They’ve not been wholly reliant on the pitch either. Where the fast bowlers haven’t always found swing with the new ball, spinners have found drift, and genuine swing when they’ve bowled the arm ball. Even as Australia hunted down 158 in just 16.2 overs against West Indies, for instance, Akeal Hosein went at just 7.25 in his four overs. His prodigiously swinging arm ball followed Aaron Finch as he made attempts to create room for himself, and eventually got him bowled off the inside edge while attempting a late cut.How have the spinners got the ball drifting and swinging so consistently when the fast bowlers haven’t? I put this question to Malolan Rangarajan, the former Tamil Nadu offspinner who’s now a talent scout with Royal Challengers Bangalore and assistant coach with CPL champions St Kitts and Nevis Patriots.”Let’s just take one example here, the one-finger [arm] ball, one of the reasons it does swing at times or at least create some sort of an angle, is because of the seam position it has to be released with,” Malolan says. “If a fast bowler bowls an outswinger, his seam position doesn’t necessarily have to be [tilted towards] first or second slip, but when a spinner bowls an arm ball, the seam position needs to be a little exaggerated at release. That forces the ball to create some sort of angle or movement in the air.”The round-the-wicket angle to the opposite-hand batter also makes it far easier for left-arm spinners to cramp right-hand batters for room, and for offspinners to do the same against left-handers.”When a left-arm spinner bowls from around the wicket, and he bowls the undercutter or the one-finger ball, even though it starts from outside your eyeline as a batsman, you know that it’s ending up towards your body,” Malolan says. “The arm comes from so far outside the pitch if the left-armer is bowling from around the wicket, but if a right-arm spinner has to do that, he has to come from around his head.”R Ashwin tends to use an inswinging reverse carrom ball to right-handers, and the traditional arm ball to left-handers•BCCIThis, then, is perhaps the biggest reason why left-arm spinners prefer bowling to right-hand batters and offspinners to left-handers. It isn’t so much about the ball turning away from the bat as much as the angles that allow the bowler to cramp batters for room.And bowlers keep finding new ways to do this. R Ashwin, for instance, bowls a reverse carrom ball that’s more or less an inswinger to the right-hander (he mostly reserves the traditional arm ball, which goes the other way, for left-handers), and he often jumps wide of the crease while bowling it, to create even more of an inward angle.”He’s got two variants of it,” Malolan says. “One swings in in the air and then goes on with the arm, and the other one, which he bowls a lot in the IPL, is he goes wide of the crease, angles it in, and then gets it to straighten. He changes the release a little bit.”If there’s been a seeming explosion of drift and slow swing at this World Cup, it may not necessarily be because these skills have been rediscovered, Malolan says. Instead, because wristspin and mystery spin had shunted them to the periphery of T20 cricket for a few years, fingerspinners weren’t necessarily getting much of a chance to show off these skills.”Ashwin for a long time has bowled [the arm ball]. Even the dismissal of Chris Gayle in the 2011 [IPL] final was a one-finger ball,” Malolan says. “Shakib Al Hasan still bowls it. I don’t know how much domestic cricket you watch, but the number of players who actually do it now is unbelievable.”Akeal Hosein, we’re seeing in the World Cup. He bowls the one-finger ball, he bowls the carrom also. There have been people who do it, it’s just that those people haven’t been playing. Now suddenly you have these guys bowl in the powerplay and swing it as much as Jimmy Anderson.”As the history of T20 has shown us, styles of bowling keep evolving with time, and as a response to external challenges. While the pitches in the UAE have allowed the inward, cramping angle to flourish, spinners have had to develop other modes of operation on flatter surfaces – the ball spinning away from a wide-ish line outside off stump, for instance, and ending up outside the batter’s hitting arc.Akeal Hosein’s arm ball forced Aaron Finch to play too close to his body, getting him to chop on in the process in their World Cup game•ICC via GettyIn his pomp, Sunil Narine did this beautifully from over the wicket to left-handers – most famously while bowling a Super Over maiden back in 2014. Krunal Pandya takes a leaf out of the fast bowler’s death-bowling playbook and uses the wide yorker liberally on flat pitches. And in the 2021 CPL, the Patriots offspinner Jon-Russ Jaggesar mostly went round the wicket against the right-handers, using that angle to exaggerate the away-drift of his undercutters and the away movement of his carrom ball.Conditions at this World Cup haven’t really forced fingerspinners to reach outside the box for these sorts of innovations, though Mark Watt’s imaginative use of the crease was one exception. Had the Covid-19 pandemic not forced the tournament to move from India to the UAE, however, we might have seen a little more variety in approaches – or, on the flip side, fewer fingerspinners selected in the first place.Which brings us to a fascinating question: Imad came into the Pakistan team at a time when they were playing all their home games in the UAE. What kind of a bowler might he have become had his game evolved in Pakistan?”Pakistan pitches are completely different to how the pitches are in the UAE,” Bazid says. “In T20 cricket, whether in PSL or domestic cricket, you’re getting scores in excess of 180 as a norm, and in one-day tournaments you’re getting scores in excess of 300 and 320.”We say that pitches in UAE, Pakistan and India are the same, but in actual fact they’re not. In India and Pakistan, the ball slides on to the bat in the shorter formats. The outfields are pretty quick as well, and the short ball is coming on to the bat, it’s not sticking in the surface, so bowling it short and getting away with it is much harder.”You’d think that you need different skills there. I think Imad would have developed in the same way, but he might have thought about changing his style a little bit. It may not have been as effective as it has been in the UAE, but then again, the way that he’s progressed in white-ball cricket, if Pakistan had played their cricket in Pakistan, who’s to say that he wouldn’t have developed skills to remain effective?”Who, indeed. For now, Imad has the chance to make a decisive contribution in potentially two World Cup knockout games. Perhaps he might then emerge from the shadow of his faster and sexier swing-bowling comrade. And maybe, just maybe, he might finally win over his prime minister too.

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