Knight Riders’ opener Venkatesh Iyer was at the crease, almost certainly feeling the pressure of giving a similar start. The first ball he received was exactly what he didn’t want - a 150 kmph rocket, targeted at the top of his off-stump.

It hit the shoulder of his bat hard and rolled over to mid-off. He looked at the willow with worry and got it checked by an opposition fielder. A dot to start the innings.

The next ball was even better, at 151 kmph. The on-air commentators were as stunned as the batter. This time, the impact was just below the handle. Iyer had another worried look and decided the bat had had enough and needed to be changed. Another dot.

The third ball was slower but not slow by any means, at 145 kmph. But the impact of the first two was such that the batter played it early and almost gave a catch to point. Third dot.

Given what had happened in the first innings, this was supposed to be a flat pitch. But there was no time to breathe for Iyer, and he was pushed back, the perfect setup for a 132 kmph in-swinging fourth ball that took the inside edge off his drive to the right of the wicketkeeper, who lept and grabbed one of the catches of the season.

The wicketkeeper was Quinton de Kock but the bowler wasn’t Kagiso Rabada, Anrich Nortje, Lockie Ferguson or any overseas pacer or even any of the emerging Indian right-arm quicks. He was a left-hand pacer from Uttar Pradesh with a killer instinct, height, pace, accuracy, swing, seam movement and variations. His name was Mohsin Khan.

Mohsin showcased that last skill abundantly in the rest of the match. In his second over, he got Iyer’s partner Abhishek Tomar out off a slower one, a rarity in the powerplay.

His next over was the 13th of the match, by when the Knight Riders had rebuilt to 125-3. The previous three overs had gone for 20, 16 and 12 runs. But Mohsin came in and conceded just two runs.

When he was put in to finish his quota in the 17th over, Knight Riders were at 144-5, and a red-hot-form Andre Russell was out in the middle. Mohsin straightaway bowled a wide cutter, slow enough not to let the West Indian get much power behind it. Russell was out caught and the Knight Riders fell inches away from victory.

With an economy rate of five, Mohsin’s name stood out on the scorecard - a scorecard where the other bowlers’ economy rates read 8.50, 11.20, 11.50, 11.50 and 15.

For those who know him and have been following him from the start, that would have been no surprise. After all, for them, standing out is what he’s always done.

In an exclusive interview with Sportskeeda, Badruddin Siddiqui, Mohsin’s first coach, attested:

Mohsin’s cricketing journey started at the age of 13. The younger of his two elder brothers, Imraan Khan, took him to Siddiqui’s coaching in Moradabad, a small town 350 kilometers away from Lucknow, where the Khans lived for a few years.

Siddiqui met the Khans through Imraan and knew that Mohsin, then short and slight, was likely to get at least six feet tall. Adding to that were a natural high-arm bowling action and raw pace, which made Siddiqui see him as an exciting project.

There was one fundamental difference to sort out between the coach and the apprentice, though, as Mohsin just wanted to bat! Bowling didn’t entertain the easy-going kid’s interest much.

Siddiqui had a tough conversation lined up. He recalled:

Seeing his talent, Siddiqui fast-tracked Mohsin to the state Under-16 trials. Mohsin shone immediately, taking 27 wickets across four trial matches, which earned him a call-up from the National Cricket Academy (NCA) in Bengaluru in 2014.

A NCA call-up is an official stamp that you are under the radar of India ‘A’ and Under-19 coaches. It’s the decisive stage in any young Indian cricketer’s career. For Mohsin and his family, however, a major shoulder injury made it a year-long nightmare.

Mohsin’s father, Multan Khan, a former state-level cricketer himself and currently a retired UP police sub-inspector, told Sportskeeda:

Siddiqui believes his family’s support was pivotal in his recovery, commenting:

The comeback was as proficient as the ordeal that preceded it was debilitating. Mohsin’s ability to plunder wickets with pace and bounce got him to the state Under-19 team.

Consistent performances there earned him his maiden T20 match for Uttar Pradesh (UP) in the 2017-18 Zonal T20 League. Mohsin featured in four of UP’s five matches and, although he didn’t put up any eye-catching figures - four wickets in a combined 14 overs for 101 runs - the best scouts in the IPL took note.

Within days of the tournament was the IPL 2018 auction, and now five-time champions Mumbai Indians (MI) picked him for the base price of ₹20 lakh. However, as previously seen in Mohsin’s story, a new career jump has never come easy.

Mohsin warmed the bench in Rohit Sharma’s team for three years before being signed by them for the ₹20 lakh base price again in 2020. This, despite him being UP’s top wicket-taker twice in the Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy - in 2017-18 and 2020-21 - and bowling with the best average and economy rate for the state in 2019-20.

It was but a difficult time, but Siddiqui knew the importance of getting through it. He said:

After all, the coach had seen another of his pupils, Mohammad Shami, go through something similar at the Knight Riders during 2011-13 before moving to Delhi Daredevils (now Delhi Capitals) in 2014. Like Shami did by picking the brains of Wasim Akram in Kolkata, Mohsin had to find motivation in being a substitute.

He said:

Mohsin also looks back fondly at that time, remembering lessons he took from Jasprit Bumrah and the team’s then bowling consultant and now director Zaheer Khan. In an exclusive chat with Sportskeeda, Mohsin said:

Shami’s connection with Mohsin didn’t end with a difficult start to the latter’s IPL career. Shami helped his junior to get out of the rut via special lessons on reverse swing and seam position during the pandemic-inflicted lockdown in 2020-21. Siddiqui, the organizer of the camp, said:

In previous interviews, Siddiqui had talked about how Shami thought Mohsin was a better fast-bowler (and batter) than him. But Mohsin is keeping his feet grounded.

The tips certainly helped as Mohsin, for the third time, was picked for the base price of ₹20 lakh in the IPL 2022 auction - but this time by a different team, the Lucknow Super Giants (LPSG). Within months of running on plowed lands with Shami, Mohsin was running in to bowl at the lush Wankhede Stadium against his mentor’s Gujarat Titans (GT).

A start to forget, a campaign to remember

Not many predicted Mohsin’s debut to come as early as his team’s first match of the tournament. But Siddiqui knew that Vijay Dhaiya, the Super Giants’ assistant coach and UP state team’s head coach, was aware of his form and would give him the chance.

It wasn’t the best of starts, though. Mohsin bowled two wicketless overs for 18 runs. The youngster couldn’t get his lengths right, often erring in his lines while trying to swing the new ball. He looked jittery and wasn’t trusted to bowl after the 10th over by the captain, KL Rahul, either.

He was dropped for the next match.

A Siddiqui pep-talk was inevitable. The coach recalled:

Mohsin’s next chance came as an injury replacement for Avesh Khan, the Super Giants’ best pacer, almost a month after his debut. The match was against his former side, the Mumbai Indians. Mohsin’s first over was again loose and went for 11 runs.

In his second over, though, Mohsin found his length. He kept the third ball slightly short and on the stumps, letting his height and action make it rise on Dewald Brevis, whose attempted upper-cut went down third man’s throat.

The first wicket changed the trajectory of Mohsin’s campaign. Suddenly, he was no longer erratic. Like a machine, he stuck to this wicket-taking length as his stock for the rest of the tournament. Everything else became a variation.

In the next two matches versus Punjab Kings (PBKS) and Delhi Capitals (DC), he picked up seven wickets, four of them via stock length. The other three were among the season’s best performers - Liam Livingstone, David Warner and Rishabh Pant.

Both Livingstone and Warner failed to pick Mohsin’s off-cutters. Livingstone’s was in the middle overs, but Warner fell for it in the powerplay. For players of their caliber, experience and, most importantly, form, that was a tad surprising.

Mohsin said he didn’t do anything special to make it difficult, and that the trick lay in timing. He explained:

Pant’s wicket was as good a set-up as ever seen in the IPL. Remember, this was a batter who had thwarted set-up after set-up in Test cricket. And unlike his recent returns in T20Is, Pant was in superb form in IPL 2022.

Here he was, with the first three balls of the over being bowled on length and wide outside the off-stump. The southpaw tried to hit boundaries but was neither given the line nor the pace to do so. He changed the strike and returned only for the last ball of the over.

Anticipating another wide delivery, the left-hander kept his body open to hit it on the off-side. But Mohsin had other plans. He bowled it straight and full at 145 clicks, slipping it through Pant’s twisting blade to castle the stumps emphatically.

Recalling the dismissal, Mohsin said:

Mohsin’s figures in the next two games read 1/6 in three overs and 1/18 in four. From being the Super Giants’ strike bowler, he had temporarily become unplayable.

Swinging the ball at the start, beating both edges, cramping top-order batters with pace and bounce, surprising them with slower ones and not giving anything to sloggers - Mohsin showed all of it and more, that too on flat wickets where other bowlers kept being costly. It was a rare display, one that had years of effort brewing behind it.

Explaining the process, Siddiqui said:

Mohsin ended the season with a 0/43 display against the Rajasthan Royals (RR), 0/43, the aforementioned match-winning outing against the Knight Riders, 3/20, and a 1/25 against Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) in a losing cause.

Mohsin’s first recorded average in the IPL was 45. By the end of the season, he had brought it down to 14.07. Similarly, he went for nine runs to the over on debut, but after the match against the Royal Challengers, his economy rate read 5.97 - the second-best after only Sunil Narine’s 5.57.

His economy rate in the powerplay, 5.25, was the best in the league. In death overs, he was the fifth most economical, 8.62, among bowlers who had bowled at least eight overs in that phase.

Skill-wise, he became a bowler that his captain not only trusted, but was “scared” of facing. Mohsin understood the value of the praise. He told Sportskeeda:

The competition in Indian cricket is such that despite being one of the finds of the tournament, Mohsin has been far from a national call-up. Many believe that the selectors want to test the second-season theory (that a brilliant year is usually followed by a poor one as the opposition gets to know the player) with him first.

Even with the small sample size, Mohsin has shown he can match the skills of his counterparts: Arshdeep Singh’s guile, Umran Malik’s pace, Avesh Khan’s bounce and accuracy, and Harshal Patel’s middle-overs prowess. All he needs now is experience.

Mohsin Khan could be the difference-maker for India

There’s one skill, though, where Mohsin has been one step ahead of his peers - batting. Siddiqui made him switch wood for leather but Mohsin never forgot his love for batting. He often finds time to have six-hitting competitions with his teammates.

Siddiqui himself accepts now that Mohsin has what it takes to be an all-rounder.

Mohsin added:

If not in Australia for the T20 World Cup later this year, Mohsin could be in line, at least as a reserve bowler, for the 2023 T20 World Cup in India. Many might have forgotten his IPL performances by now, but Mohsin is making sure he works hard enough to not be set aside as a one-season wonder.

He said:

The benchmark for him is quite clear too. Siddiqui said:

Mohsin had said in a post-match IPL interview that by playing in the tournament, he had fulfilled one of his parents’ dreams. We can only imagine what it would mean to them if he reaches the highest level.

Multan Khan remarked:

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