Kedar Jadhav's power-packed 65-ball-100 might have earned him the sobriquet of 'Pocket Dynamite' but former national selector Surendra Bhave did reveal how a hard-core vegetarian added power to his small frame once he started having chicken
Kedar Jadhav. File pic
Cuttack: Pint-sized Kedar Jadhav's power-packed 65-ball-100 might have earned him the sobriquet of 'Pocket Dynamite' but former national selector Surendra
Bhave did reveal how a hard-core vegetarian added power to his small frame once he started having chicken.
Son of former Maharashtra State Electricity Board employee Mahadev Jadhav, Kedar hails from a vegetarian family. "You can surely give this credit to me. It was me who made him eat chicken," laughed Bhave as he spoke to PTI about Jadhav. "I don't want to take credit for his stardom. I am like his coach, elder brother, mentor and guide, who meet on an off or exchange a few texts. The last time (in 2010-11) I told him that his backlift looked astray and he immediately corrected it resulting in an amazing transformation," said Bhave, who himself was a Maharashtra stalwart during his playing days said.
He fondly recollected the first time he saw a young Kedar during a Cooch Behar Trophy game against Kerala where he blasted 195 from 262 balls at the Nehru Stadium. "I instantly knew he was special. With the kind of ease he was hitting the Kerala bowlers was really different. His body language always looks casual but he's someone who loves to take on the opposition and finish the match," Bhave said. Bhave feels that Kedar is an all-format player, who can keep wickets better than a lot of specialist keeper.
"I've little doubts that he is an all format player. I've seen some of his best knocks in multiday cricket. He can bowl, give breakthroughs and his wicket-keeping is better than any specialist," said Bhave. "We have seen his wicketkeeping for Royal Challengers Bangalore and Delhi Daredevils. Clearly he's multi-talented." Bhave remembers Kedar's match-winning century against a formidable Mumbai two seasons ago in a Ranji Trophy at the Wankhede Stadium.
"The ball was darting around and doing everything. Zaheer bowled some astonishing deliveries but Jadhav showed he has the technique to flourish even in seaming conditions," Bhave said of Jadhav. "He's someone who loves to bat till the last. He is a player of three formats. I always knew there's no stopping
him, he had to rise some day. He is the best cricketer to come out of Maharashtra for a long time." His fitness was found wanting matching to Kohli in running in the Pune ODI as he developed cramps but Bhave felt that Jadhav is fit enough for the rigours. "He's supremely fit and it was just one of those days.
Moreover Pune was extremely humid that day following rains earlier. Obviously we cannot compare his aerobic ability with that of Virat but he has no fitness issues at all," Bhave said.
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The duo also share amazing rapport from his coaching days. "We begin our chat over the video analysis on his laptop and end up seeing one his innumerable Salman Khan dance numbers. The iconic belt-wiggling Salman move is his favourite. No wonder that he's 'Dabang' to his India A
teammates," Bhave concluded.