.
"There is good competition and there is good camaraderie also. And the person who was cheering me was Ravi Bishnoi; he was coming and telling me messages, so I can't ask for more.
"It's actually good to have such competition so that people will keep pushing each other. Someone will be better than others at one point of time and he will definitely get the Cup for India, so that competition is very required," Varun added.