'Realised What I Missed in Last Game And Wanted to Compensate': Mohammed Siraj on His Career-best Performance in Cape Town
'Realised What I Missed in Last Game And Wanted to Compensate': Mohammed Siraj on His Career-best Performance in Cape Town
The premier pacer talked about what he did differently in Cape Town which was missing in the first Test.

Mohammed Siraj says he wanted to compensate for what he missed in the first Test against South Africa and executed his plans well on Day 1 in Cape Town to register his career-best figures in the format – 6/15.

Siraj was at his lethal best in the first session of the day’s play and claimed a six-fer to bundle out Proteas for just 55.

Siraj had an underwhelming outing in Centurion with the bowling figures of 2/91 but the Hyderabad pacer made sure he didn’t commit the same mistakes.

Did he think he would come out to bowl twice in a day?

“Did you think so?” he chuckled with a counter-question.

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“We didn’t think also. We had put our feet up but this is cricket. You see both good and bad things,” he added philosophically.

But he was visibly happy after having one of his best days in his 23-Test career.

“You want the New Year to go well,” the affable Hyderabadi said with satisfaction written all over his face.

“I realised what I missed in the last game and wanted to compensate and I executed my plans accordingly. I wanted to hit one area consistently and I did that and got reward for it. Wicket looks quite similar to Centurion,” Siraj said at the end of the day’s play.

The premier pacer talked about what he did differently in Cape Town which was missing in the first Test.

“We (him and Jasprit Bumrah) bowled in partnerships and bowled many maidens unlike last Test match. Bowling so many maidens did create pressure.”

When one gets a track as spicy as Newlands, a fast bowler’s excited mind can get cluttered and that’s what one needs to control, feels Siraj.

“On these wickets, where ball is doing so much, often bowlers tend to think, ‘let me try and bowl an outswinger darting from leg to off or get one to bend back from angle but one should just stick to one line.

“If you hit areas, wickets will come automatically, if you try many things, you yourself can get confused,” he observed.

He thanked Bumrah and KL Rahul for constant communication.

“When senior bowler is operating and there is wicketkeeper who advises you on what is the correct length, job becomes easier as there is lot of communication. When you are hit for 4-5 boundaries, you know what length to switch to.”

So what’s an ideal score that can be chased?

“I can’t predict what will happen on second day. We have to get them out for as less as possible and we don’t need to think too far as we are still 40 runs ahead and we have to see how many we can get before they take lead,” he signed off.

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