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When Virendra Sehwag turned up at the Vikas Puri Cricket Coaching Centre as a young lad. Coach A.N. Sharma did not let him bat in the nets for six months. The idea was to test the boy's patience and find out if he was serious about taking up the sport. As the days went by, Sharma was convinced that Sehwag meant business.
“Dilli mein kehte hain uncha khiladi (you call someone special when he is one). What I realised after watching him bat was simple: he was cut out for big time cricket.” Sharma told DNA on Monday. A couple of decades later. Sharma is a satisfied man. His prodigy amassed more than 8,000 runs in both forms of the game. “As far as I am concerned, I am more than satisfied with what he has done. Nobody has played like that.” said Sharma. “Sehwag always had the ability and he always played the game like what you all have seen on television. I never altered his style of play, never made anybody follow that typical cricket maunual. I prefer to see a player play his natural game. Yes, there were minor corrections that I made here and there. The rest was Sehwag and his natural ability.” he added. Sharma gave an example of Sehwag's hunger for runs and his skill to score then quickly. “In Delhi, we play a lot of cricket in the summer because our winters are cold and foggy. We had a good side, To make it tough for us, the organisers would give us two matches a day. One at 6:30 am and the other at 2pm. We had to finish the first match by noon, so I would tell Viru to finish the game fast and come to the next ground for our second game. He would do as instructed. Such was his hunger.” said Sharma.
The coach is , however, unhappy with the BCCI for not giving his boy a proper farewell. “It is just like using him. He deserved better treatment and credit to sign off from the game.” said an emotional Sharma.