A look at trio of Rashid Khan, Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Mohammad Nabi and their performances 

While there’s no doubt that the trio have been  excellent in the shortest format, their effectiveness with the  red ball over five days is still to be tested.

Published: 13th June 2018 03:06 AM  |   Last Updated: 13th June 2018 03:06 AM   |  A+A-

Rashid Khan. (File Photo | AFP)

Express News Service

Afghanistan captain fired the opening salvo when he  claimed that their spinners were better than their Indian counterparts. While there’s no doubt that the trio of Rashid Khan, Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Mohammad Nabi have been  excellent in the shortest format, their effectiveness with the  red ball over five days is still to be tested. The key difference between bowling in T20 and Tests is that the need of scoring quickly and the paucity of time in the former often leads to cheap dismissals but there’s no such rush in the latter and therefore, only quality bowlers succeed over a period of time. Anyhow, it’s worth looking  closely at the three spinners and what they bring to the table.

Rashid Khan

The leg spin sensation is arguably the best T20 bowler in  the world right now. His high arm action, quick arms and the well disguised googly hasn’t been deciphered despite him plying his trade across the globe in various T20  leagues. Leg spinners with a high arm action might get less side spin but their googlies are more effective because they don’t have to change their point of release to slip in the  wrong one. Generally, as a batsman, you see the back of the  hand when a bowler is trying to bowl a googly but in Rashid’s case, you see the back of the hand all the time. Since there’s no visible difference at the point of release, it’s very difficult to differentiate between the leg-spin and  googly. His speed in the air also makes it very difficult for the batsman to adjust if they misread the length. Robin  Uthappa is one of the rare batsmen who’s got a very good record against Rashid and he claims to play him like an off-spinner. Perhaps, that’s what the Indian batsmen might have to do in Bengaluru.

Mujeeb Ur Rahman

He’s the new mystery bowler in town who’s also shown good control with regards to line and length. Often he bowls with the new ball in the powerplay overs of a T20 game and he’s rarely expensive.
He’s got two key variations — a front  of the hand carrom ball that goes away from the right- handed batsmen and a back of the hand googly that turns in  after pitching. Besides the positioning of the hand at the point of release, the key difference between the two is also the speed of the ball.
The faster ones are carrom balls and  the slower ones are almost always the googlies. It will be  interesting if he’s able to bowl long spells without bowling boundary balls in Test cricket, for unlike T20 cricket, it’s  almost impossible to pack both sides of the pitch in a Test match.

Mohammad Nabi

His style of off-break is a throwback to the years gone by. He’s got a clean action who relies on the traditional drift  and dip to beat the batsman in the air. He doesn’t have a doosra or a carrom ball and his only variation is the arm- ball that holds its line and goes away from the right-handed batsmen,
and is delivered a little faster and flatter.He’s the most experienced first-class cricketer in the team and  therefore is equipped with patience to set up dismissals by  bowling quiet overs. If the pitch at Chinnaswamy starts turning like it was during the IPL, he might be a fairly difficult proposition to handle.
#AakashVani

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