With the breaknecks of the T20 World Cup 2026 in which bats are clocked like sports cars and sixes are as common as dot balls, it only takes the tiniest of differences to result in a trophy or a flight home. In the case of the West Indies-a party whose name is built into the texture of the power-hitting-that quotient is now being hewn by an unpredictable hand: a 28-year-old of a Mumbai chawl.
Introduction of Abhishek Jain, the Indian throwdown expert, who has become the secret sauce in Daren Sammy coaching kitchen. With the Windies now gearing up to a virtual quarter final battle against India, possibly in Eden Gardens, it is Jain who comes with the tough job of making the already deadly hitters of the world, even more deadlier.
Between the Wankhede Nets and the Dahisar Chawl
The story of Abhishek Jain reads like a screen play of a cricket biopic. Jain lived in a rented room at Dahisar, and his life was marked by a rhythmic sound of the thwack of a ball and a sidearm- a specific plastic spoon with which cricketing balls were thrown with a speed of more than 150 kph.
The life-altering telephone call was like a Sunday morning. He was called to the office by a Mumbai Cricket Association (MCA) official with an invitation of just one question: “West Indies team ko bowl daalega? (Will you bowl to the team of the West Indies?)
Jain didn’t blink. With his sidearm elite and a bag of dreams he boarded the local train at Borivali to Churchgate heading to the legendary Wankhede Stadium. He was not there a fan, but a one-man firing squad.
In a special interview with Times of India, Jain said that he has bowled to Sachin Tendulkar, KL Rahul and Irfan Pathan. But West Indies… they are constructed otherwise. Hitting the ball, you do not merely hear it, you feel the air blowing.
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The “Sammy Seal” of Approval
It was a baptism by fire on the first day of practice. The head coach of West Indies, Daren Sammy, who had something to say about power winning World Cups, stood behind the nets, and he looked skeptical of the young man who had nothing to warm-up.
Sammy threw out the sign to the first batter: Sherfane Rutherford. Jain took out the sidearm and fired a rocket. The ball whistled like a shot, and struck Rutherford bare on his heels, on sheer quickness, one day ahead of his swing.
Sammy’s reaction? A shriek of laughter reverberating in the lonely stadium. “Brilliant man! How are you going to bowl without warming up? Sammy exclaimed. Since then, Jain was no longer a local help, but on the list.
The Invisible engine of Modern T20
Jain is a fresh crop of the cricketing businessman: the Throwdown Specialist. Gone are the days when coaches used to toss balls underarm. Nowadays, such teams as the West Indies invest in such specialists as Jain since this guarantees replicated reality.
Jain enables the power-hitters of the Windies to pre-program their muscles by simulating the particular angles of a Jasprit Bumrah or the bounce of an Arshdeep Singh. It is a hard, unappreciated work that leaves the shoulders torn and the back sore but to Jain every hug and pat on the back by Daren Sammy is worth it.

