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Harsha Bhogle

My Centurion selection

Nine years after picking three tips for the future, Harsha Bhogle examines their progress - and picks three more

Harsha Bhogle
Harsha Bhogle
17-Dec-2010
An exemplary cover drive from Marlon Samuels, South Africa v West Indies, 3rd Test, Durban, 3rd day, January 12, 2008

Marlon Samuels was a stylish batsman but, after a promising start to his career, has only played 29 Tests  •  Neil Lane/ESPNcricinfo Ltd

The stats brigade doesn't recognise it and the record keepers have expunged it like they would the utterings of an errant parliamentarian but there was indeed a "Test" played between India and South Africa at Centurion before this one. It was November 2001 and there had been much drama in Port Elizabeth the week before; a match referee had been challenged and then sacked, there were threats of a pull-out and, when the captains went out to toss, they weren't quite aware of the status of the game they were playing. Much drama and much farce followed and eventually, like a child stripped of a family name, the Test was marked "unofficial" and consigned to the bin. Shaun Pollock missed out on another Test century but rather more cruelly, Connor Williams could never tell the world he was a "Test player".
As we were sitting by the beautiful ground I got a call from the BBC. They were asking various people to nominate three young players they thought would impact the game and asked if I could send in my nomination. And, as the decade draws to a close, and Centurion gets a Test that is "official" I thought it might be interesting to see what those three promising players have since gone on to do.
I nominated Jacques Rudolph as one of my three. He had started making a name for himself in South Africa and at Centurion scored a stylish 21 before being run out. A brief little cameo, you might say, but there was something striking about him, as there had been in an innings of 22 I had seen in a Ranji Trophy final ten years earlier from a young man called Sourav Ganguly. As it turned out Rudolph was to miss out on another "Test debut" when he was replaced by Justin Ontong in Australia a year later after being named in the side because South Africa needed a minimum number of coloured players.
When, a few months later, he made 222 not out on debut against Bangladesh I thought my choice was coming good. Four centuries later, though, with an average of 36.21 from 35 games, the kind of number that suggests unconverted promise, Rudolph opted to become a Kolpak player. I notice with some interest though that he is back home and on a preliminary list of players from South Africa for the World Cup. I wonder if there is a twist in that tale!
I also nominated Marlon Samuels and I honestly cannot remember why. Maybe it is the old Indian fascination with elegance because there was something very stylish about him. He came to India a year later and scored a couple of centuries, started bowling off-breaks with a very contemporary, and therefore dodgy, action and seemed destined for much more. Then he vanished into that hungry hole in the West Indies - the one that devoured any talent it spotted - and, apart from a brief comeback in 2008, he too finished with little to show: 1408 runs from 29 Tests at 28.73. He was briefly considered an IPL prospect around then but his record of being seen with the wrong kind of people quickly put paid to that.
My third nomination was Virender Sehwag and my friends who track stocks would say: here was a mid-cap that made it big. He had just had an extraordinary fortnight, having made a century on debut at Bloemfontein and being banned a Test for excessive appealing at Port Elizabeth. I remember him, while the game at Centurion was on, sitting on the steps just outside the Sandton Sun in Johannesburg wondering what life had in store for him. It wasn't a bad script, with 84 Tests, and more to come, 7550 runs at 54.71, 22 centuries including two triples and a place in India's all-time Test XI.
And so, as another game begins in Centurion, it is time to pick three more. Two on my list, Umar Akmal and Mohammad Amir, face uncertain futures and I hope someone reminds them that most people can be very good at only one or two things and that they squander those at their own peril. Darren Bravo would be a dark horse, Tamim Iqbal a safer bet (but he's been around too long to qualify) and Kane Williamson a stock you would buy if you had some money left.
And so the three I will pick are Virat Kohli, Eoin Morgan and Angelo Mathews. Maybe some day when there's another game in Centurion, and if we're all still around, we'll see how this pick went.

Harsha Bhogle is a commentator, television presenter and writer. His Twitter feed is here