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Fifty-year-old Shashidhar N still remembers the first time he met Karun Nair. It was in the early 2000s and Karun was a 4th standard student of the Chinmayi School in Bengaluru. Shashidhar, the cricket coach of Frank Anthony Public School, and the then Principal Anthony Browne spotted the young kid playing with a straight bat.
Shashidhar, sitting in the games room at the school on Monday evening:
A few hours ago, his old student Karun Nair had made the country proud by becoming the second Indian to score a triple hundred in an international test match.
Impressed by Karun’s technique, Shashidhar and Browne then approached his parents, asking them to enrol the gifted boy in their school.
Shashidhar says Karun was always a quiet boy, focused on his practice.
Karun Nair was a consistent performer from his early days and was keen on staying unbeaten till the end of the innings. “He was consistent, no ups and downs. Batting was his main forte, but he also used to bowl off spin,” says Shashidhar.
During those years, the school did not have a turf ground and many parents contributed to create one. The school clearly remembers Karun’s father Kaladharan Nair who contributed sprinklers for the new ground.
“Karun was a student before I took charge, but I have heard that he was a disciplined student and a good player,” the school’s current principal Kevin Dominico Pope told TNM.
Karun had done well for the school during many occasions. He scored 188 runs in a quarter final match in the Himalaya Cup in 2007.
When told about the picture, Srinath remembered the time when he handed over the trophy. About Karun’s latest feat, he told TNM, ”It was a good triple century.”
Shashidhar says he always knew Karun would make it big in the cricketing world. “I knew for sure that he would play in Ranji matches. But when he was playing for the Under 19 team, I watched him and knew then that he would go on to play for India.”
He has only one wish for Karun. “He should go on playing for India and score lots of centuries."
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