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Feature

Where Mustafizur finds his fizz

His mastery of variations has been to the fore for Rajasthan Royals this IPL, as before

Mohammad Isam
Mohammad Isam
04-Oct-2021
"I won't really think about the over I have just bowled, regardless of whether I have bowled well or not"  •  BCCI

"I won't really think about the over I have just bowled, regardless of whether I have bowled well or not"  •  BCCI

Mustafizur Rahman has an arsenal of lengths, lines, cutters and yorkers at the business end of T20 matches. He seems to come up with altered versions of his variations every delivery. His slower cutter, even when it lands halfway down the pitch, ends up befuddling the batter. Two weeks ago against Punjab Kings, Mustafizur's brilliant 19th over, off which he gave just four runs, proved too much for set batters Nicholas Pooran and Aiden Markram. That the Kings messed up what ought to have been a sure win is a story for another day, but Mustafizur had proved his class in the death overs yet again.
There is literally no visual record or memory of Mustafizur mouthing off against a fielder who has dropped a catch off his bowling, or of him sledging an opponent. And he has bowled in a lot of high-pressure moments for Bangladesh, and in the IPL and BPL. What is the secret to his composure and presence of mind in pressure moments?
"You can't really plan these things. The main focus is always to bowl dot balls," Mustafizur says of that penultimate over against Punjab Kings. "In the 19th over you can't really bowl one type of delivery. You have to mix it up, keep the batsman guessing, whether you are bowling a yorker or a slower ball. The captain knows what I am going to do, and then the field set-up works as a communication between us."
Mustafizur's quality and experience make him the top-ranked bowler in the Royals attack in the absence of Jofra Archer and Ben Stokes, but it's not something he regards as adding pressure to his role.
"I don't see it [being the senior bowler] as an added responsibility. I am basically bowling at stages where I am usually bowling for Bangladesh too. Expectations definitely bring in a bit of pressure, but it's not something that worries me.
"I try to remain calm in difficult situations. I focus on what's in front of me. I won't really think about the over I have just bowled, regardless of whether I have bowled well or not," he says.
In most T20s, Mustafizur bowls two overs up front. "With the new ball, I am mostly trying to bowl seam-up deliveries, with a bit of swing, if it is available," he says. "Variations are limited during the powerplay." It is at the back end of the innings that his full repertoire emerges.
"We have only played in Dubai and Abu Dhabi - I won't say they are great pitches, but nor are they really bad pitches," he says. "It is somewhere in between - on the slower side. Teams getting good starts are reaching 170-180 even, so the starts are important."
Royals' captain Sanju Samson has allowed Mustafizur the freedom to bowl the way he likes, and it is something the bowler has appreciated.
Mustafizur is arguably among the more clear-thinking minds in the modern game, and he makes it a point of passing his knowledge on - to the likes of young Royals fast bowlers Kartik Tyagi and Chetan Sakariya, who have caught the eye in recent seasons. "They want to learn my bowling grips, especially my cutters," he says. "They want to know how I am so normal in pressure situations. They listen to what I have to say."

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Mustafizur grew up in a small village called Tetulia, roughly 300km south-west of Dhaka, near the border with India. He learned cricket in the village fields, playing with Indian-made balls that were harder and bouncier than the conventional tennis balls typically used for casual cricket in the subcontinent. From Tetulia, his older brother, Poltu, would drive him on his motorcycle to Satkhira, the nearest big town, where he started practising with a cricket ball.
"The moment I cross Satkhira town and I can see my village, I breathe better," Mustafizur says about going back home. "I love the air in that place. I am a proud village boy."
Mustafizur is renowned in the Bangladesh team for his love of fishing, and it is one of the first things he does when he goes back home, he says. He also spends time playing tennis-ball cricket in the village fields. "During the winter we will play volleyball in the evening and badminton at night. I try to fit in everything. The days go well in the village," he says.
"You have to be really patient when you sit with the rod. You can't expect to throw it and reel in the fish in one go. It doesn't work like that. I usually sit for four or five hours with the wheel [rod].
"When nothing happens, I put out the fishing net to find out what's going on down there. I do get a bit impatient at times.
What does he typically catch? "We have the usual white fish like rui and katol [kinds of carp]. We get the parshe fish [flathead mullet] in our shrimp farm," he says.
When cricket stopped with Covid taking hold in 2020, Mustafizur spent more time in Tetulia than he had at almost any period over the last six years. Much of it was spent at the pond at his family's shrimp farm, rod in hand.
How has this outdoorsman adapted to being for weeks and months at a stretch in bio-bubbles? "Off the field, I don't go out too much," he says. "I sometimes sit by the pool. I go to the gym. I sometimes spend time in our team room.
"I miss fishing, but what I really miss is my village."
Mustafizur has been in good form for Bangladesh of late, helping them to T20I series wins over Australia and New Zealand in the last couple of months.
He did well in all three phases of the innings, helped by home pitches that provided him the rough that lets his cutters grip. It's likely the pitches in the UAE for the World Cup too could help the Bangladesh bowlers. And if that is so, Mustafizur will be in the thick of things.
Not that he betrays any excitement at the prospect. "My role will be the same," he says. "Everyone will be hopeful, but the rest is up to Allah. I think it is important to remain healthy."

Mohammad Isam is ESPNcricinfo's Bangladesh correspondent. @isam84