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Regular-article-logo Sunday, 06 July 2025

Varun’s fitness needs special care: Gloster

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(PTI) Published 21.08.14, 12:00 AM

New Delhi: The BCCI must take special care of injury-prone fast bowler Varun Aaron to ensure he has a long and successful international career, feels former national team physio John Gloster.

Gloster, who had worked with the Indian team from 2005-2008, feels that “maintaining proper workload is an area of concern not only for Indian fast bowlers, but also for bowlers from other parts of the world”.

“Varun is just 24 years… And he has already had a back surgery and that’s not a great thing at such a young age. He is a fast bowler who needs to be managed very carefully as there is every chance of a recurrence,” Gloster, who managed the likes of Zaheer Khan, Ashish Nehra, Ajit Agarkar during his stint with the Indian team, said during a promotional here.

For Gloster, the “fitness programme” for each and every fast bowler should different from one another.

“Aaron bowls at 90 mph, while Bhuvneshwar Kumar barely touches 80mph. The fitness programme for both would be entirely different as their workload varies,” said Gloster, who is currently attached with the IPL team Rajasthan Royals.

On Ishant Sharma’s recurring ankle problem, Gloster said that bowling in English conditions is completely different because of the “pounding that the feet takes on softer grounds”.

“As far as I know, Ishant’s rehab went well. Now the problem is that a fast bowler, who does not have an experience of playing county cricket in England will have difficulties on the softer turfs. The pounding that a fast bowler’s ankles take on landing is enormous.

“That’s why it is so important for Indian boys to go and play county cricket. Look at Zak (Zaheer)… A season with Worcestershire and he was a changed bowler. I have worked with Surrey and I feel that players learn more about maintaining their fitness while playing county cricket,” Gloster said.

Gloster made an interesting point about bowling shoes of a particular sports manufacturing brand that has been causing injuries.

“Now cricketers have their kit contracts… A lot of these fast bowlers wear a famous sports brand’s bowling shoes, which are actually rubbish… Since they are contracted to that particular brand, they wear and develop a lot of injuries,” explained Gloster.

He is also against too much of training in the gymnasium rather than doing “cricket specific exercise”, which leads to a lot of stress related injuries.

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