Hungry for success: From Rs 10 per wicket for food\, Kolkata\'s Papu gets ready for Deodhar debut

Hungry for success: From Rs 10 per wicket for food, Kolkata's Papu gets ready for Deodhar debut

Press Trust of India  |  Guwahati 

for success is a common trait but for young left-arm spinner Ray, success was non-negotiable as it ensured that he didn't go off to sleep hungry.

As gets ready for his first brush with big time after good for his adopted state Odisha, he recollected his back-breaking journey where each and every wicket meant, he would get to eat proper lunch and dinner.

"Bhaiya log bulate the aur bolte the ball dalega toh khana khilaoonga. Aur har wicket ka 10 rupaiya dete the. (Seniors in my locality used to summon me to bowl and gave me Rs 10 per wicket)," recalled his days of during an interaction with PTI.

Son of couple, who migrated to Bengal for greener pastures, Papu lost his parents and when he was an infant. His father, a had a while mother passed away after

His parents hailed from Khajuri village, about 41 kilometres away from Chhapra in Saran district of Bihar, and had come to Kolkata in search of work and that's the only thing he knows about them.

"Unko (parents) kabhi dekha nahin... Kabhi gaon gaya nahin, khali suna hai (Never seen them nor have I been anytime to my native. I've only heard about them)," Ray, who now lives in a rented accommodation in Kolkata's Picnic Garden said.

"Wish they were here today to see me playing for C. I could not sleep whole night yesterday and kept crying. I think my years and years of hardwork is finally paying off now," Ray said as his voice choked with emotion.

Once his parents passed away, it was his uncle and aunt, who took care of him but once his uncle, a daily labourer also passed away, the 15-year-old found it difficult to even arrange one meal a day. But was his calling and also his saviour.

He had initially started off as a pacer but it was Howrah Union Academy Sujit Saha, who advised him to take up left-arm spin

He was the highest wicket-taker in CAB's second division league in 2011 when he got 50 wickets in nine matches for Dalhousie.

However with Iresh Saxena playing for Bengal at that point of time and later Pragyan Ojha coming in, Ray didn't find a place in the Bengal team.

Club cricket in Kolkata is only lucrative for a select band of cricketers playing for the big clubs and Ray's next destination was neighbouring state of Odisha.

In search of and shelter, his next stop became Jajpur, about 100 kilometres northeast of Bhubaneshwar.

"My friends (and Asif Iqbal Khan) whom I met here told me they would provide me and shelter. So Odisha became my home," he doesn't forget to mention those, who stood by him during those dark days.

It was in 2015 that he first got a "break" in the form of entry into the Odisha U-23 team.

"There was a U-23 state team trial in Cuttack and my friends told me you will be picked if selector sir watches you bowl. It was only during the third match Suresh sir came and I was selected," he said.

Within three years, Ray made his senior team debut in List A cricket getting 14 wickets from eight group league games for Odisha. So Bengal's loss was Odisha's gain.

In fact, his List A debut on September 20 against Andhra, he dismissed and former national U-19 off successive deliveries.

"I missed the hattrick but grew in confidence from then on and the teammates supported me fully," Ray, who played all eight matches for Odisha, said.

As he gets ready to wear a representative India jersey, his only hope is to get at least one chance in the playing XI.

"Hopefully, I will get a chance and I will give my best. It will be a great learning experience," he signed off.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Fri, October 19 2018. 17:05 IST