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This is an archive article published on September 14, 2024

Journeyman Pratham Singh and rising talent Tilak Varma stub out Shreyas Iyer’s India D in Duleep Trophy

India D were left to chase a daunting 487-run target shortly after tea on Day 3 as Tilak sauntered to his fifth FC hundred.

Duleep TrophyPratham Singh and Tilak Varma in action against India D. (X/BCCI Domestic)

What does a Duleep Trophy hundred represent in 2024?

Sixty-three years on, the predominantly zonal tournament now turned into a red-ball exhibition under the national selectors’ watch, retains its charm for the trier.

For Pratham Singh, an engineering graduate, a late-blooming cricketing career was glued to uncertainty for six years until he struck his maiden First-Class hundred in his 29th match in February. On Saturday in Anantapur, Pratham doubled the tally with another second-innings hundred. As he raised his arms aloft in jubilation, the 32-year-old played like he belonged in his 30th red-ball outing, his Duleep Trophy debut for India A.

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For Tilak Varma, 22, the challenge was to match the initial promise and sustain his healthy red-ball numbers. But for a majority of tons in the Ranji Trophy plate league and brief injury concerns, the Hyderabad youngster had to get back among runs on a higher plateau to remain in contention.

The twin southpaw attack was too much for Shreyas Iyer’s India D to contain on another listless day in the field. Consequently, India D were left to chase a daunting 487-run target shortly after tea on Day 3 as Tilak sauntered to his fifth FC hundred.

First Class, Pratham

While he had missed out on the first attempt, falling for seven, Pratham’s overnight do-over teased his positive intent and shot-making profile.

The Railways opener’s rearguard had grabbed attention in his last Ranji Trophy game against Tripura in Agartala.

Manning a 378-run chase where Railways had conceded the first-innings lead and stumbled to 31 for three, Pratham blunted the opposition with his stoicism, remaining unbeaten for 300 balls. Pratham, by then, had slammed his maiden red-ball ton (169 not out) and overseen the highest-ever chase (378) in Ranji history against a shell-shocked Tripura in their state capital.

On Friday evening, Pratham raced off the blocks with a swivelling pull for four off Harshit Rana. He carted seamer Vidwath Kaverappa to the point boundary before flicking and drilling Arshdeep Singh for successive fours through fine leg and long off. In the morning session’s play on day 3, Pratham made his intentions clear as he swept and lofted a threadbare spin attack.

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Employing some typical left-handed languidity, Pratham vaulted to his century as he walloped Kaverappa for a maximum over mid-wicket and followed up with successive boundaries. While Pratham placed India A in the driver’s seat before tapping a delivery to first slip off Saurabh Kumar, Riyan Parag fluffed another chance with the blade.

The instinctive slugger spanked left-arm spinner Saurabh with a mistimed six over long-on before holing out to a similar stroke soon after. Parag’s tendency to give away high-voltage starts has subdued his campaign to four iffy knocks across two rounds with questions lingering over his defensive temperament.

India D’s frolic was short-lived as Tilak combined with Shashwat Rawat (64 not out) and blunted the bowlers.

Back in the race

Tilak opened the day for his side by thumping a full toss to the long-on fence for four. The reverse sweeps and zooming aerial cover drives put offie Saransh Jain and Saurabh off their tracks. Operating smoothly within the popping crease and beyond, Tilak’s assured footwork befuddled the tweakers as Iyer extensively resorted to spin in the phase. Effectively, 89 of Tilak’s unbeaten 111 runs came against spin, including seven fours.

India D’s response to a 489-run target suffered another worrying start when opener Atharva Taide bagged a pair, registering a five-ball duck against his first-innings nemesis Khaleel Ahmed. While the left-arm pacer had struck with a sharp nip-backer the previous day, Khaleel’s fuller ball caught Taide off-guard as he chipped to the mid-on fielder. Promoted to number three, an aggressive Ricky Bhui imminently wore the new ball down as his reticent partner Yash Dubey watched on.

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The right-handed Bhui bludgeoned seven fours off the pacers and crunched left-arm spinner Shams Mulani for a six, taking India D to 62 for 1 before stumps.

Easwaran fights the odds

In the other round two fixture, India B’s determined pursuit of India C’s whopping 525 dwindled progressively as Anshul Kamboj wreaked havoc on a flat strip. Captain Abhimanyu Easwaran’s unbeaten hundred left India B with a fighting chance after Anshul single-handedly uprooted the middle order. Mumbai sensations Sarfaraz Khan (16) and Musheer Khan (1) were trapped cheaply by the Haryana seamer. Anshul then registered his maiden First-Class five-for when he cleaned up Nitish Kumar Reddy, ending his wait for the milestone in his 15th appearance.

Holding on with the tail, Easwaran’s 24th First-Class hundred eventually dragged India B to stumps with a 216-run first-innings deficit hanging over them ahead of the final day’s play.

Brief Scores: India A 290 all out and 380/3 declared (Pratham Singh 122, Tilak Verma 111 not out, Shashwat Rawat 64 not out) vs India D 183 all out and 64/1 (Ricky Bhui 44 batting).

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India C 524 all out vs India B 309/7 (Abhimanyu Easwaran 143 batting, N Jagadeesan 70; Anshul Kamboj 5/66)

Lalith Kalidas is a Senior Sub-Editor with the sports team of The Indian Express. Working with the online sports desk, Lalith specializes in the happenings on the cricket field, with a particular interest in India's domestic cricket circle. He also carries an affinity towards data-driven stories and often weaves them into cricketing contexts through his analysis. Lalith also writes the weekly stats-based cricket column - 'Stats Corner'. A former cricketer who has played in state-level tournaments in Kerala, he has over four years of experience as a sports journalist. Lalith also covered the 2023 ODI World Cup held in India. ... Read More

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