Hyderabad:India is known to produce some world-class batters but former India bowling coach Paras Mhambrey has busted the myth. The former India right-handed speedster reckons that when he started coaching junior cricketers, the idea was to create bench strength and it paid dividends as the country now has a substantial pool of fast bowlers.
Paras was the bowling coach of the Indian Cricket team that won the T20 World Cup 2024, which was co-hosted by the United States and West Indies. The 52-year-old Mhambrey, who represented Mumbai in the domestic circuit, in an exclusive interview with ETV Bharat, said, "Happy the way whatever the talent you have seen as a bench strength. Ideally, when we took on (coaching) junior cricket, the idea was to create a bench strength from the perspective of the spinners and fast bowlers combined."
"And, over the period, I have seen a lot of players go on to represent (the country). So, there is a lot of talent available. Avesh (Khan), Khaleel Ahmed, Arsh (Arshdeep Singh) coming through. (There was) the experience of (Mohammed) Shami, Ishant (Sharma) and Umesh (Yadav) as well and (Jasprit) Bumrah. So, I think there's a bench strength. I was very excited about the new talent coming in. Maybe someone like Mayank (Yadav), Mohsin Khan, and a lot of other guys are around. Harshit Rana is someone, Kuldeep (Sen), all of these guys have created a bench strength and I think that's the way coaching is about," elaborated Mhambrey, who played 2 Tests and 3 ODIs for India.
"Give them opportunities, test them under pressure and different match scenarios and conditions to build them strong and make them good players. Hence it's important to allow players to showcase their talent. The challenge was to ensure that the balance between obviously winning also matters but also the larger the part is making sure side by side your bench strength improves," quipped Mhambrey, who has also coached India U-19 and was associated with the Bengaluru-based National Cricket Academy (NCA).
On the 2024 T20 World Cup win:
Mhambrey also feels that ending his tenure with the Men in Blue was a special moment.
"It's not the best, but yes it's one of the best moments. As a coach, a journey is a lot more than just winning it. Obviously, winning a World Cup is special, but the whole journey has been great so far, very fruitful, and satisfying," he quipped.