Pankaj joins 400-club, eyes Test comeback

November 24, 2016 12:28 am | Updated 12:28 am IST - KRISHNAGIRI (WAYANAD):

It has been two years since Pankaj Singh dismissed Joe Root and Jos Buttler in the Manchester Test. While the two English cricketers are part of the current Indian tour, Pankaj is bowling his heart out in domestic cricket.

And he is bowling as well as he has ever done, he feels. With 35 wickets, the Rajasthan captain is, in fact, the leading bowler in the Ranji Trophy.

On Tuesday, the second day of the Group-B match against Delhi at the Wayanad Cricket Stadium, he also took his 400th wicket in First Class cricket. And he did that in his 100th game.

He also became only the fourth Indian pace bowler to take 400 First Class wickets, after Madan Lal, Debashish Mohanty and R. Vinay Kumar.

“Only late last night did I come to know of that fact and that made me very happy,” Pankaj told The Hindu on Wednesday. “As the statistics show, it is not easy for a pace bowler to take that many wickets in India.”

Rajasthan’s best

He said it felt nice becoming the highest wicket-taker for Rajasthan. He had gone past the tally of Kailash Gattani’s 397 wickets in his last Ranji match.

“Yes, it has been a good season for me,” said the tall paceman. “I have been getting wickets regularly and that too on pitches and in conditions that are not always helpful for pace bowling.”

He added it was a challenge bowling in southern India. “It is so different from northern India where we normally play,” he said. “The weather can be pretty hot in most places even in the winter.”

Pankaj believes that he could still make a comeback into the Indian team. “I am bowling well, I am bowling quick,” he said. “And I continue to take wickets.”

He admits there is stiff competition among Indian pace bowlers for a place in the national team. “When you want to play for India, you have to compete against the best,” he reasoned. “My next target is not 500 First Class wickets, but to play for India again.”

Looking back at his brief international career — he played in two Tests on that England tour and a one-dayer in Sri Lanka four years earlier — he said he felt that he had bowled better than what his figures suggested.

“Everyone told me that I bowled well, but sometimes you may not get wickets even after good spells,” he said. “But, I would rather like to think about the future.”

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