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October
12
Zaheer rues missing maiden
five-wicket haul
BOMBAY:
Indian fast bowler Zaheer Khan was left to rue
another near miss after failing to secure his
maiden five-wicket haul in Test cricket against
the West Indies on Friday.
The 24-year-old had a potentially match-winning
4 for 41 on the third day of the first Test to
bowl out the visiting team for a meagre 157, but
could not pick up the additional wicket needed
to fill the blank in his stat sheet. "I'm
disappointed at missing out on five
wickets," Zaheer said. "I thought
today was a good chance to get it, but luck
plays a factor too."
Zaheer had taken four of the first seven wickets
to fall, but leg-spinner Anil Kumble polished
off the last three batsmen to finish with 4 for
51. |

MUMBAI: Indian
pacer Zaheer Khan celebrates after claiming the
wicket of Ryan Hinds, of the West Indies, during
the third day's play of the first Test on
Friday, October 11, 2002 |
Zaheer, playing his
21st Test and bowling better than ever before, said it
was not a major worry. "I'm not really worried or
tense about it. If I keep bowling well, the wickets are
bound to come. I'm sure I'll get a five-wicket haul
sooner rather than later."
It was the third time Zaheer, who has 58 Test scalps in
all, had picked up four wickets in a match. The left-arm
paceman, who made an impressive debut two years ago but
lost his way last season after gaining weight, thanked
the Indian team's fitness trainer Adrian LeRoux for the
change of fortune. "I have lost a lot of weight and
become physically fitter over the last few months thanks
to Adrian, who has put the whole team under an excellent
fitness routine. That's paying rich dividends."
Zaheer grabbed 11 wickets in a recent four-Test series
in England and 15 in the Caribbean before that.
Mumbai's slow Wankhede Stadium pitch was not very
helpful to fast bowlers, but Zaheer said, he had made up
his mind to capitalise on any help he got from the track
on Friday. "The strip was not helpful, but I bowled
a disciplined line and length and that paid off.
Hopefully I can do that again tomorrow," he added.
Kumble said he and his colleagues would not make the
going easy for the visiting team. "It's a big
target, we've a very handy lead," the 31-year-old
said. "It's up to the bowlers now and we've to try
and ensure that our team doesn't have to bat
again."
Kumble, who took his Test wicket tally to 337, is
India's second most successful bowler in history behind
former paceman Kapil Dev (434).
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