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That Mumbai feeling: Ajaz Patel is back at the scene of his triumph

Ajaz Patel walks through the stands to attend an indoor training session Surjeet Yadav / © Associated Press

Mumbai holds a special place in Ajaz Patel's heart. It was where he was born and grew up for a while before emigrating to New Zealand with his parents as an eight-year-old. His wife is from the city, and he still has plenty of extended family there, whom he often visits. Three years ago, the Wankhede Stadium was the scene of one of the rarest bowling feats in Test cricket, when Ajaz became only the third bowler in the history of the format to bag all ten wickets in an innings.

That was his first time playing international cricket in India and he finished the two-Test series as the highest wicket-taker, with 17 wickets - 14 of which came in that Mumbai Test, to date the best figures by any visiting bowler in the country. While it was an effort that catapulted him to global recognition, it was also bittersweet with New Zealand going down in the Test and losing the series 2-0.

Now, almost three years later, New Zealand make their way to the final Test of the series having taken a 2-0 lead and broken a slew of records on the way. There is some pressure on them to sweep the series, but as Ajaz makes his way back to his "second home", he is likely to take a quiet moment to himself in the place where it all began.

"Yeah, it will be pretty cool. It'll be pretty nostalgic for me, obviously, going back there," he says. "My roots are deeply connected to Mumbai. For me, it's just special being there and being available and having the opportunity to play at Wankhede. Yeah, it's surreal. Even when I went there the first time, it was really special even before everything kicked off. It was just special to be in Mumbai and be able to have the opportunity to play there."

It was on the second day of the Mumbai Test in 2021 that the stars aligned for Ajaz. He had bagged four wickets on the opening day and was eyeing the honours board, but there was a lot more than that in store. He got his fifth and sixth off consecutive deliveries, and while the seventh took another 28 overs to come, he wrapped up the final three wickets quickly to claim a place in history.

Of the ten, Virat Kohli's wicket was the one Ajaz cherished the most. "He's a great of batting around the world and comes out with an aura and confidence, and to be able to get him out was special," he says. But more than the wickets, he remembers most fondly a feeling that came over him earlier in the match.

"In a funny way, the glaring moment of that game for me was being out there on the morning of day one and kind of absorbing the fact that you're out there in Mumbai," he says. "The place that you're born… you're not living in India anymore, you're playing for another country, which is your new home, but you're back here against India. And all those things in combination were quite crazy to comprehend, and obviously, a lot of things have to line up to get that opportunity.

"It's almost like I was destined to come there and play, but then the way that it unfolded was obviously quite special. At the end of day two I was just kind of sitting back and appreciating what I'd achieved and what had just happened, and also accepting the fact that there's a lot of destiny about it, and there's a lot of grace from high up above to be able to achieve something like that, because we all appreciate that cricket requires a little bit of luck as well, and to take ten, you need a lot of things to go your way. So that was pretty special."

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Ajaz made his first-class debut in 2012 and had to wait for close to six years to break into the New Zealand team. The 2021 Mumbai Test was only the 11th of his career. One would assume that after taking ten in an innings, opportunities might have been fairly regular for Ajaz, for a while at least. As it turns out, he wasn't even part of the squad for the next Test series that New Zealand played, against Bangladesh at home less than a month later. In fact, of his 20 Tests, only three have been at home, the last of them in February 2020.

New Zealand's bowling requirements are such that they have opted for a seam-heavy combination at home, with the likes of Rachin Ravindra and Glenn Phillips doing the spin-bowling duties if required. Since his record feat, Ajaz has been part of only ten of the 23 Tests New Zealand have played. All but one of those ten were in Asia. Before the Sri Lanka tour just preceding the ongoing one of India, he went through a period where he played only four Tests in close to two years, between late December 2022 and September 2024.

While there is a tinge of frustration at the lack of opportunities, Ajaz admits it "breeds hunger" and the will to "continue to improve".

"If you're honest, as an international cricketer and a professional cricketer, you want to be playing every game and work towards putting yourself in a position to be able to do that and play in all conditions and play everywhere around the world," he says. "But sometimes in New Zealand, that's a little bit difficult. You look around the world and you see spinners playing in all conditions. They play in their home conditions, they play in away conditions, where I guess our team balance and what we've been looking to achieve for a while now has been so seam-dominated that it's been difficult to find a space in that team as a spinner.

"But also, in saying that, if we look at the last five to eight years of New Zealand cricket, we've probably had the best seam attack we've ever had. So it's kind of going well.

"Yeah, it's difficult and you want to play and you want to be available and push yourself for every opportunity, and realistically, sometimes that's not a possibility.

"But I think you still have to aim for it, you still have to work towards it because that's the best way to prepare yourself when the opportunity does arise. I know that I don't get as many opportunities, So when I do, I'm really hungry for them and I'm really excited for them. And I always work towards my game to be available everywhere, whether it be at home or whether it be in the subcontinent.

"Obviously then it's up to selectors whether I get picked or not. And then if I don't get picked, that's fine. I continue to grow my game, so that I can still keep pushing for that opportunity."

He can take comfort in the fact that since his debut, he has been part of the New Zealand playing XI in every Test in Asia. On the flip side, there is obvious expectation from him to rock up almost cold and succeed in spin-favouring conditions almost every time. After all, since his debut, only five bowlers have more wickets in Asia than his 70 in 15 Tests at 30.57

How then does he prepare for a tour of the subcontinent?

"For me, it's making sure my action is where I want it to be able to deal with the conditions that are going to be present here," he says, "and then also have an idea of what those plans are going to look like.

"Obviously, I've been fortunate enough to be here in the past and know what kind of conditions we're likely to face and what skill sets are going to be required. It's about practising those skill sets, and they're different to back home. Like back home, everything's about shape in the air and getting that extra drop and that ball performance, where here it's a lot about the surface and adapting to the right pace or the right seam angle and stuff like that.

"And it's learning to be adaptable as well, and it's being able to change at a whim going from 45 [degrees] in terms of your seam position to a square seam position, or sometimes even over the top. And that's where I think, for us, that's what tests our skills. We were fortunate back home, we practised on some wickets that we thought might be similar to the wickets here in terms of playing on turning wickets and slow wickets and low wickets and also fast, turning wickets. So we had a lot of different challenges put in front of us to try and learn and adapt, and I guess, grow.

"And then the other thing is being accustomed to bowling long spells [as a spinner]. It's something that probably in New Zealand we don't get that often."

Ajaz arrived in India earlier than the rest of his team-mates to get over jet-lag early and to be able to spend some time with his family in Mumbai. He had a few sessions at the MIG cricket club in Bandra, where he practised bowling on different kinds of surfaces, which included black- and red-soil pitches.

Over the last few years, he has made a change in his bowling stride and load-up, lengthening his run-up to help vary his pace so as to better adapt to surfaces in the subcontinent. It has yielded results. Ajaz was the second-highest wicket-taker when New Zealand visited Bangladesh for a two-Test series late last year. He also picked up eight wickets in the first Test against Sri Lanka in September.

"If I'm honest there, about two years ago, I felt like my bowling wasn't quite up to where I wanted it to be. And it's funny to say that, because it was literally after I took ten wickets in India," he says. "But my drive has always been to continue to improve and continue to get better. And one of the big things for me was being able to hit a higher range [of speed].

"With my old action and my old run-up, I was able to hit 90s [kph], but not quite consistently. I would range between the mid-80s and the early 80s to the early 90s. With the addition of the run-up, now I can go up to mid-90s and still [also] hit the early 80s. So that range becomes a lot bigger, and that gives you more opportunities and also, it allows you to challenge batters on different surfaces.

"If it's slow, you can adapt and get quicker, or if it's quick, you can adapt and get slower. After that Mumbai Test, there were probably games where I wasn't quite satisfied with how it was coming out and what I was able to produce. It was then [about] going on a little discovery and figuring out what that looks like and where I wanted to take my bowling next."

During the two Tests in India in this series, Ajaz has seen the fast bowlers run riot in Bengaluru, and then Mitchell Santner take 13 in Pune. With match hauls of 2 for 100 and 2 for 97, his own performances have been lukewarm. Now, though, on (second) home territory, he will hope for another special show as New Zealand eye a rare series sweep. He will have plenty of support in the form of his parents, wife, daughter and extended family in attendance in the crowd. Is another ten-for too much to ask for?