[ad_1]
Cricket World Cup: ‘Grateful that I never chased my childhood dream’: Tabraiz Shamsi on his obsession with tempo bowling
Growing up in Johannesburg, Tabraiz Shamsi needed to be a left-arm pacer for South Africa, idolising Wasim Akram and Chaminda Vaas. But now he’s relieved to have given up on his childhood dream, and became a spinner.
“If I was still trying to achieve my dream of becoming a fast bowler, I would never have been an international cricketer,” Shamsi tells The Indian Express on the eve of South Africa’s first World Cup match in opposition to Sri Lanka.
“In South Africa, there’s a tradition of tempo bowling. I’ve grown up watching the likes of Allan Donald, Shaun Pollock, Lance Klusener, all of these guys. Naturally, whenever you see these guys dominating batsmen world wide, you wish to be one in every of them. We haven’t had many left-arm quick bowlers, I needed to develop into one. So, I used to attempt to study from Wasim Akram and Chaminda Vaas, these have been the 2 premier left-arm quick bowlers at the moment. I used to attempt to copy their bowling actions as effectively.
Read extra World Cup 2023 tales under.
World Cup 2023: WC caravan breathes new life into Dharamsala
Rahmanullah Gurbaz: Afghanistan’s Dhoni fan with a zidd carves out a national image
New Zealand win one-sided World Cup opener, stadium far from full: Are ODIs dying?, ask fans
Mickey Arthur hopes ‘The Pakistan Way’ can win the 2023 World Cup
[adinserter block=”4″]
[ad_2]
Source link