
Karun Nair comeback story: One more chance, 3006 days later
Karnataka has always produced mentally tough cricketers. It's part of the blood here,' Karun Nair's childhood coach says, the pride in his voice almost tangible. 'It's part of the culture.'Vijay Madyalkar called it Karnataka's own brand of khadoos - less abrasive than Mumbai's, but no less unyielding. Few embody it quite like Karun Nair.In December 2016, Nair announced himself with a thunderclap: a 303 not out against England in Chennai, making him only the second Indian after Virender Sehwag to hit a triple century in Tests. He was just three matches into his Test career. At 25, the future looked gilded. But it never quite arrived.advertisement
Three more Tests came, against Australia in 2017. And then, silence. He was picked for the 2018 tour of England, sat on the bench for four Tests, and when a vacancy opened for the final match, India flew in Hanuma Vihari—who wasn't even in the squad originally. Nair, who was, didn't get a game.3006 days later, Karun Nair walked out to bat for India in a Test match. It was at Headingley, Leeds, a long, winding road from Chennai, where he had last worn the whites for India. Dismissed for a duck, it wasn't the fairytale return many would dream of, but the fact that he was there again, on the teamsheet, in whites, was hopefully the start of a second innings.No one better than Nair knows there's a second innings—in a Test, and in life.advertisement'Waiting is nothing new for Karun, is it?' Vijay says, before answering himself. 'Absolutely. You won't believe it—he should've debuted a year earlier. But because senior players were in the team, he had to wait. I remember one season we travelled with the Karnataka Under-25 side to Vizag, and he scored 500 runs in five matches. What he's doing now, he's done before. I reminded him about that and he said, 'Yes, sir. I was thinking the same thing.' It's amazing.'But that kind of patience can bruise a career. And it did. Karun drifted out of the Indian side without explanation, without farewell.Then, in 2022, the silence became louder. He was dropped from Karnataka's Ranji side, a team he had once captained. Opportunities dried up. The Indian Premier League (IPL) door closed.A SIMPLE PLAN: KEEP BATTINGOne day, he showed up at Vijay's cricket academy on the outskirts of Bengaluru, two hours away in choked traffic. He had no matches to play, no team to represent. Just a stubborn flicker of belief.'This was in 2022,' his coach recalls. 'He wasn't part of the state team. He was very upset and had no cricket to play. One day, he came to the academy.advertisement'He just said, 'Sir, I don't know why, but I want to do something.''Vijay Madyalkar didn't offer platitudes. Just a plan.'I told him, 'You're a batsman. Let's just focus on batting. You don't have to worry about anything. Your mindset is brilliant. Your fitness is excellent. You've already scored a triple hundred in a Test—what can I teach you?' So we decided to refine his skills and keep hitting balls.What followed was five months of quiet obsession.'We kept it simple—basic cricket. Cover drives, cut shots, same skills repeated. You won't believe it—he used to play 600 balls every alternate day. We literally counted them. He never took a single ball lightly. Even if he missed one, he'd feel bad. His focus was extraordinary. There was zero negativity, zero excuses.'ONE MORE CHANCEThe same year, Karun posted a tweet that would gain momentum later: 'Dear cricket, give me one more chance.' At the time, it barely made a ripple. But in 2024, when he began dominating the domestic circuit again, the tweet went viral.Karun made no fuss. He simply embraced whatever came his way—matches in the Karnataka Premier League, domestic games under grey English skies, grinding spells for Vidarbha on dry, cracked dust bowls back home.advertisementAfter being sidelined by Karnataka, he shifted base to Vidarbha with quiet determination. In 2023 and 2024, he took his game to England—first with a local club, then with Northamptonshire in the County Championship. There too, he dug deep: 249 runs in three matches in 2023, followed by 487 in seven the next year, including a stoic double hundred.By the 2024–25 season, Karun was relentless. He topped the Vijay Hazare Trophy charts with 779 runs at an astonishing average of 389.50. He was Vidarbha's leading scorer in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy. And in the Ranji Trophy, he finished as the fourth-highest run-getter in the country, his four centuries instrumental in Vidarbha's title-winning campaign.And through it all, he kept expanding his range, his hunger, his belief.
Karun Nair had a stellar domestic season (PTI Photo)
'He was focused purely on skill enhancement. He even developed a new stroke—a reverse-sweep six—which he executed beautifully during the KPL (Karnataka Premier League). We never spoke about the future or his past setbacks. He never showed frustration or disappointment. His only goal was to prepare.'advertisementThat was the mantra through his years in exile: no talk of the future, no dwelling on the past. Just the next ball, and the one after that.When India finally came calling again, the coach barely needed to say a word.'Not much,' he says of their conversation. 'He's a quiet guy. We understand each other without having to say much. I followed his Ranji Trophy games and messaged him a few times, but that's all.'Still, the satisfaction was immense.'For any coach, this is the moment we wait for—this is our reward. Everything else in life comes and goes, but these are the moments we want to experience. It's a very satisfying feeling.''If I could give Karun one message for the rest of his career,' the coach says, 'it would be: keep scoring runs and make sure that whenever you play for India, you help the team win. That's the only thing that matters.'Now, at 33, with the silence broken and the scoreboard ticking again, Karun Nair has the chance he asked for.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
14 minutes ago
- Business Standard
ENG vs IND 1st Test: Hourly weather report of Headingley, Leeds on June 23
India had a mixed outing on Day 3 of the first Test vs England at Headingley, Leeds, as despite having big runs in the bank and Bumrah's historic five-wicket haul, they could only manage a 6-run lead in the first innings due to England's Bazball approach in the latter stages. However, the Indian batters came out with the same intent in the second innings and added 90 runs for the loss of two wickets by the end of the day to take their overall lead to 96. Now, with just two days to go and almost two full innings still to be played, the match is likely heading towards a draw, unless the cloudy weather in Leeds triggers another batting collapse on Monday. IND vs ENG 1st Test: Leeds weather report for June 23 According to the latest weather reports from for Leeds, United Kingdom, the day will begin with a partly sunny morning and a 20 percent chance of rain. However, the chances of rain drop to zero starting at 8 AM, just before the start of the match. While there is no prediction of rain post 9 AM, intermittent clouds can still pose the risk of impromptu showers any time during the day, given the unpredictable nature of England's weather. Rain is expected to resume from 7 PM, but with the match scheduled to end by 6:30 PM, even with extra time added, weather is not expected to be a concern for Day 4. Batters' day out on Day 4? Despite having the reputation of being a batter's graveyard, Headingley usually offers better batting conditions on the last two days of play, as many memorable run chases at this venue suggest, including Ben Stokes' historic 135* to help England beat Australia in the 2019 Ashes. If India need to save this match, they must put at least a 350-plus lead on the board; otherwise, the English side will fancy their chances of chasing it down in typical Bazball style.


Indian Express
20 minutes ago
- Indian Express
‘We needed an all-rounder': Sourav Ganguly says VVS Laxman ‘didn't speak for 3 months' after 2003 World Cup snub
VVS Laxman was arguably in the form of his life in Test cricket in the lead-up to the 2003 ODI World Cup, and despite his exemplary strokeplay the elegant Hyderabad batter was dropped from the squad for the tournament in South Africa. Laxman's then-captain, Sourav Ganguly, recently revealed that the 2001 Kolkata Test hero did not speak to him for nearly three months after being snubbed for the inclusion of Dinesh Mongia. The then-selection committee chief, Kiran More, had said last year that all five national selectors were in favour of Laxman's inclusion, but captain Ganguly and coach John Wright had other plans. 'Before the 2003 ODI World Cup selection meeting, we had a huge argument when the Indian team was playing in New Zealand. As per the inputs received from the captain and the coach, we selected a 14-member squad and asked them what they thought of it. Over the conference call, Ganguly had a different opinion. We had selected VVS Laxman as our middle-order batter. Ganguly was very smart. He was a brilliant captain, a person with a great cricketing brain. He said 'we need an all-rounder',' More had told on former Pakistan captain Rashid Latif's YouTube channel. Ganguly recently stated that Laxman was devastated by the snub that left him without a World Cup appearance to his name despite featuring in 86 ODIs for India. 'It has happened many times when we rested players. They were unhappy. Laxman being left out of the World Cup…he never spoke to me for three months. Then I made up with him. Anybody would get upset…for a World Cup. Especially a player of Laxman's calibre. Quite natural that he would get upset,' Ganguly told PTI. India had a near-flawless run to the finals, where they were stunned by a dominant Australian side led by Ricky Ponting in a 125-run victory. Ganguly recounted the reconciliation and how Laxman made a successful ODI comeback that marked his best ever white-ball season for India in 2004, scoring 841 runs


Indian Express
20 minutes ago
- Indian Express
Jasprit Bumrah is the ‘most complete bowler ever', says former England pacer Steven Finn
Former English pacer Steven Finn hailed India's Jasprit Bumrah as 'the most complete fast bowler ever.' Bumrah continued his record-breaking spree in Test after getting his 14th career five-wicket haul during the first innings of 1st Test between England and India at Headingley in Leeds on Sunday. Finn went to social media X and wrote, 'Making a case for Jasprit Bumrah as the most complete fast bowler in the history of the game. It's hard to refute in my opinion,' while referring to his column for the BBC. 'Guys…. It's impossible to compare eras exactly, I know that. I love fast bowling and all the greats everyone is mentioning. But, I think Bumrah is complete,' he added. Bumrah's five for 83 ensured England got bundled out for 465 in their first innings, handing India a slender six-run lead. In his column, Finn wrote, 'We're lucky to be in an era of great fast bowlers. From recent international retirees Stuart Broad and James Anderson, to Kagiso Rabada, Cummins, Hazlewood and Mitchell Starc.' But the English pacers keep the Indian ace pacer above all of them. 'Bumrah sits atop of them all as the finest fast bowler to have played the game. Some accolade,' he added. He went on to heap praise for the World No. 1 Test bowler. 'If I ever had the misfortune of facing Bumrah, he'd be done with me in a maximum of two deliveries. A good short ball, then a searing yorker would do the trick. I'd hold out hope he'd go straight for the second of those options as, by all accounts, it is incredibly hard to see the ball when Bumrah is bowling. He would cause a tailender like me some harm.' On Sunday, Bumrah also equalled Kapil Dev for the most Test five-wicket hauls (12) among Indian bowlers in away Tests. He also went on to equal R Ashwin (11 in 78 innings) for the most five-fors in the World Test Championship in only 67 innings. Speaking on Bumrah's bowling acumen, Finn wrote, 'Bumrah is a thinker about the game and would have been India's first choice as the new Test captain has it not been for his struggle to play in every match. He took the decision himself to not pursue the job as he did not feel it was fair on the team.'