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Cricketfundas.com Interviews : Arshad Ayub |

Arshad Ayub was one of India's most promising
spinners in the 1980s. A competent late order
bat as well, Ayub made telling contributions in
quite a few ODIs while playing for India in the
late 80s. He however couldn't manage to hold on
to his place for longevity in the Indian squad,
a trait quite similar to other very promising
spinners in the 1980s, .viz Maninder Singh and
L.Sivaramakrishnan. Ayub however was a stalwart
for the Hyderabad Cricket Team for a long time
with whom, he won the Ranji Trophy in the year
1989, by contributing to the victory with a
string of decent performances.
Our Cricketfundas.com's reporter V.R.Srinivasan
had the opportunity of interviewing Arshad Ayub
in his Cricket Academy premises. Special thanks
to Ashwat Ramani for bringing out this
interview.
Cricketfundas.com: Good
Evening, Mr Ayub. To start with, we would like
to ask you about your first first class match
which was a big time one at that. You played for
a U-22 Team against the mighty West Indies in
1978. What were the feelings that you were
carrying into that match and can you tell us
about that match too?
Arshad Ayub: Well the game was something
basically! We faced a team that was actually a
new one for the West Indies, because most of
their other players had gone on to play in the
Kerry Packer (World) Series. So players like
Marshall came into the scene that time, so did
Sylvester Clarke and others who actually turned
out the West Indies team in a way too...because
Marshall became a legend and Sylvester Clarke
was probably the fastest bowler during that
time. The team was led by Kallicharan and
because of their strength we were indeed under
some great pressure and people were thinking
this could be an one sided affair. But I guess,
we gave them a very good fight and I was also
there to avoid the follow on (Cricketfundas.com
reminds,” You scored a 58 in that game"). Yes, I
scored 58 and we could save the follow on and
save the game actually. So it was a good
experience for me, and I think probably during
that time, there wasn't any protective gear such
as helmets to wear. It was a big thing and quite
a fact that I could play Marshall and Clarke
without protective gear and score a fifty and it
turned out that after that game I never felt
overawed by any bowling actually.
Cricketfundas.com: Sir,
at that point of time when you were 20 years of
age, were you an out and out off spinner or an
all rounder? You scored 58 runs in your first
big game so at that time you must have
considered yourself as a decent all rounder?
Arshad Ayub: Actually if you look at my school
records and my U-22 records, I have always been
an all rounder. I used to bat No.3; I used to
open the Innings so it was never a middle order
batsman also in the sense I never used to bat
lower than 3. Only in the Ranji Trophy did I bat
a little lower down. Otherwise if you look
overall, I batted No.3 for my School Team, U-22,
and Junior State etc. So I was more of an
all-rounder than anything else. Even if you look
at Ranji Trophy, probably till… I think 1988 I
had an average of about 45. (Cricketfundas.com
reminds “Sir, Actually in one season you
actually scored more than 700 runs”).
Cricketfundas.com: Sir,
when people are young they try to contribute in
every aspect of the game; they fancy their
chances in everything. Then comes one point in
their career where they decide that now is the
time to become a specialist in a particular
field. So when exactly did you feel that you are
going to be an off spinner with a great caliber
and going to represent India. When did you feel
that you had to concentrate on your off spin
specifically?
Arshad Ayub: I think only when I played for
India, I mean if you look at it in that way, I
mean till then I was playing for the state as
well as for the Zone, so I had to perform in
both, bat and ball, because I used to bat at
No.6 as an all-rounder and I was the main
off-spinner in the team. So I had to perform in
both the things. So I never felt that, I must
concentrate only on one thing. I always
concentrated on both the things. But yes, When I
went into Test Cricket, that was the time when I
couldn’t bat No.6 or No.7, I was sent into bat
at either No.8 or No.9, that was the time I
thought that, although I got some runs for India
in matches whenever it was required, but I think
I played mainly as an off-spinner there. I think
that is where I thought that probably I must
start concentrating more on my bowling.
Cricketfundas.com : You
were one of the Premier off-spinners during the
80’s and you were transcending after a
generation that was probably the best ever
spin-bowling generation in any nation. We had
the spin quartet and very talented spinners like
Dilip Doshi etc, so was there a kind of pressure
and lot of expectations on you to live up to
that generation, when you started your career as
a national Off-spinner?
Arshad Ayub: No, not really. I felt that you
know I had it me to be a good bowler and I never
felt the pressure put by anybody for that matter
throughout my life. I played my cricket very
hard. So right from the beginning, I had really
you know had a competition from the Hyderabad
state team. When I came into the side there were
guys like Ramnarayan, Shivlal Yadav, Naushir
Mehta, 3 off spinners who had established
themselves. So I had to break in when all these
off spinners were there. So I think I always
played hard so I never felt any pressure as such
when I played for India, I didn’t want to
compare myself with Prasanna, Venkatraghavan or
anybody, I wanted to create my own mark when I
played. I think during that time I felt that I
should make my own mark rather than copying
anybody else and living up to their
expectations. There were different times, like
when I was there the Cricketing phase was
completely changing. So I was in a changing
phase. When I left, the phase had changed
completely. So during that phase a lot of things
were happening, the one-dayers became the more
kind of stable game during that time. During my
time, you know we were playing about 12-13 ODI’s
in a year and after that the phase changed and
they started playing 35-40 games in a year.
Cricketfundas.com : So,
you played for Hyderabad throughout your career,
and Hyderabad for a long time has been a very
talented team. So do you think that as you had
to work hard to establish into the ranks, that
was a reason why you made into the national team
and it was a kind of seamless integration into
the national team?
Arshad Ayub: Well, I don’t think so exactly. I
mean to say that, that kind of thought never
came into my mind. Because if you look at my
career, right from my school days, my
performance levels were always above average and
I remember that I had got a "Best Student in
India" too very early. From then onwards, I
never looked back actually, and whenever I had
the chance of batting or bowling, I always used
to prove myself. My whole aim was to play for
the country, and I did go through a lot of Ranji
Trophy and Domestics Struggles. Infact I
couldn't get into Ranji trophy easily either
inspite of the 58 against the visiting WI. I
fought it out and finally made it. I got a
chance to go to the WI in 1980; the tour however
was cancelled because Sunil Gavaskar didn't want
to go. Then after that I got a chance in 1984,
where I did well in the trial games and was
tipped to go to Pakistan, which didn't happen
again. There were the Australian games in 1985
and I thought my international career could take
off there because I had performed at my best but
still didn't make it yet. All these hardened me
and probably I think the near misses made me
stronger and made me feel that I could make it
whatever be the circumstances around me. That
was one reason why I could contribute well and
win the Ranji Trophy for the first time in
Hyderabad after about 49 years, I think. In the
semis, I got around 200 in the first innings and
also picked up 4 wickets then in the final. In
the final too I scored a century and a 80 in the
same game and I relish the fact that I could
give back to Hyderabad cricket after all that I
got. I think we haven't won the trophy since
then, so that win was something huge and big.
Cricketfundas.com :
Sir, you had a very stylish kind of bowling,
very unique at that time. For Off spinners, we
generally don’t associate style over substance
with off spin bowling as such. So was there
someone who inspired you to bowl in that manner
or was it your own style.
Arshad Ayub: My bowling style I think probably
was my own; I hadn’t copied anybody as such.
But, I think basically I always used to look up
to was probably Prasanna as he was the greatest
spinner of his times, so he was one particular
person I used to look up to but I don’t think I
have copied anyone as such consciously that you
would know.
Cricketfundas.com:
Were you coached by Prasanna and other off
spinners?
Arshad Ayub: No, not really. M.R.Baig coached me
actually. He was a very good off spinner. He had
played for Hyderabad, Delhi, North Zone and
Services. He was a good off spinner. But, he was
basically my spinning coach only. Batting wise,
I must thank Mr. Bhupathi and Mr. Ibrahim Khan,
they were the legend coaches of Hyderabad I
think those were the people who taught me.
Bhupathi actually taught me how to hold a bat
properly. I think Ibrahim Khan Saab worked a lot
on me and on my stroke making. So I think both
of them get the credit for my batting.
Cricketfundas.com : If
you look at Hyderabad cricketers as such, they
have been consistent in their own ways. But
there is something that distinguishes them from
the others, that is the way they play ….say Md
Azharuddin, yourself and V.V.S Laxman they all
are stylish. Why is it that Hyderabadi batsmen
have their own kind of style from the days of
M.L.Jaisimha to V.V.S.Laxman.... style has been
one constant theme that has influenced
Hyderabadi Cricket very much. So do you
attribute it to the coaching that you had or
what is the basic reason?
Arshad Ayub: Probably, I would say you know….
Matting wicket is one of the cause, so you have
to be very wristy because of the bounce that is
one thing you know you have to come into the
line and play across the line most of the time
and you try to fetch a lot of the runs on the
on-side and so basically I think matting wicket
is one of the reasons..... but generally if you
look at Hyderabad Cricket they have been stroke
makers from the beginning so I think probably
the trend goes on ..…if you watch somebody
before you blaze, you try to copy him in a way …
you know .. That is probably the reason I must
say you have kind of heroes in your mind. For
ex: there are a lot of people who want to copy
Sachin Tendulkar or Sourav Ganguly, but very few
of them would like to copy Rahul Dravid because
he is not a very exciting player to watch,
Virender Sehwag for that matter is an exciting
player, Similarly I think for a young boy who is
coming up, for him a good impression is a person
who is making lot of strokes, playing out of
ordinary basically which gives him an attraction
to follow him. Probably that is one of the
reasons why Hyderabadis are looking at their
seniors to develop this kind of game.
Cricketfundas.com :
When you were playing for India or when you were
in the reckoning or coming back for India,
throughout that period, India had spinners who
promised a lot people like Sivaramakrishnan,
yourself, Shivlal Yadav, Maninder Singh to
emulate the feats of the earlier generation but
couldn’t exactly match the feats of the earlier
generation. What were the factors, which curved
the complete maturation of bowlers like you,
Siva and others.
Arshad Ayub : I think probably Siva was the most
talented boy who came across during that time
and I feel he got carried away rather soon and
lost it. But in my case and Maninder's case it’s
a different story and I don’t want to blame
anybody in this matter but yes we were treated a
bit badly during that time when we were
performing really well. We did well when we came
back from Pakistan although I didn’t get any
wicket in that series because of placid tracks,
India scored 500 odd runs and Pakistan scored
650 odd and 15 wickets fell in 5 days. So you
can imagine the state of the wicket and that was
the only failure I had in my life as such. We
weren’t treated, as we had to be I think
probably we had the potential to play for
another 3-4 years but the selectors thought it
otherwise.
But Shivlal, I think he played about 30 odd test
matches and got 100 wickets so I think he did
fairly well but remember one thing, you are as
good as the captain thinks, its always like
that... Pras (Erapalli Prasanna), Chandrashekhar,
Bedi, Venkatraghavan; they all had a very good
captain who believed in spin bowling...Pataudi
really used to believe in spinners. But on the
other hand, Sunil (Gavaskar) you know was ok
with the left arm spinners but he didn’t have
the same amount of confidence in off spinners.
So Shivlal was in and out in and out majority of
his times.
There is a little bit of history linked with all
these things if you look into it. When Dilip (Vengsarkar)
came in and he was the captain I think I
performed the best, because he had lot of
confidence in me. Then Srikkanth came in and I
remember him saying during my university days
that he wouldn't mind even if he had just one
bowler in his squad! But again he was a
different captain in Pakistan where he relied a
lot on his bowlers.
In the Pak scenario, if you go back into
history, people like Bedi, Chandrashekhar all
lost their places after the Pakistan Series. So
what happens is that, as Pakistan are rivals,
people think that if you don’t do well against
Pakistan you are axed without any
accountability. So that was the kind of factors
that probably played against us.
Like if you see there wasn’t any off spinner in
the side for around 2-3 years after I left the
side. After much longer than that, Rajesh
Chauhan came into the side who was an off
spinner. (Cricketfundas: “ It took almost 10
years for an off spinner to take a 5 wicket haul
after you had taken a 5 wicket haul”). I had
taken 50 wickets in the Ranji Trophy after being
left out of the squad, but I didn't get a chance
to come back. Basically our planning changed
during that period and there wasn't much
necessity for an off-spinner probably, even
though I had improved a lot and was playing at
probably my best after being left out. Anyway
it's all part of the game and you need to take
it in your stride, no blaming on anybody, but
these are the reasons you know can be given what
happened during that time.
Cricketfundas.com :
Sir, the focus of our Cricket is more towards
the Ranji Trophy, where you play longer innings
suitable for Test Matches as such, but you were
used more as a One-Day Bowler, infact you played
a lot of ODIs before you started playing Test
Cricket regularly, if I am right. So was it easy
for you to suddenly jump into the whirlpool of
One Day Cricket after your domestic experiences?
Arshad Ayub: No, actually I think I started off
with Test Cricket first. My debut was in Delhi,
so I started my international cricket with Test
Cricket first. After that series, we
straightaway went into One-Days. So, it was a
question of you know probably you need to adjust
to the game as quickly as possible, because if
you want to become a quality player you need to
adjust and we can’t complain about that. But,
there is a problem; you can’t mix it around like
you playing 1 Test Match and then suddenly 1 ODI
and again 1 Test Match and 1 ODI. There must be
some balance there, like you finish your Tests
and then go back to the One-Dayers, and vice
versa.
Cricketfundas.com : The
emphasis for an off spinner in Test Matches is
always to flight the ball but in the ODI’s he
can sometimes commit hara-kiri by flighting the
ball because its not controlled cricket as
such...and other such factors...All these
nuances which made up for the adjustment. Did it
come naturally to you?
Arshad Ayub: It’s like this; first of all you
need to be a very good reader of the wicket. If
you have a little experience of how the wicket
is playing or if you know that you are going to
get some bite out of the wicket, then you feel
like here, OK, I have a chance that I can give a
50 % chance for the batsman to get runs and I
also have a 50% chance to get a wicket. So if I
can get 3 or 4 wickets then it can change the
whole situation. Similar thing happened in Dhaka
in the final game where I got 5/21 against
Pakistan, I could see that there is a little bit
of turn in the wicket, I could see that there is
a little bit of moisture in the wicket, so when
I saw that I thought ok, this is the time when I
can bowl a little slower than required. So I
bowled a bit slower and it got good grip from
the wicket.
There were other occasions where the wicket is
not at all going to help me, where I knew that I
for sure am going to go for not less than 50
runs, then that is the time I needed to think a
lot as to how to give less than 50 runs. That
was the idea, because in those days, 250 was a
big score and a score like 260-270 was
considered unachievable except for one odd
occasion when Pakistan chased 280 runs. But,
otherwise 250 runs was always a winning score at
that time. So I used to adjust to the ODI game
by bowling good Yorker length balls, you know,
block hole deliveries, which helped me, curb the
run rate. That’s how I was able to cut out the
50 run margin in 10 overs to 40 odd runs. To sum
it up, I had to make some calculations as to how
to cut out the runs on flat wickets instead of
directly going for taking wickets, and focus on
how to induce a mistake by the batsman and thus
buy a wicket. For any off spinner, this is how
one needs to work on, bowling in ODIs. And with
experience; one gets better in ODI bowling!
Cricketfundas.com: Sir,
talking about the 5/21 against Pakistan in the
Asia Cup in Dhaka, was that your most memorable
performance?
Arshad Ayub: I think, yes in a way that you know
it was unexpected in a One-Day match and
especially during that time, 5-21 was a big
thing and especially against a side which had
Javed Miandad and the likes of Salim Malik. I
mean those guys were among the best players of
spin bowling. So I was thrilled.
Cricketfundas.com : It
took almost 10 years to break your record, like
Anil Kumble broke your record with his haul of
6/12 against the West Indies. So did you have
mixed thoughts during that time…Oh my god I am
missing a record?
Arshad Ayub: No, not at all. I think records are
meant to be broken. I did well during my time;
they are going to do well during their time. Now
for example: look at that Walsh record now, its
gone now, the 519 wicket record, who would have
thought that one would take 400 wickets, but
this fellow has taken 520 and he never looks
like stopping.
Cricketfundas.com :
Taking this conversation into controversy mode,
you are an off spinner, Muralitharan is an off
spinner, and there is always a 50-50 reaction of
what Murali is doing. We as Indians, and with
certain inclinations to support Sri Lankan
achievements, probably feel that Muralitharan is
a genuine bowler, but again lots and lots of hue
and cry has been raised about his action, his
doosra was questioned recently, so what’s your
opinion about that? Does he bowl the illegal
delivery often or is he a genuine bowler?
Arshad Ayub: I think what he does for the normal
delivery, you can call it a fair delivery,
because there is a bend in his arm, he is not
using the bend properly to straighten his arm he
is bowling with that bend. And then what he is
doing is that he is rotating his wrist so much
that it looks like he is actually chucking the
ball but I think he is not. But that I think is
as far as the normal delivery is concerned.
But for the other one that is going out, I think
that is where the suspicion comes in. I think
even the best of the supporters of Muralitharan,
have got a doubt in their mind because in that
particular delivery, there is an angle of
straightening, because he is bending a little
bit and there is an angle of straightening for
that particular ball. So that is where everybody
suspects about him. If he bowls it like he bowls
the regular ball I don’t think there will be any
problems. But when he is bowling the doosra
(trying to imitate Murali’s action), he bends
his arm like this and it pitches and straightens
and that is where the problem arises and the
controversy is going on because of that.
He has gone to Australia and proved his action
to be ok again and again, but it's still
controversial. I would not like to say that it
is very clean or not, but its still
controversial. Its also a bit tough on him,
because of the controversy, everybody is
watching him and the limelight further makes the
whole issue more controversial. It affects a
bowler psychologically and it affects your
thought process. On the whole, I think that the
outgoing delivery is a very difficult ball to
bowl, whether by Saqlain or Murali.
Cricketfundas.com :
Sir, now that you have finished your career as a
player, you are into coaching now, so if you
find youngsters who try to imitate Muralitharan,
so what would be your advise to them... would
you prevent them from bowling in the same
manner?
Arshad Ayub: No, the thing is that you never
really prevent anybody from bowling anything.
Let me be very specific about it, you see…when
you see a youngster bowling, if he has got a
natural action for anything, no matter if he is
an off-spinner or a leg spinner or a medium
pacer, then you don’t change his action. You try
to manage that action in such a way that he gets
the most effective delivery and stays within the
laws of bowling. So that is what you as a coach
should do. Coach must have an eye to watch a
player, which is the most important thing. If he
has an eye like what is required for a
particular player, then he can be a good coach.
But if he doesn’t have the eye to find the good
and bad qualities of a particular bowler then
its going to be very difficult to separate the
both. So he needs to understand what is good and
what is bad, so that he can take the bad out of
him effectively, Good has to remain there.
Every player has got this unique way of batting
or bowling; a talented player always shows that
he has a unique way of doing things. So you need
to understand that and come up with the best
solution for it that is going to work for him.
You cannot change it like you have to bowl like
Dennis Lillie or you have to bowl like some
other bowler ….no that is not the right way to
do it. He can’t be a Prasanna, he can’t be a
Bishen Singh Bedi, he can be himself, but he
should learn the good things from these greats
and add those things in his bowling.
Cricketfundas.com :
Sir, Any prospects that you know, who will make
into the team from Hyderabad as spinners now?
Arshad Ayub: We are trying to find some. There
are some young boys who are doing well, but I
think they are very young right now and I don’t
want to comment on that because it might go into
their head and can prove really bad for them.
There are young boys who are coming up and I
think they are doing well, and we have got lot
of hope on those boys, but if you look at the
state level scenario, there are hardly any
quality bowlers, whom you can talk about. But
the youngsters are coming up and the future
seems to be better than what we have right now
because I think the not very long ago there was
some neglect of spinners and spin based
training. Everybody was thinking like…you
know... they wanted to have a fast bowling camp,
they wanted to have an MRF Camp etc. But nobody
thought of having a spinners camp, which came in
very late probably last 2 years ago or so, there
was a thought process, which went through BCCI
that made them think that we must also have a
spin-bowling academy. So there is a Mac academy
now, they have started a spinners academy. I
think 2 yeas back they started it... VV Kumar is
there, I think, so there is some thought process
going on there and my academy is also there. Now
we are thinking of doing a special training
thing for spinners and we have been doing this
since the last few years.
There are a lot of youngsters who are coming up,
I don’t want to name any body at this point of
time, but yes in the next 4 or 5 years, you will
see some better quality spinners.
Cricketfundas.com : Are
you still involved with the Hyderabad team?
Arshad Ayub : Not as a coach, but I think I was
putting in so much of time with the Hyderabad
Cricket and 8 months or so I was losing on that,
so I stopped last year and I thought I will take
a break from there as I was there for 4 years.
Once we went to the finals, once we went to the
Semis, but after that I thought that I will take
a break, and now I am helping the youngsters
here to groom them and I have started a special
class on Sunday also for the boys who cant make
it everyday but want to learn, that Sunday class
basically…it’s a personal coaching class,
because I take it myself and I don’t take other
coaches with me, I do it myself and I have
Fayyaz Baig with me so both of us look after the
boys during that time.
Cricketfundas.com :
Anything else what you would like to tell as ….a
message probably to budding cricketers?
Arshad Ayub : Well, Cricket has been the
bloodline for the Indian people now, it has been
more than anything more than the film industry,
more than any other game and people have been
attached with cricket, and are attached
emotionally. I think cricket has come to stay in
India and I think there should be a balance
between watching cricket and studies for
youngsters.
For any budding cricketer, he should concentrate
on studies too and not just cricket alone and
should not stay up late or have a third focus
such as watching television etc. That way they
would end up not achieving both in cricket and
in studies!. If youngsters concentrate on just 2
priorities, I think they will have a very good
future.
Cricketfundas.com : We
personally feel that Hyderabadi Cricketers as
such are models to follow; all of them are of a
simple humble background who made it big and
have maintained their character throughout so do
you think we are right?
Arshad Ayub: Well in effect yes, you can say
that about most of the cricketers but I think
most of them come from very good families. That
was the main thing...they had a very solid
family background.. If you have a very good
family background then you don’t tend to waver
around. So you have a support system there. So I
think most of the cricketers from Hyderabad had
a support system, irrespective of the fact that
whether it was a joint family system or a
single-family system, and where the person in
you was treated same as everybody around.
So when you grow up you have that extra bit of
confidence, which made you feel above the crowd,
and still players such as ML Jaisimha, Abbas Ali
Baig and others later on were very humble
because of a solid family background. In fact
they were also very charismatic, like Jai (Jaisimha),
Abbas (Ali Baig) and Azhar. All of them were
very charismatic but they were still very humble
as far as their nature went and as regards their
interaction with the general public.
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