There are two true originals in the game of cricket these days: Steve Smith and MS Dhoni. No one else can bat like Smith, no one else can bat and keep wickets like Dhoni.
Dhoni doesnât flick; he drags. He doesnât drive; he shoves. He doesnât cut; he chops. He doesnât lean forward; he lunges. He doesnât defend; he stabs. He doesnât uppercut; he carves.

But all that to an extent is still apeable, but no one has come close to copying his wicketkeeping skill, in particular his way to stump batsmen. He doesnât collect the ball; he snatches it. He doesnât âgiveâ, that cushioning that wicketkeepers tend to deploy; he pounces on the ball even as he moves his hands forward towards the stumps. Itâs a remarkable visual. So much so that in real-time view, itâs a magnificent blur. It used to be said of Gary Sobersâs reflexes in close-in positions that he used to catch blurs; Dhoniâs gathering of the ball itself a blur. In the words of former fielding coach of India R Sridhar: âIt often looks like Dhoni can stop time while executing a stumpingâ.
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The other night Suryakumar Yadav caught that blur. Once he missed the ball, he had heard the death rattle almost immediately; so quick was Dhoni that it almost seems that the batsman is out bowled and not stumped. In real-time, it seems as if Suryakumar had tried to press his back foot back inside the crease and turn back his head also â but replays reveal all that is a posthumous event. The bat hasnât even finished its full arc in follow-through in that attempted inside-out cover drive, the foot is still outside the crease, when the bails have come off.
Dhoniâs art can be traced back to him being original. A few years ago, on a stage show, he had opened up on his wicketkeeping method. âMy technique is different. I am not copybook. Pachas-on saal sey wahi karte aa rahe hai (They have been doing the same thing for decades). They say an, âgiveâ you are supposed to receive the ball. I thought why should you receive the ball? â These days our wicket keeping gloves have rubber and it has cotton â Â itâs already very soft,â before he finished off with this clincher: âyou can actually snatch the ballâ.
His own style
Itâs not a copybook but there is a definite method thatâs worth watching in slow-motion. Take the Suryakumar dismissal.
For starters, Dhoniâ gloved hands are very close to the stumps, further than many other wicketkeepers. Time saved already.
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Secondly, and this is quite difficult even to do with an imaginary ball, Dhoni was actually moving towards his left side but his cupped hands remain almost absolutely still. The body is moving, and the natural reaction is to jerk the hands up a touch. Not him, though. The hands stay almost relaxed in that position in front of him. The left leg finishes dangling outside the leg stump in fact but the hands stay just outside off. Needless to state, the head too is in great position of balance.
Remrkably, he has begun to move his hands towards the ball even before it has crossed the stumps. The side-on view is quite telling. As soon as Suryakumar fails to connect and the ball slides past the bat, Dhoni has begun moving his hands ahead. There is a jerky movement as the ball goes into the gloves.
Here is where his tearing-the-copybook way gets more interesting. Sridhar had once told this newspaper about that exact moment. âWhile others use their hands to produce that give, he uses his wrists. While his hands are going towards the stumps, thereâs a slight flick of the wrists in the backward direction. In my opinion, itâs not safe hands but strong hands that allow him to do that. Thatâs also the reason you will rarely see him collecting the ball to his side like other keepers. He doesnât need to,â Sridhar had said. âHe uses his peripheral vision more than anybody else. While heâs looking at the ball, his corner of the eye has already gauged where the stumps are and where the batsmanâs foot is.â
Somehow, even as the peripheral vision is working and he is moving his hands rapidly towards the ball, he keeps them soft and pliable â even if he is technically âsnatchingâ in his own words, to gather the ball. The whole need for cushioning, the âgiveâ is for that softness, so that you donât snatch at the ball and the ball doesnât pop out. Dhoni shreds all that wisdom as piffle, trusts his gloves, his hands, and his instincts to become the fastest hands in the East or West. He doesnât âgiveâ; he just takes them down. A true original.Â