A Quote by Vijay Shankar

I look to improve every time I play, whether batting or bowling. — © Vijay Shankar
I look to improve every time I play, whether batting or bowling.
My batting took some time to develop - I was batting at No. 10 initially but my bowling took off.
We had this little yard, and during the summer holidays, when my mum and dad were working, I spent hours bowling a golf ball at a stick. Just bowling, bowling, bowling. And I got to where I could hit the stick every time, repeating the same action. That's where the darts came from.
Whenever I get an opportunity to play for India, I will give my best in both aspects - batting and bowling.
I never think that I have to be at top every time. Obviously, I have to do well in every game and series; that's what I try to do. I try to improve and work on the swing and variation in my bowling.
I want my bowling to speak for me. In fact, not only my bowling, my batting, my fielding. Overall, I want my cricket to speak.
Sometimes I need to look at the scoreboard to figure out whether I'm batting hundred-plus or whether I am on zero.
I do enjoy batting - if the bowling's not quick!
I have to be flexible in my role, batting and bowling.
He has defined cricket in his fabulous, impeccable manner. He is to batting what Shane Warne is to bowling.
An all-rounder is someone who can make it to the team purely on the basis of his batting or bowling. Not both.
The most important thing is to keep our basics strong in both batting and bowling.
I am happy with my batting form. I have been bowling well, too, and have bowled long spells.
Every time you play more, you will improve.
When I hire musicians, I look for that first: every time they sit down do they go for it, you know? And do they try to learn the music and try to get inside the song whatever the tune is? Whether it's my originals or someone else's, it's just whether or not they're gonna play their hearts out, first and foremost.
There is a lot of talk about how Twenty20 has changed batting techniques in Test cricket. But it has also had an impact on bowling.
Every time I have people over, I watch how long they look at every part of the painting, or pictures on my computer. I have a few close friends and people that are constants. Whether I like their opinion or not, I've been hearing it for a long time and I can use it as this constant. I mentally pay attention to how long they look at every image, which ones they pause on and what parts of it they look at.
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