Practising more than what was
assigned wasn't the only thing Liton changed about himself. What was needed
was a fresh outlook towards his cricket, and he was lucky to have help along
the way.
"Earlier I used to think a lot about
luck. Basically in cricket luck is a must but now I feel that one can change
his luck by practicing. I used to believe that luck is not supporting me,
what else can I do. Now, I think that if I had practiced more two years ago
then the chance of being successful would have been higher," Liton said.
Chandika Hathurusingha, the former
Bangladesh head coach, had once boldly admitted how he wasn't disappointed
in Liton who was failing at big scores at the time. Every flower doesn't
bloom together, he had said, pointing his fingers towards some of Liton's
teammates who had shown more promise despite having less calibre.
Liton, until the tour of Ireland in
May 2019, had played 27 ODIs and scored 508 runs at an average of 19.54 and
a strike rate of 79.75. And he knew very well that his back was against the
wall. The presence of Neil McKenzie, Bangladesh's white-ball batting
consultant, surely helped.
"My first acquaintance with Neil is
probably from that Ireland tour. He liked my batting and always tried to
talk to me. He and our main coach always told me that I have the potential
in me and I can score runs any moment, I can play any kind of shot. Neil
pointed out how when I batted in the net for say 20 minutes, I used to bat
very attentively for the first 5-10 minutes and didn't in the last 10.
"When I batted, Neil used to stand
behind me and told me to play late. At first, I was having some problems
adapting, as I used to play cricket in one style and now learning a new
thing was difficult. But I started to feel better when I applied those
things. Before I used to play early and lose control, but now I have the
control on the ball, like I can hit the ball wherever I want to, I could get
time to play the ball."
Playing late and being attentive -
the two McKenzie lessons, brought rewards for Liton, who went on to score
571 runs in nine matches averaging 81.6 with a strike-rate of 115.2. In
between he played consistently well in the last edition of Bangabandhu
Bangladesh Premier League and scored two murderous centuries against
Zimbabwe that includes his record breaking highest ODI score for his
country.
Liton also thanked former spin
bowling coach Sunil Joshi, who is currently the Indian chief selector, for
making him understand the importance of his wicket and though Liton failed
to deliver initially he still remembers his words of wisdom.
"I had some conversation about this
thing with Sunil Joshi and he once told me that the next time you are going
to play in the domestic circuit, try to bat at least for 35-40 overs. You
will then have a practice of not getting out and will also be able to bat
for a long time. Then you will understand what is your game, how to play in
which situation," Liton said.
"His words always remained in my
head. Though he was a bowler but he bowled against big batsmen, sometimes he
gave me examples of Tendulkar also. He told me a few things like how to play
spin bowling on slow wickets and on fast wickets."
Liton admitted that he was a little
late to understand that he's allowed to be different. "I can't play like
Afridi. I depend on timing and Afridi depends on force. I was a little late
to understand it. Everyone used to say that I'm a timing-based player. Until
one realizes himself, he cannot understand his own mistakes. Now I
understand that by applying force I can't do things."
McKenzie, who in a way kick-started
the transformation for Liton, said he's pleased with what he's seeing now.
"I think we all know that Liton Das is a very talented cricketer. I think
with talent comes frustration because we all know how good he can be,"
McKenzie said. "And he was getting good starts, a lot of 20s and 30s looking
like a world-class player. But world-class players don't get 20s and 30s.
So, like everything in life with a bit of maturity, he started to understand
his game plan a lot better, he understands what the team needs from him, he
understands his strengths and weaknesses and he understands that he
definitely wants to play a certain brand of cricket. He doesn't want to go
into his shell, he still wants to be positive.
"But there's a method to play
positive, obviously, and it starts with a good technique, being in good
positions. And I think that's something that we sort of spoke about when I
first got in the Bangladesh setup. That he can play his attacking shot but
he can be very solid in defence in the same innings. So I think he's gone
away, he has done all the homework and credit to him, he's come back really
well and I think he had a great last series.
"With regards to playing late
obviously if you see the best players in the world like Kane Williamson or
AB De Villiers, Virat Kohli you just see how late they play the ball.
Everything happened under the eyes, you know that's the key to the game,
playing the ball nice and late and then just being in a consistent
position."
Posted on May 23, 2020
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