.
.

Munaf Patel

Munaf Patel is tall but not very tall. However the high arm action means that he extracts awkward bounce off a length just short of good length. As a result, he is very difficult to play and not just get away for runs. Comparisons to McGrath have been made and they are not completely unjustified. However, it will be unust to Patel to put such huge expectations on him.

One aspect which he has lacked so far in his career has been the accuracy. How difficult it is to attain accuracy has often been under played. Patel has gone down the path of becoming more accurate at the cost of losing pace. Now pace is a weapon which not many have and so I am always against a bowler who can bowl fast to sacrifice his natural edge. One school of thought is that as bowlers have little room for error in a ground like Kinrara (small stadium), Patel is going for honing his accuracy. I have no qualms with this approach if it is only a short term measure.

When Patel can get the batsmen in uncomortable positions on a Kinrara pitch because of the bounce from the just short of good length, the potential on a more bouncier pitch like say pitches in South Africa is immense. Get back to the normal 90 miles Patel bowls at and keep the accuracy close to what he is getting in Malaysia and you have a dangerous bowler.

What is missing in the Patel armoury? Variation. You need to swing the ball both ways and even reverse it if you can and keep the batsmen guessing. A hindrance for Patel which has been stated often is his high arm action as opposed to the round arm action of say Ajit Agarkar (who has every delivery in his kitty). I don’t see why Patel cannot develop variations in his bowling. Patel has already shown that he is a keen student of the game and in due course, he is bound to get more weapons.

South Africans are among the best players of pace bowling in the world. You need more than just pace and accuracy to get the best of them. You need to pitch the ball at the right spot and outfox the batsman as well with variation. I hope he doesn’t change the length drastically there because a common mistake bowlers have made when they get more bouncier pitches is start bowling shorter. The hook and pull not being a problem for the batsmen, that means easy runs. It is a mistake Srinath often made.

I am looking forward to how Patel bowls in South Africa and regardless of how he fares, it will show us how far he has developed and give us a glimpse at what more Patel needs to do to improve further.

Tags: .

10 Responses to “Munaf Patel”

  1. Angshuman Says:

    If you ask me what creates problems for batsmen Pratyush, I’ll say this: if you track all problems of footwork that are induced in otherwise good batsmen by the great bowlers (as against the very good ones) of all kinds of pace, you’ll find that 90% of them are from extra bounce. Reason: batsmen can condition themselves more for lateral movement but bounce - at any pace - tests your control over you instinctive reaction to get out of line.

    Munaf has natural bounce, and he should do nothing (even in the name of improvement) that can reduce that real weapon of his. The pace is highly desirable but the bounce, essential. He should take care to add to his stock without losing his ‘brahmastra’.

  2. Manish Says:

    “Despite not being very tall..” - Munaf *is* tall!

  3. Pratyush Says:

    Angshu: Yep. The bounce is his biggest advantage for me as well.

    Manish: Agh. I have edited it to *tall but not very tall*. I hope it is clearer now.

  4. Manish Says:

    Actually…the thing is…the bounce he gets is due to his height coupled with that high arm action.

    Anyway…no more nitpicking :-)

  5. Pratyush Says:

    Ya the point was - the high arm action has a lot to do with the bounce he extracts which is usually forgotten and it is assumed it is just because he is tall. A lot of fast bowlers are as tall as him. :)

  6. Manish Says:

    But isn’t it true that *most* of the tall bowlers do get good bounce, and have that as their main weapon - McGrath, Clark, Harmison, Flintoff and even retd Sir Srinath.

    Ofcourse it is true that some don’t use the height to the advantage - Simon Jones comes to mind.

    On the other hand, some not-so-tall bowlers get awkward bounce due to high arm action - Naved, RP (how tall is he?) and even Santh to some extent.

  7. Pratyush Says:

    I wouldn’t say most of Munaf’s height extract bounce like he does. The high arm action of Patel certainly plays a vital part.

  8. Ravi Says:

    and its kinrara, not kinnara

  9. Pratyush Says:

    Edited. Thanks!

  10. Catherine Says:

    Dudley

    Who has never tasted bitter, knows not what is sweet…

Leave a Reply