Gurjapneet brings pace to Tamil Nadu, via Ludhiana and Ambala

The tall left-arm quick moved from north India as a teenager, and he bagged the prize scalp of Pujara for a duck on first-class debut

Deivarayan Muthu17-Oct-2024″Tamil Nadu fast bowler” is almost an oxymoron.While the team has always had a surfeit of spin options at their disposal, they have lacked fast bowlers who could give their attack a point of difference. This is why the emergence of Gurjapneet Singh gives Tamil Nadu hope.A 6’3″ left-arm seamer who was born in Ludhiana (Punjab) and grew up in Ambala (Haryana), Gurjapneet moved to Chennai when he was about 17. Seven years later, on his Ranji Trophy debut against former champions Saurashtra, he bagged 6 for 22, the best figures in a first-class innings by a TN fast bowler at home since 2005-06.Gurjapneet’s record haul included the prize scalp of Cheteshwar Pujara for a duck, which helped TN beat the clock and the Coimbatore weather for an innings victory. Four weeks before trapping Pujara, Gurjapneet had bowled Virat Kohli at the Chepauk nets in the lead-up to the first Test against Bangladesh in Chennai. A tip from Kohli, Gurjapneet says, played a role in Pujara’s dismissal.”When I spoke to Kohli, he gave me some points, which gave me more confidence,” Gurjapneet tells ESPNcricinfo. “I was mentally prepared to bowl to Pujara, who is a legend in red-ball cricket in India. Against right-handers, he [Kohli] suggested me to come around the stumps also and told I can keep changing the angles to make it uncomfortable for the batsmen. I came around the stumps to Pujara first ball and with that angle I got him lbw. If I bowl over the stumps, there is less chance of getting lbw.”Pujara’s wicket made Gurjapneet believe he could cut it at the higher level. When he was a teenager, Gurjapneet had not made it to many age-group teams back home, and upon the advice of his coach Anil Mashi, he shifted to Chennai, which has a more robust cricketing structure, in 2017-18.Having enrolled himself into Guru Nanak College, a home base for India Cements’ league teams, he bowled at the college nets and steadily moved up the ranks to play for their third division and then first-division sides. He then broke into the TNPL in 2021, playing for R Ashwin’s Dindigul Dragons. There he worked closely with Yo Mahesh, who incidentally is the only other TN fast bowler to have taken a first-class six-for at home since 2005-06.