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National Cricket Academy India - Overhaul/Rejig

Surya Kiran

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Efforts have started in earnest to draw the roadmap for NCA in India with Rahul Dravid(Head of NCA) visiting Arsenal Training Centre and meeting the Head of Arsenal Management.

Purpose of the visit was to understand the below aspects

- functioning of the Arsenal Academy
- Scouting
- Nurturing of talent(Age 9 - 23 years)

Recent developments in preparing coaches for future

- Vikram Rathore couldn't apply for India "A" or India U19 batting coach
position because of conflict of interest
- Hrishikesh Kanitkar is being groomed in his place now and Kanitkar is
currently travelling with India U19 which is playing Tri-nation series in
England,
- Dravid is personally present in this tour to help out the new support
staff and mentor them
- Narendra Hirwani will be travelling with India's women team as a
consultant on select tours. Emphasis is on T20 spin skill set. Until now
he was only working at NCA.
- Shitanshu Kotak from Saurashtra is currently incharge of India "A"
playing in West Indies
 
Efforts have started in earnest to draw the roadmap for NCA in India with Rahul Dravid(Head of NCA) visiting Arsenal Training Centre and meeting the Head of Arsenal Management.

Purpose of the visit was to understand the below aspects

- functioning of the Arsenal Academy
- Scouting
- Nurturing of talent(Age 9 - 23 years)

Recent developments in preparing coaches for future

- Vikram Rathore couldn't apply for India "A" or India U19 batting coach
position because of conflict of interest
- Hrishikesh Kanitkar is being groomed in his place now and Kanitkar is
currently travelling with India U19 which is playing Tri-nation series in
England,
- Dravid is personally present in this tour to help out the new support
staff and mentor them
- Narendra Hirwani will be travelling with India's women team as a
consultant on select tours. Emphasis is on T20 spin skill set. Until now
he was only working at NCA.
- Shitanshu Kotak from Saurashtra is currently incharge of India "A"
playing in West Indies
We need to make sure to catch the talented youngsters in the early stages. Many like Siraj, Saini, Yashaswi Jaiswal were all missed by the system and were fortunate enough to find some good samaritans. To me following should be the agendas:
1) Create a unified curriculum and training methodology for all academies across India
2) Create some incentives for IPL teams to invest more money and time into their regional academies such as they can buy their own academy players at auction for minimum base price. That will push them to go to rural areas and scout good players at young age.
3) Come up with proper diet plan for each region and publish them in bcci website so that everyone can read it for free. Desi diet though tasty is not exactly great for athletes.
4) Invest in training in more sports nutritionists, physios and conditioning experts. We still import most of the folks from outside the country and need to have more locals to work at grassroots.
5) Make sure all our bowlers gets trained in batting too. The kind of batting depth that England has is by proper planning, not by accident.
6) Bring in that genetic test which senior team done at junior level too so that deficiencies and strengths should be identified at junior level itself and players would be able to work on it.
 
We need to make sure to catch the talented youngsters in the early stages. Many like Siraj, Saini, Yashaswi Jaiswal were all missed by the system and were fortunate enough to find some good samaritans. To me following should be the agendas:
1) Create a unified curriculum and training methodology for all academies across India
2) Create some incentives for IPL teams to invest more money and time into their regional academies such as they can buy their own academy players at auction for minimum base price. That will push them to go to rural areas and scout good players at young age.
3) Come up with proper diet plan for each region and publish them in bcci website so that everyone can read it for free. Desi diet though tasty is not exactly great for athletes.
4) Invest in training in more sports nutritionists, physios and conditioning experts. We still import most of the folks from outside the country and need to have more locals to work at grassroots.
5) Make sure all our bowlers gets trained in batting too. The kind of batting depth that England has is by proper planning, not by accident.
6) Bring in that genetic test which senior team done at junior level too so that deficiencies and strengths should be identified at junior level itself and players would be able to work on it.

Nice points, my observations are below

1) This has been on the agenda for some time but fear is that we will become like England with universal training. Our cricketers have the leeway to do the training that interests them as long as they are meeting the fitness criteria

For example: Dhoni plays all sports to keep himself fit, Kohli is more into cross fit where as Rahul is into mountaineering

2) IPL teams have already started doing it.

KKR has their academy in Bangalore which is operational throughout the year. KKR previously has sent some of his players to South Africa to train in high altitude conditions. Beneficiaries were Kuldeep, Yusuf Pathan, Manvinder Bisla, Piyush Chawla. Auction thing is very tricky though.

CSK are conducting age group tournaments for schools across Tamil Nadu and picking best players in the tournament to form a team which will travel abroad. Recently CSK junior team travelled to UK with Rayudu as their mentor. In this way, they are grooming coaches

Mumbai Indians have the best scouting program of all IPL teams. John Wright will watch most of the Limited overs domestic cricket. His scouting team includes Rahul Sanghvi, Robin Singh, Nilesh Kulkarni & kiran more

3) Diet plan is universal across all regions. Separate diet plans for particular individuals only happens at the higher levels of cricket. It will not be put up on website but all the players visiting NCA even junior cricketers get a handbook with plenty of required information in regional languages.

4) This point is true and worrying. Rahul dravid's suggestion is to encourage players who have not made it big to still be connected with the game by being involved in various capacities such as physio's, conditioning experts. Plans for NCA have been on hold since 2013 because of various issues. Original plan was to introduce a scientific research institute. Australia is way ahead of other countries in this regard

5) Well, this is because there are so many domestic teams that players don't need to have multiple skills to get into team. Even though, England has many counties. if players are identified they would be pulled out from the county cricket and are groomed in the England Lions tour. Stokes and Woakes were travelled with Lions for over 2 years. There is lot of uproar when domestic players are on India "a" tour when domestic season is on. If you notice, India "A" tours are planned when domestic cricket is not on. These "A" tours give only experience but not enough time to mold their skills

6) Rahul Dravid's philosophy is to let junior cricketers just play the game for the love of it and enjoy it for what it is. More on team building, work on skills and fitness will become a higher priority as they move to the next level
 
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Thanks [MENTION=150477]Surya Kiran[/MENTION] for the detailed reply but I still have some qns/comments on the points discussed.
2) Why is KKR having an academy in Bangalore where we already have NCA? Shouldn’t it be Kolkata which is their captive region? I know about scouting of Mumbai Indians but I want them to catch them even younger as scientific training and boarding in an academy will accelerate the development of our players. Also, it would give some hope for our rural talent who doesn’t have the resources of their richer city counterparts. Folks like Jaiswal wouldnt have to struggle living in a tent to make it bigger.

3) I meant diet plan as per the food culture of each state. For example, a cricketer from North-East or Kerala wouldn’t be having a problem in eating red meat or fish but Haryanvis might have a problem.Also being freely available on bcci website would mean kids can access it way earlier and accelerate their growth. Currently, there is lot of confusion in what to eat and most of the diet plans are made according to western food habits.
 
4) BCCI needs to tie up with few universities for this as this would require lot of manpower and resources. Also creating a pan-Indian infrastructure for this would help other sports also and raise the total fitness of Indians.
 
5) What I meant was make sure our bowlers were caught early and go through a proper academy setup as proper training is needed to be a batsman whereas your tennis ball skills can make you a bowler overnight like Saini and Siraj. Mavi and Nagarkoti came through proper academies and hence their batting seems to be better. We should be catching tearaways in tennis cricket tournaments early enough.

6) Youngsters can know what to eat better as per their genetic mapping and then also enjoy the game. What you eat in your teen years is what decides your actual development and many of our youngsters have malnourished diets at that age. Especially for fast bowlers, a strong body is essential.
 
Thanks [MENTION=150477]Surya Kiran[/MENTION] for the detailed reply but I still have some qns/comments on the points discussed.
2) Why is KKR having an academy in Bangalore where we already have NCA? Shouldn’t it be Kolkata which is their captive region? I know about scouting of Mumbai Indians but I want them to catch them even younger as scientific training and boarding in an academy will accelerate the development of our players. Also, it would give some hope for our rural talent who doesn’t have the resources of their richer city counterparts. Folks like Jaiswal wouldnt have to struggle living in a tent to make it bigger.

3) I meant diet plan as per the food culture of each state. For example, a cricketer from North-East or Kerala wouldn’t be having a problem in eating red meat or fish but Haryanvis might have a problem.Also being freely available on bcci website would mean kids can access it way earlier and accelerate their growth. Currently, there is lot of confusion in what to eat and most of the diet plans are made according to western food habits.

Below is my understanding

2) KKR has their academy in Bangalore because it has the best weather for sports persons to train in India and their domestic players are from different parts of India not just West Bengal. I can understand about the policy of catch them young but it is a tradition in Indian cricket not to involve scientific training at formative years so players don't lose their natural flair. It is the job of state associations to go to rural areas and provide facilities. Some states have not done anything in that regard for example CAB(Bengal), HCA(Hyderabad) but there have been other associations who have done a remarkable job such as ACA(Andhra) and VCA(Vidharbha)

3) No matter how much is done, it always boils down to the individual concerned. Best example is Shami. When in preparotary camps or NCA he would follow diet plans perfectly but once he went back home bad habits would creep in. Kids will lose interest in the game of Cricket if they are made to follow such strict diets at such young age. So, it is only accessible to elite players at age group levels
 
4) BCCI needs to tie up with few universities for this as this would require lot of manpower and resources. Also creating a pan-Indian infrastructure for this would help other sports also and raise the total fitness of Indians.

4) As mentioned, BCCI had very big plans for this since 2013 but its hands are tied because of ongoing issues. There has been one positive development over the years though. We have biomechanics lab in Tamil Nadu where there is a tie up with university. Rajat Bhatia is getting trained in Biomechanics by the way.
 
5) What I meant was make sure our bowlers were caught early and go through a proper academy setup as proper training is needed to be a batsman whereas your tennis ball skills can make you a bowler overnight like Saini and Siraj. Mavi and Nagarkoti came through proper academies and hence their batting seems to be better. We should be catching tearaways in tennis cricket tournaments early enough.

6) Youngsters can know what to eat better as per their genetic mapping and then also enjoy the game. What you eat in your teen years is what decides your actual development and many of our youngsters have malnourished diets at that age. Especially for fast bowlers, a strong body is essential.

5) It also could just be a case of better hand and eye coordination for certain cricketers. The problem is not just developing but not let their skills regress. Examples Praveen Kumar, Zaheer khan were terrific strikers in the beginning of their careers but lost their mojo in batting later on. Shami is similar to them where as Ishant is a blocker in Gillespe mode and Bhuvaneshwar is a grafter.

6) Genetic mapping has already part of BCCI programs. I provided a link in this forum previously

https://www.thehindu.com/sport/cric...g-dnagenetic-fitness-test/article20321195.ece

for juniors, there are various tests in place such as skinfold etc
 
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