courtesy news.bbc.co.uk |
Shekhar Gupta’s Walk The Talk with Farokh Engineer was pure nostalgia for people like me. Our generation --both cricketers and followers -- was probably cheated by history since there was no TV, live or otherwise, and many
notable achievers did not get their due. One of my heroes barely got a passing
mention from Farokh. This is an attempt to rectify the omission in whatever
small way I can. But before that, one needs to give today’s cricket lovers a
feel of Indian cricket those days.
1971 was a monumental year for India. On the cricket field, the turning point really
was the tour to West Indies. One needs to remember that India’s being thrashed
on foreign tours was a given those days, no one expected anything different. 0
for 4 at Lords may have been extreme but not surprising. And who were to be our
opponents? The mighty West Indies. If you managed to get through the initial
line up of Fredericks, Camacho, Kanhai and Lloyd, you saw their Captain, the
real King of Good Times, Gay Sobers walk in. The same Sobers who had hit a
hurricane century on the last day of a Brabourne Test a few years earlier, all because he wanted to
reach the racecourse by 3 p.m.! There was contempt for Indian cricket written
all over that century.
Cricket selection was a topic of heated debates across
India. Regional and Linguistic chauvanism (but thankfully never Religious) were
always in the mix and when Vijay Merchant as Chairman of the Selection
Committee dumped the Nawab of Pataudi in favour of Ajit Wadekar, there were
many who remembered that in 1946, Merchant’s legitimate claims to Captaincy
were overlooked by a Vizzy dominated Selection Committee in favour of fellow
royal Iftekhar Ali Pataudi. But Merchant
gave Wadekar a team which was a good mix of youth and experience. Among the
youngsters was a 21 year old Sunil Gavaskar.
This piece is NOT about Sunil Gavaskar, but a short
digression is tempting. Bombay schools cricket was a big deal in the 60s and
Ramesh Nagdev, Quereshi, Solkar, Gavaskar, Milind Rege and their prospects had
been discussed endlessly by aficionados, not just in Mumbai but all over India
(I was in Ahmedabad then). Although some of the others also played at higher
levels including Tests, only SMG had the focus and stamina to come through
initiation into College, Universities and first class cricket with his
reputation enhanced. There was excitement around prominent college players too
and Ashok Mankad from Mumbai and Ashok
Gandotra and Vinay (or was it Raman?) Lamba from Delhi were subjects of heated
discussions among cricket lovers.
The first test of ’71 West Indies tour began in Kingston, Jamaica
on Feb 18 but SMG had to sit it out with an injury. Loss of a day due to rain
reduced it to a four day affair. I remember a bunch of us in Pilani (where it
can be 2 Degrees C in winters) heaving a sigh of relief on hearing about it on
BBC World News at 4 or 5 a.m., now a draw was possible, that was the extent of
our ambition. Yes, there was no live commentary from West Indies those days and
we had to catch the 20 second tail end of the hourly news bulletin from BBC on
our crackling radios just to get the score!
Next day, our hourly nightly vigil told us that India was 75
for 5. We had all seen this movie before and turned off our radio sets and went
off to sleep. India went on to make 387 and Dilip Sardesai made a stunning 212.
Only Laxman’s 281 many years later can
be really called a comparable innings, in fact these were more than just
‘innings’, these were statements which heralded turnarounds for India’s
cricketing fortunes. Let me elaborate.
There have been many wonderful innings and many great bowling spells by Indian
cricketers over the years, quite a few of which led to India winning the match
or possibly saving it. And yet, other than these two, I cannot think of a single
effort in Tests which transformed Indian cricketers' attitude, on-and-off the field, for many years
to come. The opposition were commanded to Respect. Remember, in 1971 there were no helmets, little protective gear and
for someone to not get overwhelmed by the scorecard and launch a counter-attack
against a fearsome Carribean attack was nothing short of a miracle.
We read about Dilip Sardesai’s sterling knock (and we had
only news reports to vouch for it, much like Kapil’s 175 years later) with
complete disbelief; Indian cricketers were not supposed to fight back like
this, they were there merely to serve as punching bags for the big boys (A, E,
WI). Sobers too could not recover from the shock of the display of spine by
‘sheep’ and when Wadekar asked the WI to follow-on after they were all out for
212 (follow-on margin was reduced due to the loss of a day), there was a
stunned silence in the WI dressing room. WI drew that test but their confidence
must have been dealt a mortal blow.
It is my belief that SMG’s having to sit out the first Test
was a huge blessing for him and for Indian Cricket. That shrewd cricketing
brain must have absorbed a thousand lessons in those four days which must have
helped in the tour later. For in the second Test itself, India finished what
Dilip Sardesai (in partnership with Solkar and with the spin quartet showing
its mettle) had started in the first. A century by Sardesai and two sixties by
SMG in his debut test marked a new dawn for Indian cricket with the first ever
Test victory over the mighty West Indies. I remember there being some relief that
Gavaskar missed his hundred; debut centuries were supposed to be jinxed, how
many had/ have heard of Deepak Shodhan—I believe still very much around in
Ahmedabad?
The rest of the series was a 'night'mare for us, for by then
we were hooked onto BBC’s ghastly 30 sec updates at unearthly hours (I hope
some of my professors are reading this, they finally know the reason for the
drop in my CGPA for that semester!). Suffice it to say that India hung on to its
lead right to the end. The last Test was a six day affair –that was the way it
was played then, if after four tests the score line was 0-0 or 1-0---and I remember
the fourth day ending with India, trailing by 160 odd in the first innings, at
89 or 90 for 1 in its second, SMG batting 59. He had already scored a century
in the first innings and while we marveled at his boy-who-stood-on-the-burning-deck
act, we all knew where it was heading. Not SMG, for, as we were to learn over
the next 15 years, he always relished a scrap and this was a big one. End of
day five saw him on 180 not out (and most of our hostel awake in awe at 5 a.m.!) and by
lunch on the 6th day, riding on his 220, India had more or less
saved the match and won the series.
Dilip Sardesai’s 642 runs in the series stood as an India
record for all of 5 days before SMG overtook it with his last innings of the
series. Statistically perhaps it was a most appropriate passing of the
baton to a youngster who was to become a giant in years to come.
India had a scrappy 1-0 series win over England in that
English summer, thanks largely to Chandrasekhar and the other spinners. Farokh
Engineer, Ajit Wadekar, Vishwanath and Abid Ali played useful hands and Sardesai and Gavaskar made vital but patchy
contributions of 40s and 50s too but the best of Sardesai was behind him, the
best of SMG was yet to come. Those who only statistics know will find Dilip Sardesai's test record of 2001 runs spread over 30 tests spanning 12 years @ 39 modest but The Renaissance Man had done his job,
bringing alive a sleeping cricketing nation and, in a manner of speaking,
handing over its cricketing future to a most capable pair of hands.
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Great article Sir!! I had a perception that the renaissance in Indian cricket started after the world cup victory in 1983. Though we are pounded by cricket gyan from every form of media the things that you have written are rare to find. I had a faint idea about SMG's arrival on world stage in the West Indies tour but this article describes the exact details in a very beautiful manner. Getting cricket scores was such a tough jobs those days!! I found it hilarious.
ReplyDeleteThanks Rahul, yes things were a bit different then. It is not that before SMG Indian test players did not score 100s; they did but then absolved themselves from run-making responsibility for the next two tests. More on these matters as-and-when:0
DeleteSatish, I was initiated into cricket in 1979 -I was young. But what you have narrated here is not very different from my experience. I still remember the mighty West Indies then and I am sure they were as invincible in 1971, if not more. What Dilip Sardesai and SMG did back then was every bit the miracle that Kapil Dev led team did in the 1983 World Cup.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the nostalgic trip. It almost read like an elegy in the context of the demise of the game that it used to be.
Thanks Umashankar, don't get me wrong, I am not crying for 'good old days'. Everything must move with time, incl cricket. But looking at old photographs is fun sometimes:)
ReplyDelete