Ashwin: The future of finger-spinners lies in the perception of people
Ashwin: The future of finger-spinners lies in the perception of people
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King XI Punjab skipper Ravichandran Ashwin believes finger-spinners are battling a perception of ineffectiveness in limited-overs cricket but remains confident that he and his ilk can flourish with the white ball. Once considered a luxury for a penchant to bleed runs in order to claim wickets, wrist-spinners have taken limited-overs cricket by storm, excelling in the dual enforcer-defender role and banishing their finger-spin cousins to the fringes.

Their stock has risen so high that a wrist-spinning trio. Afghanistan’s Rashid Khan, New Zealand’s Ish Sodhi and West Indian Samuel Badree also occupy the top three places in the current Twenty20 bowlers rankings. Ashwin has been one of those at the receiving end of the wrist-spin revolution, which is also reflected in the one-day international rankings with three of them turning their way into the world’s top six.

The 31-year-old and regular test partner Ravindra Jadeja are currently surplus to India’s limited-overs requirements with leggie Yuzvendra Chahal and left-arm unorthodox spinner Kuldeep Yadav occupying the position of the new spin darlings. “The future of finger-spinners lies in the perception of people,” Ashwin told in an interview. “More so because it’s based on perception about what people think of what’s relevant and what’s not. Things will turn around. People have been allowing 64 runs for two wickets in 10 overs of leg-spin too. If you give the same courage to the finger-spinners, they’ll do the same thing. “It’s all about perception. I think handling bowlers is all about how you handle them and you how perceive them.”

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