Greg Chappell, former Australia captain and former Indian males’s cricket coach, is thrilled with Rishabh Pant’s batting, regardless of possessing a way that’s not in ‘the MCC coaching manual’.
“What an exciting cricketer! What a player to have on your team!” Chappell mentioned, whereas interacting through videoconferencing at a launch of str8bat, a wise bat sticker that acts as a efficiency evaluation device.
“He reminds me very much of Adam Gilchrist. The difference that it can make to a team to have a wicketkeeper that can bat at that level and to score runs quickly,” he added.
Besides surpassing Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s tally of six Test a whole lot, hitherto essentially the most by an Indian ’keeper, Pant turned solely the second wicketkeeper in Test historical past to attain 100 in every innings of a Test match throughout India’s series-opener in Leeds.
“The beauty of it is that Rishabh gets his runs at a very fast rate, which gives you time to win cricket matches. He was a phenomenal performer (at Headingley). Some of the shots that he played probably weren’t in the MCC coaching manual when I last looked at it,” Chappell mentioned.
“He is reinventing the game as a batsman. Given the modern technology, the bats are very different, obviously. You can play shots that weren’t possible with the old bats. But, man, he is exciting to watch. You never quite know what to expect from him from the first ball.
“At any stage, he is likely to jump down the wicket to the fast bowlers or he will play the falling ramp shot. It keeps the opposition on their toes. He is a match-winner and very nearly made the difference in that regard.”
Former India wicket-keeper and chief selector Kiran More and Chappell hoped that the technological innovation would get a go-ahead by the Marylebone Cricket Club — the custodian of the cricket legal guidelines — for the stickers for use in aggressive matches.







