logo
You can never achieve perfection but that's the only thing that will keep you running: Varun

You can never achieve perfection but that's the only thing that will keep you running: Varun

The Hindu11-06-2025

Ever since his return to the national team in October 2024, Varun Chakaravarthy has been on a purple patch. The 33-year-old has quickly become India's strike bowler in T20Is and could be a key cog in the Men in Blue's title-defence campaign in next year's T20 World Cup to be played in India and Sri Lanka. Earlier this year, the mystery spinner also demonstrated his prowess in the ODI format as well and played a key part in India's Champions Trophy triumph. After another productive IPL season where he took 17 wickets, Varun is back in the TNPL, trying out new variations to stay ahead of the batter. In a chat with The Hindu, Varun spoke about his form, the three-year struggle to get back his place in the national team, and more.
Excerpts:
It has been a tremendous last year for you. How do you see this phase of your career, and do you feel you are at the peak of your form?
Nothing but gratitude for the people who stood by me and helped me. So I'd like to thank all of them. In another six or seven months, I might reach my peak. Still, there's more work to be done, which is what I'm trying to work on in this TNPL so that I can try some new things. If I get one more (variation), which I am trying, I will be very happy.
You had another successful season in the IPL, taking the most wickets for KKR. It was also the first time you came into an IPL after playing a lot of international cricket. How was it in terms of your game and also your workload?
Regarding the workload, not much, but just the mental aspect of it. I played the full domestic season, and I was at home for probably just 10 days over the last seven months. Other than that, it's fine and I can't complain at all. I love what's coming my way and I have to take it with both hands.
It wasn't tough in the IPL, I feel IPL can sometimes be tougher than international cricket. However, it gets tougher when you play domestic cricket, as sometimes the fatigue sets in. I train three to four times a week nowadays, which helps keep my body fit. For the last seven months, I have been playing continuous cricket, and thankfully, I have no injuries. I'm used to the schedule now, and I feel that by the time the next T20 World Cup comes, I will be even fitter. So, I am ready for the challenges.
Can you discuss the effort you've put into your fitness? You started late and weren't the fittest or most agile cricketer, but you seem to have gotten better.
Yeah, it was a holistic approach. First thing, I had to cut down on my unwanted food-eating habits. So nutrition was the most important thing, and then hitting the gym three or four times a week. I have not trained with a single person so far, because every team has had a different trainer. I had to find my way through, which was challenging, but I was able to do it. I know what works for me and what doesn't, so I communicate with them and take it forward. I am also running constantly, so if I get a two or three-day break between matches, I make sure to run on one of those days. It's more about making my lifestyle as a cricketer, rather than just doing it as practice time.
How was it being part of the Champions Trophy-winning squad, and you played your part in the triumph as well?
Yeah, it's the biggest blessing, I think, that I've got for whatever I had to go through in the last three years when I was not recognised. Once I was dropped from the team, I felt that I had put in too much work, but I didn't have a clear direction. I have to give credit where it's due - definitely to GG sir (Gautam Gambhir) and the captains, who backed me. I performed well in the T20 series, and then I was introduced to the ODI setup. Rohit Sharma also played a role in getting me into the team. It just felt like life came full circle at that same venue. I just wish I could turn up like that for the country again and again and keep making everyone proud.
You were seen as a largely T20 bowler, so how did you find the transition to ODI cricket?
I have always done well in the 50-over format for TN. In the three seasons I've played in the Vijay Hazare, I've always been among the top two highest wicket takers in the country, so it has always gone well for me. So, one-day cricket was never a doubt for me. I always knew that I could do it. I know that once the ball softens and becomes rougher, I can get more grip and turn, and if the batters miss it, I can take wickets. In T20, you don't get time to set up a batter, but in ODI, I get that. I can bowl five incoming deliveries, and one away, or four outgoing deliveries, and one in. I can't do that in T20, because I will get predictable.
You are largely self-taught in the sense that you didn't go through the rigours of age-group cricket and more systemic coaching. How did it help or affect your ability to make a comeback?
Yes, because I started everything by myself, even now, the thinking part and the direction part are where I have to be involved; everything I do is on my own. When I needed help, I did fall back on A.C. Prathiban and, obviously, Abhishek Nayar, who has been my mentor and helps me with the mental aspect of it. But other than this, the key decisions I take. If I have to develop variations or not, I take all those things into consideration. I put it in front of my coach, AC (Prathiban), and he gets to see if it's working or not, so that's how our partnership has been. My mind is always working around the clock to improve. Even here in TNPL, I've come to try certain variations.
What is the key to the success of being a mystery spinner, and how to stay ahead of the batter?
I think it's mainly about the sequencing of the deliveries. I can bowl three away going and one incoming, or one straight, two incomings, one away going. It's about how I'm mixing up, how I'm sequencing the ball. The skill is there, but how you use it is the main thing, because there are many people with the skill. You must be highly accurate in all those deliveries. I know that I have to be perfect.
However, the fact is that perfection is an illusion (maya). You can never achieve perfection, but that's the only thing that will keep you running; you will never be satisfied, so it is a double-edged sword. That's how it works, too. Even though I know I won't be perfect at all, I keep chasing it.
From your breakthrough in 2018, you made the national team in three years. However, once dropped, it took another three years to get back your place. Which was tougher?
Yeah, my comeback was a lot tougher because I had tasted the forbidden fruit once, so I wanted to taste it again. Once I was dropped from the team, I knew the way, but there were more obstacles this time. The first time I came through, it was through word of mouth.
However, the second time, I had to cross and convince many people, breaking many perceptions about me. Even the training regime, I used to get up by 5:30 a.m., go for practice, not knowing when I would get the call. When you say I got the call after three years, but I didn't think I would get that call after three years. So I just kept on doing my thing.
Since 2023, you have been performing well in the IPL and for TN whenever you have played. Did it affect that you didn't get a callback?
Yes, that's what made me feel that I wasn't being considered at all. That's what I thought, because I was performing well in the IPL and domestic cricket as well. But God's grace, God's plan... (I got back).
You have now found a second wind in your career. How much of it is developing new skills, and how much of it is just mental adjustments or refinements?
When you first come onto the scene, a perception is created about you, and people start getting used to it. Then you have to break that perception. You can only break that perception when you develop other specific skills. I feel it's the toughest, but that's when you'll have a longer run. The second time, it is like breaking your own identity and becoming a new person, but it is much more enduring. You must have the courage to unlearn many things.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

IND vs ENG: Rishabh Pant's front-flip celebration after Leeds century goes viral
IND vs ENG: Rishabh Pant's front-flip celebration after Leeds century goes viral

Time of India

time15 minutes ago

  • Time of India

IND vs ENG: Rishabh Pant's front-flip celebration after Leeds century goes viral

Rishabh Pant (Pic credit: BCCI) NEW DELHI: Rishabh Pant lit up Headingley with both bat and flair on Saturday as he celebrated his seventh Test century with a gravity-defying front-flip that instantly went viral across social media. LIVE: India vs England 1st Test Day 2 On Day 2 of the opening Test against England, the India vice-captain brought up his hundred in vintage fashion - dancing down the track to loft Shoaib Bashir over deep midwicket for six, even with one hand off the bat. Then came the celebration: an acrobatic somersault, reminiscent of his IPL stunt earlier this year, sending fans into a frenzy. Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW! The broadcaster's clip of Pant's leap, captioned 'What a knock, what a celebration!', has gone viral, making it one of the most talked-about moments of the match. WATCH: — StarSportsIndia (@StarSportsIndia) Pant's century - his fourth against England and seventh overall - came off 146 balls and featured 10 fours and four sixes. His aggressive knock, alongside captain Shubman Gill's 147, formed a mammoth 209-run fourth-wicket stand that helped India surge past 400. Though England fought back late in the session to reduce India to 454/7 at lunch, the highlight remained Pant's electrifying celebration - a moment of joy, confidence, and peak Rishabh Pant energy. From being ruled out for months due to injury to flipping in celebration in a Test century abroad, Pant's comeback story continues to inspire - now with a viral twist. Game On Season 1 kicks off with Sakshi Malik's inspiring story. Watch Episode 1 here

Pant joins elite club of hattrick of tons
Pant joins elite club of hattrick of tons

United News of India

time18 minutes ago

  • United News of India

Pant joins elite club of hattrick of tons

Leeds, June 21 (UNI) Rishabh Pant etched his name in the record books yet again as he struck a blistering century against England at Headingley, helping India script a historic moment — the fourth instance of three Indian batters scoring hundreds in the same Test innings outside Asia. Pant's unbeaten century, brought up in trademark style with a one-handed six off Shoaib Bashir, followed sublime hundreds by young openers Yashasvi Jaiswal and skipper Shubman Gill. The trio's centuries marked a rare and elite achievement for Indian Test cricket abroad. This is only the fourth instance of three Indian batsmen scoring centuries in a single Test innings outside Asia. The previous occasions were in 1986, when Sunil Gavaskar, Kris Srikkanth, and Mohinder Amarnath achieved the feat against Australia in Sydney; in 2002, when Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, and Sourav Ganguly did so against England at Headingley; and in 2006, when Virender Sehwag, Dravid, and Mohammad Kaif repeated the milestone against the West Indies at Gros Islet. Pant's knock was not just historic but also symbolic — a continuation of his recent resurgence. Having rediscovered form in the IPL against RCB, he has now scored back-to-back Test centuries in England. The moment in the 99.1 over perfectly captured Pant's audacious brilliance — stepping out to Shoaib Bashir and launching a one-handed six to bring up his seventh Test century, followed by a helmet-off salute, bat drop, and his now-signature somersault celebration. This marked the third time Pant has reached a Test century with a six — all three against English spinners (Adil Rashid, Joe Root, and Shoaib Bashir), a rare club in which only Sachin Tendulkar (six times) and Rohit Sharma (three times) also feature. With this innings, Pant now holds the record for most Test centuries by a designated wicketkeeper for India (7), overtaking MS Dhoni (6) and Wriddhiman Saha (3). His aggressive flair, tactical nous, and ability to rise in pressure situations reaffirm his status as India's Test crisis man and vice-captain. India, driven by its young core, has not just dominated the scoreboard — they've underlined a new era of bold, fearless Test cricket in foreign conditions. UNI BDN RN

Rishabh Pant Breaks MS Dhoni's Historic Record With Fiery Ton, Sunil Gavaskar Quips: "Get An Ambulance..."
Rishabh Pant Breaks MS Dhoni's Historic Record With Fiery Ton, Sunil Gavaskar Quips: "Get An Ambulance..."

NDTV

time38 minutes ago

  • NDTV

Rishabh Pant Breaks MS Dhoni's Historic Record With Fiery Ton, Sunil Gavaskar Quips: "Get An Ambulance..."

Rishabh Pant, who was unbeaten on 65 at the close of play on Day 1, smashed his 7th Test century, overtaking MS Dhoni as India's most decorated wicketkeeper-batter in terms of centuries scored in Test cricket. Pant achieved the feat on Day 2 of the ongoing first Test against England in Leeds on Saturday. Former India captain Dhoni scored his sixth and final Test century in 2014. Pant celebrated his century in a unique fashion, dishing out a summersault. Reacting to Pant's celebration, legendary batter Sunil Gavaskar made a cheeky remark on air. "After that, you need to keep a stretcher and ambulance ready, just in case," Gavaskar was heard as saying. Most Test centuries by designated WKs (India) 7* Rishabh Pant 6 MS Dhoni 3 Wriddhiman Saha On Day 1, Pant overtook Rohit Sharma to become India's leading six-hitter in World Test Championship (WTC). Ahead of the match, Pant was tied with Rohit on 56 sixes each, despite playing six less games in that period. He hit two sixes on Day 1 two surpass Rohit and increase his tally. In the overall list, Pant is only behind England captain Ben Stokes, who has smashed 83 sixes in 54 WTC fixtures. On Day 1, Pant had joined Gill after Jaiswal's wicket, and he welcomed Stokes with a four on the second ball, a soothing sight after a colossal failure that was his 2025 IPL stint with Lucknow Super Giants (LSG), except for a century against champions Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB). During the course of his half-century, Pant overtook Dhoni to become Asia's most successful wicketkeeper in SENA conditions and also brought up his 3,000 Test runs, becoming only the second after Dhoni to do so. Earlier on Day 1, a composed century from debutant captain Shubman Gill, a fluent ton by Yashasvi Jaiswal, and a measured innings from vice-captain Rishabh Pant powered India to a dominant 359/3 at stumps on Day 1 of the first Test against England at Headingley on Friday. After Jaiswal set the tone with a sparkling 101 off 159 balls, featuring sixteen boundaries and a six, Gill took over with a captain's knock, showing maturity and poise throughout his unbeaten 127-run effort. The stylish right-hander struck sixteen fours and a maximum in his 175-ball stay, steering India to their highest-ever first-day total in a Test match on English soil. Pant supported his skipper brilliantly, remaining unbeaten on 65 from 102 deliveries. His innings was laced with six fours and two towering sixes, and he looked in full control alongside Gill in their unbroken 138-run partnership.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store