DIY star Ryan Burl embodies new Zimbabwe's ethos

The allrounder talks about his turn to legspin, learning from Rashid Khan and Ish Sodhi, and finding himself in a newly positive national side

Firdose Moonda16-Oct-2022″” is a phrase used in much of southern Africa. Literally translated it means, “A farmer makes a plan”, but that doesn’t quite do it justice. The expression is used to explain the can-do attitude and ingenuity of people in a place where resources are often lacking. It tells the story of how they have learn to live with long-running electricity cuts, drought, government corruption, inflation, unemployment, and other kinds of lack.The people of the continent are known for their DIY solutions to all kinds of problems, including ones like ripped bowling boots. Zimbabwe’s Ryan Burl used to fix his with a clamp and some superglue.”I always like tinkering with stuff,” he says on the eve of the Zimbabwe squad’s departure to the T20 World Cup in Australia. “It’s one of my traits. Sometimes I will be fixing a grip or something else on the bat, sometimes working on the shoes. So I took a picture to show people what kinds of things we do in the background.”Related

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Burl says he wasn’t asking for any favours and simply ended up with much more than he bargained for when his tweet caught fire. “Overnight there were so many messages coming in. My wife was like, “Have you seen what’s going on? This is crazy.”Then he got a message from Puma India, who agreed to sponsor him and some of his team-mates with new boots and additional kit. “You’ll have to wait and see at the World Cup how many of our guys will be wearing Puma,” he jokes. “And it’s also just shown a lot of other sponsors that have maybe been sleeping on us that there are countries and cricketers out there that do need a bit of help.” indeed.