“You don’t have to tell anyone that you mop floors at a tuition centre. Just come in the morning, do the cleaning and leave. Nobody will know. But I didn’t like the idea,” Rinku Singh had once narrated his ordeal.
These were his father’s words to a young Rinku before he began playing at Under-16 level for Uttar Pradesh.
The family of seven, which included five sons, found father Khanchand’s meagre income from delivering LPG cylinders door-to-door insufficient for financial sustenance and most of them had to do odd jobs to make ends meet.
Life was tough for Mr. Rinku and his family.
However, his perseverance kept him going and now he has become a household name after his sensational power hitting in the IPL on the night of April 9.
“I am not educated enough to fall back on academics. It is only cricket that could have taken me forward, and it wasn’t just one of the options, but the only option,” his jaws tightened when he spoke to KKR’s official Youtube channel some time back during an interaction.
On April 9, the stockily-built 25-year-old from Aligarh didn’t just hit his U.P. teammate Yash Dayal for five consecutive sixes to pull off an incredible IPL win but each and every ball that soared over the ropes at the Narendra Modi Stadium was a statement in itself.
In the last few years, his family has been able to bid poverty goodbye with IPL money, but from now, he will enjoy IPL stardom.
Ian Bishop was on air when Mr. Rinku launched into Mr. Dayal’s back of the hand slower delivery.
“Rinku Singh, remember the name,” Mr. Bishop’s voice was something one would love to hear on a loop.
“My father struggled a lot, I come from a farmer’s family. Every ball that I hit out of the ground was dedicated to the people who sacrificed so much for me,” Mr. Rinku said after his match-winning knock.
In the 2021 domestic season, he had sustained a serious knee injury while going for a second run during a game for U.P., and underwent surgery. His father was so depressed that he had stopped eating for a few days before he made him understand that injuries are part of players’ lives.
That Aligarh Boy
Aligarh is considered a cultural hub in India with the famous Aligarh Muslim University still having its pride of place among the country’s elite academic institutes.
It has been a house of intellectuals, poets, social reformers, sportspersons (Major Dhyan Chand and Lala Amarnath) for nearly a century and half (148 years).
The biggest link of the city with sport is that it is the birthplace of former India hockey captain Zafar Iqbal.
But Aligarh belongs to Mr. Rinku too, whose father would often thrash all his five sons if they tried to give cricket precedence over studies.
“To play proper inter-colony or club matches, you needed to pool in money to buy a leather ball and my father would never give me money. Once I went to play a match in Kanpur and my mother borrowed ₹1000 from local grocery store to provide for my pocket money,” Mr. Rinku had recollected.
“Papa se hum paancho bhaiyon ko bahot maar padhi hai (All five brothers have got lot of thrashing from dad). My father was hawker, delivered LPG cylinders and when he wouldn’t be available for the job, we brothers had to fill in and father would sit with a stick till we hadn’t delivered,” the U.P. southpaw said.
An emotional Mr. Khanchand while talking to PTI on April 10 remembered the good old days.
“I had beaten up Rinku a number of times only for the reason I thought that he was wasting his time by playing cricket. Neither he would study, nor did he support me in my work,” Mr. Khanchand said.
Their poverty was the reason he got emotional as he didn’t have the means to buy a proper match bat for his son, which would cost in excess of ₹12,000.
“However, at times, I had become emotional seeing the passion towards cricket in Rinku,” Mr. Khanchand said, adding that he was helpless then.
Lifting the heavy LPG cylinder requires a lot of strength. Mr. Rinku and one of his brothers would often carry the cylinder on their bike and then travel through the bylanes of Aligarh to deliver it at homes and hotels.
“Hum paancho bhaiyon ne papa ke kaam mein bahot madad kari hain. (All five brothers have helped papa in his job).”
So when did his father finally stop beating him up for ignoring studies and playing cricket?
“There was a tournament called School World Cup being organised by DPS Aligarh and I was adjudged man of the tournament. That was the first time Papa had come to the ground to watch me.”
“I was presented with a motor-bike in front of him. Usdin ke baad unhone kabhie nahi mara (He never raised his hand after that day),” Mr. Rinku was seen laughing for the first time during the interaction.
Coming through ranks
He had his share of rejections as he was twice ignored during the UPCA’s U-16 trials though he himself admitted that he wasn’t ready for that level at the time.
But by 2012, he was ready and scored 154 on his Vijay Merchant Trophy debut and an innings like that in a BCCI tourney gave him confidence that he can play elite cricket if he worked hard.
Within a couple of years, he was in the U.P. U-19 team and was then directly inducted into U.P.’s one-day team. There has been no looking back after that.
Once you start playing competitive cricket, there are certain investments and kit is one of the major ones.
“At least five or six people really helped me in my journey. My childhood coach Masood Amini, Mohammed Zeeshan, who provided me with full kit, including cricket bats, Arjun Singh Fakira, Neel Singh and Swapnil Jain are some people I would always be grateful,” he had said.
Mr. Amini couldn’t be more proud about his student.
“Rinku has an X factor in him, which will take him to greater heights, and he will definitely make it to Team India. Rinku plays aggressive cricket, and can also become a good Test (cricket) batsman, because he has the capacity to switch his role as per the format of the game,” Mr. Amini said about his ward, who averages nearly 60 after 40 first-class games.
In the last three years, Mr. Rinku has moved his family into their new apartment in the city, the first thing he did with IPL money. He has cleared all outstanding loans of his family.
“Jo dikkate thi saari duur ho gayi, (All problems have been solved),” the happiness was palpable.
Mr. Rinku has the talent and ability, but after April 9, it can be safely said that he also has the heart to own the big stage in most difficult of circumstances.