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Cricketfundas.com Interviews : Vijay Bharadwaj |

Vijay Bharadwaj was once
thought to be the street smart all rounder for
India. He was thought of as someone who could
come in to the slogs and produce a quick cameo
and with his off breaks keep it tight and pick
up a few wickets here and there. But he's much
more than that and is a classy middle order
right hand batsman who can do his bit with the
ball. He's reckoned to be one of the technically
well equipped batsman in the country.
This Karnataka mainstay did get his chance at
the highest level, he had fared decently in the
10 one dayers he played, however the 3 tests he
had played were disappointing. Born on India's
Independence Day 15th August, this 29 year old
has still got loads of cricket left for the
country.
Vijay Bharadwaj happened
to have a chat with Ashwat Ramani of
Cricketfundas.com and this is the interview
compiled :
Vijay, talk us through your ODI debut against
South Africa in the LG Cup at Nairobi.
I think it was a perfect launching pad for me,
and I never dreamt of such a good performance on
my debut. On that particular tour, I bowled
really well and I scored some runs. After that
even in the New Zealand series I bowled well and
my performance was quite good in the ODI’s. I
think I should have carried on for 2 or 3 years
more, but because of the injury which I had in
Australia in the Sydney Test Match, I was not
able to play for one year. And after that I
couldn’t cement my place in the Indian team.
You were awarded the Man of the Series in your
first ever tournament for taking 10 wickets at a
mind-blowing average of 12.2 and scoring 65 runs
without being dismissed once. How do you feel
about your performance in your very first
tournament?
It was a very good series for me, and I think we
should have won that tournament. Had we won
that, it would have been even more memorable for
me. The feeling of anybody contributing on debut
and winning the tournament would have been
great.
What is the story behind your entry into
cricket? Who inspired you the most?
It's just the friends and the people around me
who inspired me the most. Everyone of us were
cricket crazy and we started playing at a very
young age. I was very fond of playing cricket in
my school days and college days. When I started
playing Cricket, it was very competitive in
Karnataka. That’s how I picked up cricket, and
got a lot of help from the senior cricketers. I
played a lot of Junior Cricket in Karnataka, and
as far as I remember, I played my U-16 in 1989.
So its almost 15 years of Cricket now for
Karnataka.
In 1999 you played the Australian A side which
included the likes of Gilchrist, Symonds in Los
Angeles. What did you learn from that series?
It was a pretty good tour against the Australian
A side, because that was almost the Australian
side. They had Brett Lee, Gilchrist, Symonds,
Damien Martyn and Shane Lee. So it was almost
the Australian National team. And there was only
one complete game, due to the poor conditions
and there wasn’t a wicket at all over there and
I think there shouldn’t be any kind of
International Cricket played on such tracks,
because people trying to make their comeback or
establish their careers against sides like
Australia, and if you give them tracks like
that, then your confidence gets shattered.
Your Test Debut came against New Zealand at
Mohali where the Indians got all out to a paltry
score of 83. Talk us through that and also the
nature of the wicket.
Even though we were all out for 83, that turned
out to be a good game for us later. I didn’t
perform well, but I could see Sachin get a 100,
Rahul get a 100, and Sourav got some runs.
Getting all out for 83 in the 1st
Innings and then drawing the match in the end
was a good feat. I didn’t score runs, but I got
a feeling of what Test Cricket was. Even though
that was my Debut, I was not at all nervous.
You were one of the 4 players including MSK
Prasad, Devang Gandhi and Hrishikesh Kanitkar
who never made it back to the Indian test team
after a poor series down under in Australia.
What went wrong there?
I played only one Test in that Series and that
was the 3rd and final Test at Sydney.
We had lost all our games in that Series
including the tour games. We just won one game
against New South Wales. No one was performing
well in that tour and it was a pathetic
performance by everybody. Apart from Sachin, no
one scored runs in that tour. Forget about the
junior players who were touring Australia for
the first time, even the senior players were
finding it difficult, because the Australians
were on a roll winning so many Test Matches and
I think it was tough for Indian Cricket during
those times.
In Ranji, you’ve been performing very well since
the past 10 years both with the bat and the
ball. So what really is the secret for your
consistency with both the bat and the ball?
It is just a motivation for playing for
Karnataka. Playing for Karnataka for such a long
time around 10-12 years, I think as far as I
know very few people have done that. It’s a
great sense of achievement for me and I think
that keeps me going.
You scored 207 against a mighty Tamil Nadu in
2001 after trailing by around 250 runs. Talk us
through that innings.
Yeah I ended up on 207 not out in that match,
but eventually it was an outright win for Tamil
Nadu. I felt really sad after that match,
because we lost to Tamil Nadu and we didn’t
qualify just by a point. But yes, that inning
was a very memorable one.
Is making a comeback into the Indian team in
your mind?
Yes definitely. Lets hope I play well this year
and score a lot of runs.
What do you think are India’s chances in the
upcoming ICC Champions Trophy?
India I think has a very good chance of winning
this tournament. If they do the right things at
the right time, then they have a very good
chance of winning this Tournament. I hope that
the top 6 batsmen come good while batting and
score a lot of runs.
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