A year after a lower-back injury took him out of the game, the fast bowler is ready to reclaim his place in India’s attack

Shashank Kishore09-Aug-2023Last year around this time, Prasidh Krishna was among the contenders for India’s pace-bowling arsenal for the World Cup, but he hasn’t put on the blues since India’s tour of Zimbabwe, when a lumbar spine injury sidelined him.Prasidh’s tall frame allows him to extract steep bounce while bowling in the high 140s, which made him a key point of difference in the middle overs. The injury setback came just as his India career was about to take off. A year on, as he gears up for the T20I tour of Ireland, he reflects on his journey – the injury, the diagnosis, rehabilitation process of understanding himself – ahead of his comeback series, in this chat in Bengaluru.Let’s go back to when the injury first cropped up. It’s August 2022. You play the ODIs in Zimbabwe. You’re then named in the India A squad for New Zealand, and suddenly that’s the last we hear of you until the BCCI issues a media release in February. What happened?
We were playing the second ODI in Zimbabwe [in August 2022]. I came off the field, did a small stretch and told the trainer that I’m feeling a little too slow and we need to up our training to something more power-oriented to feel fast. I initially thought it was a conditioning-based thing. We’d played in England, then we travelled to the West Indies and then Zimbabwe. So this feeling was on and off.Related

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I was rested for the third ODI, along with Mohammed Siraj. Then I got back to Bangalore and I was named in India A’s squad for the four-day games against New Zealand A. During training, I had a little bit of stiffness while bending, so I went to the physio [Tulsi Ram], who was part of the Zimbabwe tour as well. He said, “Why don’t we get a scan done?” That showed I had a stress fracture in my left lumbar spine, so I was withdrawn from the series.We decided to give it a break for a few weeks before I started rehab. This is where the NCA rehab team of Shrikant Iyengar, Rajnikanth and Nitin Patel came into the picture. So I started my rehab after some time off and there wasn’t much pain after a couple of weeks of rest. We had a protocol with some set timelines because a stress fracture of the back is something we can’t be negligent about.What was the initial rehab process like?
It began at the end of September-early October. I was doing everything except bowling for the first eight to 12 weeks. Then we slowly introduced gym activities, where I was running, I was jumping around, I was doing a lot of burpees, I was working on my running technique and how the body can be brought to a stable base.

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