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This is an archive article published on September 23, 2023

Mohammed Shami on getting rest after WTC final: ‘I end up training more at home than when I am with the Indian team’

Shami says the rotation policy has helped the Indian team get the desired result and he doesn't mind if he is not playing regularly.

Mohammed Shami claimed a career-best five for 51 against AustraliaMohammed Shami claimed a career-best five for 51 against Australia. EXPRESS PHOTO by Kamleshwar Singh
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Mohammed Shami on getting rest after WTC final: ‘I end up training more at home than when I am with the Indian team’
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Mohammed Shami doesn’t seem to feature in India’s first XI plans for the World Cup as the management wants to persist with Shardul Thakur, who gives an extra batting cushion, but the veteran bowler played down the ongoing rotation policy, saying it is giving the team the desired results. But the veteran doesn’t mind the rotation policy in place at the moment.

After making a statement with his five-wicket haul in the first ODI against Australia in Mohali, the pacer said: “When you build a team, a coach has a role to rotate players and based on the situation, it is decided. You have seen we have got results due to rotation and I believe before the World Cup, you shouldn’t put too much workload by playing back-to-back games, and it’s going well, and we are getting good results.”

Shami claimed a career-best five for 51 against Australia. This included the scalps of Mitchell Marsh, Steve Smith, Marcus Stoinis, Matthew Short and Sean Abbott, with the last three wickets coming off his last nine balls.

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Shami added: “This is the team’s plan and it is important to stick with it. When you are playing regularly, then someone will have to sit out; one shouldn’t feel guilty about it. If you are playing, it is good, and if you are not in the playing XI, then you should be supportive to those who are playing. I think there is no point feeling low, and I am ready to play the role the team gives me.”

Shami was given rest after the World Test Championship (WTC) final. The 33-year-old said he needed the break since he was playing non-stop cricket.

“Whenever I have come back, I have had the same rhythm, but it was important to take that break, because back-to-back, I had played continuously for seven-eight months and at the back of my head, I felt I needed a break for a series,” he said. “I discussed it with the coach and captain and took a break from (WI series). But my break never seemed like a break for me because I have an elaborate training set-up there, and I ended up training more at home than when I am with the Indian team.”

In the first ODI on Friday, Shami bowled in four spells. He even left the field after bowling his first spell due to the intense heat.

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“There is no such talk about it (bowling smaller spells). It depends upon the situation: how is a partnership going and how well you are bowling. Sometimes you have to bowl six overs on the trot as well, while sometimes you bowl only three,” he said.

Shami heaped praise on Jasprit Bumrah, with whom he was bowling after a long time.

“If you see in the past seven and eight years, we (pacers) bowl in partnerships. If you see today when I was getting the wickets, Bumrah was not leaking runs at the other end. It was a good partnership and we got the result. At the end of the day, luck also plays the part. Today was my day,” he said.

“When you get such a wicket where nothing is happening and suddenly you get that rhythm, it gives you satisfaction. It gives you momentum,” he said.

Pratyush Raj is a sports journalist with The Indian Express Group and specializes in breaking news stories and conducting in-depth investigative reports for the paper. His passion extends to crafting engaging content for the newspaper's website. Pratyush takes a keen interest in writing on cricket and hockey. He started his career with the financial daily Business Standard but soon followed his true calling as Times of India's sports reporter for Punjab in Chandigarh, a job that required extensive travel to states such as Haryana, Himachal Pradesh and Jammu & Kashmir. He has also contributed to the sports coverage of India Today Group. Pratyush's love for sports blossomed during his upbringing in flood-prone Saharsa, a district in North Bihar, where 'Cricket Samrat' was his cherished companion.  ... Read More

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