As far as why we chose the location, a number of our support staff including our manager Romi Bhinder comes from that area. We acquired a lot of land in that area and thought what"s the best way to utilise that land. Effectively, we thought that if we put all our dreams in place in terms of what could be the perfect place to practice—where we could replicate the Chennai soil, the Mumbai red soil, a bouncy wicket, a slow wicket, a green wicket etc—how would it look? That"s when that seed was sown. It"s tough to find land around India close to a city where you can have a vast expanse and not have to spend silly amounts of money. So we decided to build in Talegaon something that"s world class. That"s why we"re in that little village. It gives us a great opportunity to just be around the sport and create that team environment because when you are there, there is nothing else.
To produce one Yashasvi Jaiswal, you need almost 20 people who can throw and bowl a ball. We have a set-up where we have trained people over a 10-year period to throw a ball, so that the accuracy with which they throw, the precision with which they can detect a fault helps zero in on the problem and helps us solve it. The speed at which problems are solved increases because of this specificity of the skills that we’ve developed in these throwers. It"s that kind of layering and infrastructure that we have set up which eventually benefits the Sanjus and Riyans and Dhruvs and Jaiswals of the world.
As they say, it takes a village to build a champion. In our case, it"s literally the village of Talegaon that has come together to produce what you see today. It doesn"t happen overnight, it takes years of preparation and planning. And now we"ve got the next generation of those throwers coming through, and we"re indigenously using everybody from the village to develop this skill. Which is an incredible opportunity for them to not only earn a living from it, but also be part of the ecosystem of the Royals.
Q. Tell us the kind of work you’ve done with Jaiswal over the last one year or so.One of the problems we have in our sport is that the kids who come from under-19 into the IPL set-ups don"t encounter T20 cricket. It"s a major handicap from a franchise perspective because there are certain shots that you want these individuals to have and develop by the time they reach us, but they don"t have that. You have to strip it all apart and start from scratch. You’d then analyse a player and say Jaiswal can play in this direction, but he has no shots in some other direction, so what do we do? And there are multiple layers within that structure. Say, he couldn’t hit a ball over long on, for example, what that meant was his elbow at the point of impact was bent. Now, you can"t solve that in three months—it would take at least 6-8 months. When we"re trying to solve that, we have to come up with another solution in the short term—so, if he can’t play that shot against the spinner, we need him to reverse sweep. This year it"s been much less, but if you saw last year, he reverse-swept almost every single spinner at least once or twice in every innings. So, it was breaking down his game into multiple parts, multiple facets and then setting up a structure for how we could develop him into what we wanted as the final product.
We went to work in terms of building that foundation for the shots he didn’t have, and then reverse-engineered the process to ensure he was able to play the ball where he wanted. You saw that sequence in the Test match against England where he hit Jimmy Anderson for three sixes—flicked over square leg, then over cover and then straight down the ground. That is a sequence we executed in our practices almost every single day.
When we do our throwing and bowling, we do it in that sequence. For example, we will have four guys who will throw the ball from, say 15 feet, to Yashasvi, Dhruv or any of these guys in this sequence—for the cut, pull, flick, drive. Following them, we have the side-arm guys, who throw the ball with a stick, then followed by spinners and fast bowlers. In one sequence, we have 16 people.
When a Dhruv Jurel comes to practice and we have to get him done in, say, two days, knowing that he"s going for a Test match, we can get through 140 overs in one day. That"s a monumental practice session of 16 people throwing and bowling in one round of practice. Normally, when you go for any other cricket practice, you will see a maximum of four bowlers, so there"s no variability. We are trying to ramp up the variability to bring in the kind of situation they may encounter in a match, so that when they go out in the middle they are not thinking about any kind of situation being abnormal. One of the biggest things we have in our philosophy [for the players] is they don"t rise to the occasion—they actually go down to the level of practice, because they know they have covered every base in practice.
Q. Have you put Riyan Parag through a similar kind of training as well? Till last year, he had a lacklustre tournament, but this year he’s been on fire, both in the IPL and the domestic season.
Absolutely. And two things happened there. One, Riyan always had the ability, we couldn"t get him to understand some parts of this philosophy and we couldn"t get him to understand why it was so important for him. And again, my learning is that I am partly to blame because, if I am the coach it is my responsibility to make him understand. So that was my failing in terms of my inability to communicate that and get him going as quickly as a Jaiswal or a Jurel. It always is a two-way street. Riyan, fortunately for us, had the great example of guys like Dhruv and Yash streaming ahead of him, and then he had the realisation that “oh, this is what they were trying to tell me". And once that was said to him from the finish of last year’s IPL, we started practice with him just about three weeks after. We went through some crazy extremes to get him ready and he was willing to put in the work. Now he"s realised what he needs to do to continue to perform at that level. That’s why you’ve seen the transformation in him since last June-July.
Q. RR as a franchise has been doing really well in the IPL for the past few years. You were the runner-up in 2022, were just edged out in the fifth place last year, and this year have been going really strong. How much has this centre contributed to RR 2.0?Like always, in any success, there are many factors. We’d attribute a lot of it to factors. We could start off with technology, and a very high investment from our owners on it. We have a full new team on that front—Giles Lindsay is the head and he has built a phenomenal team of analysts and technologists who work day in and day out in giving us information of, say, how do we choose a player, selections, trials etc. The second part is Kumar [Sangakkara] and his knowledge about the game, in terms of his vision of doing great things in the IPL and his vision of taking the franchise forward in the way he wants to see. The third part is, now that this centre has emerged, and the kind of time and resources the franchise is putting into that, where they are clear that this is the role they want to play not just for RR but for Indian cricket as well. Any successful set-up has multiple people putting their resources together, and when you see all of it coming together, you start to see the output.
You have to have those Indian players who take you to victory. Your overseas players are the superstars who come in and win you games. But the Indian guys who are young and coming up through the ranks… for them to win you games consistently is a big thing. If you are starting to do that as a franchise, and if the overseas guys also do their job, together it becomes a potent combination. Which is something you have started to see.