Stargazing - Ravi Shastri, 2021
Stargazing - Ravi Shastri, 2021
Stargazing - Ravi Shastri, 2021
CONTENTS
Introduction
Born to Lead
Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi
Spin Maestros
Erapalli Prasanna, Bishan Singh Bedi, Bhagwat Chandrasekhar
and Srinivasaraghavan Venkataraghavan
Learning in the Box
Richie Benaud, Greg Chappell, Barry Richards, Tony Greig and
Nasser Hussain
Captain of Captains
Clive Lloyd
Wrists of Steel
Gundappa Viswanath
Run Machine
Zaheer Abbas
My Mentor
Sunil Gavaskar
Kaptaan Khan
Imran Khan
Mr Perfection
Richard Hadlee
The King
Vivian Richards
His Lordship
Dilip Vengsarkar
Terminator
Malcolm Marshall
Elegance at Play
David Gower
Man of Destiny
Arjuna Ranatunga
Straight Shooter
Dean Jones
Daredevil
Aravinda De Silva
Waz to My Shaz
Wasim Akram
Tough Cookie
Steve Waugh
Fast Friends
Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh
Heart-throb of a Billion
Sachin Tendulkar
Thunderbolt Unleashed
Waqar Younis
Supreme Soloist
Sanath Jayasuriya
Super Hit
Inzamam-ul-Haq
King of Spin
Shane Warne
Spin Wizard
Muttiah Muralitharan
Fight to Win
Ricky Ponting
Heavyweight Hitter
Jacques Kallis
Mighty Wall
Rahul Dravid
Epic Chaser
V.V.S. Laxman
Game Changer
Adam Gilchrist
All-shot Wonder
Kumar Sangakkara
Universe Boss
Chris Gayle
Demolition Man
Virender Sehwag
Sultans of Swing
James Anderson and Stuart Broad
Mr Sixer
Yuvraj Singh
Mr 360 Degrees
A.B. de Villiers
Ace of Pace
Dale Steyn
All-format Force
Hashim Amla
Captain Coolest
Mahendra Singh Dhoni
Kane Is Able
Kane Williamson
Maverick
Steve Smith
Photographic Inserts
Acknowledgements
Copyright Acknowledgements
About the Author
About the Co-Author
About the Illustrator
Copyright
INTRODUCTION
The first I heard of Garfield Sobers was in my home in the early 1970s.
Barely ten, I had begun to show some aptitude in both bowling and batting,
which kind of impressed my father. ‘We have a Sobers in the house,’ he once
declared jokingly to his friends who were visiting.
I hadn’t seen Sobers play when the West Indies toured India in 1966-67,
so for the first few years of my cricketing journey, his stupendous all-round
skills were known to me only through hearsay. A great deal of it through my
father, who was an unabashed fan.
Dad was a horse lover and when he spoke of Sobers, the word used often
was ‘pedigree’. He would show me photographs of the great West Indian,
highlighting his sinewy physique, great sense of balance, batting or bowling,
and the way he could draw so much power in whatever he did by making
comparisons with pedigreed horses.
As my cricketing ambitions and education grew, I made it a point to learn
more about Sobers. What I read – and subsequently saw on videos too –
revealed an exceptional, multi-dimensional player who not only won matches
on his own, but did so incomparably.
Videos and films give a more vivid expression to sporting action than still
photographs, and Sobers’s magnificent prowess came through tellingly. Tall
and athletic, he batted with panache and timing that separates the great
batsmen from the very good. He could bowl genuinely fast, fast-medium with
late swing either way, or switch to orthodox left-arm spin when needed.
Super quick on his feet, Sobers could field in any position, and a strong
left arm meant he could throw hard over long distances. After he became
captain, he preferred to stand close-in to be more involved in the game, and
his lightning reflexes and keen ball sense helped him take sensational
catches.
Though most of the matches Sobers played go far in establishing his
batting genius, two are particularly memorable. One was when he played for
Nottinghamshire against Glamorgan at Swansea in his debut season in county
cricket in 1968, and the other was in 1972 on a fiery Perth pitch as the Rest
of the World took on Australia. I have watched these contests hundreds of
times, as I am sure everyone from my fraternity and those who love and
follow the game have done over the years. In the 1980s, it wasn’t so easy to
get footage, which is now readily available on YouTube etc., but the effort
was worthwhile to understand Sobers’s genius.
The match at Swansea was remarkable for Sobers’s lusty hitting against
Malcolm Nash. After the first three balls had been hit over the fence, high on
adrenaline, he went for broke, hitting the next three for six too – becoming the
first batsman in history to do so in one over.
His 254 against Australia is rightly considered a classic. It is
extraordinary for the quality and range of strokes, which Sobers’s bat spat
out as a machine gun does bullets. A high backlift usually heightens the risk
in batting, but also enhances the beauty of strokes, and Sobers was utterly,
marvellously, delightfully in control in that knock. He made the Australia
attack – Dennis Lillee, Bob Massie, Graeme Watson, Terry Jenner, Kerry
O’Keeffe – seem positively mediocre, especially Lillee, whom he smashed
ruthlessly.
I am hardly the type who gets overawed by anything or anyone, but when I
first met Sobers in the flesh, on the tour to the West Indies in 1983, I could
barely utter a word. I couldn’t take my eyes off him, and barely registered
what he said in his sing-song Barbadian accent. The splendid athlete I had
seen on videos was now a man approaching middle age, with a hobbling gait
that spoke of years of wear and tear on his knees from playing cricket
relentlessly all over the world. Yet, he was still very much a superstar,
though he wore his fame lightly.
When I found my voice, Sobers was helpful, giving me important tips on
batting – I had by then got a promotion up the order – and spin bowling when
I asked him how to improve. The abiding lesson: don’t underestimate
yourself, no matter the reputation of the opponent.
In January 1985, batting against Baroda at Bombay, I hit left-arm spinner
Tilak Raj for six sixes in an over, which brought me level with Sobers in this
rare record. The heady feeling remained with me till I reached home, where
my father took me aside briefly, away from all the congratulations and
visitors.
‘Fantastic, son, but remember, there can never be another Gary Sobers.’
I had taken after my old man in being blunt, and our views often clashed.
But in this we were in complete agreement.
PLAY HARD, PLAY FAIR
Ian Chappell
My first cricket hero was Gundappa Viswanath, but Ian Chappell is the one
who I grew up idolizing after being initiated into the sport.
There was no TV coverage of overseas cricket in the early 1970s. Radio
was the only real-time link to cricket action happening outside of India. I
would be glued to Radio Australia whenever matches were played in that
country, and this was my introduction to Chappell.
There was a buzz around him when he was playing. His name would crop
up in the commentary more frequently than any other player’s, even when he
wasn’t batting. The 1974-75 Ashes series tipped everything in Chappell’s
favour where I was concerned. His dashing approach as a batsman and hard
aggression as captain made a huge impact on me.
From an early age, I found the so-called niceties of the game somewhat
hypocritical. If you don’t take the field to win, why play at all? Chappell was
the kind of player I wanted to be. He was a polarizing figure in his heyday.
He played really hard, but also played fair, as I got to understand, which
seemed the best way to play.
I would read about how he would be in eyeball-to-eyeball confrontation
with opponents on the field, then share a beer with the same person
immediately after the game. This was ‘spirit of cricket’ for me, and made
Chappell even more endearing.
He was obviously a fantastic captain, not losing a single series. He had
the ability to get the best out of his players, and under him, Australia became
world-beaters in the 1970s. It’s not often that players are revered by
teammates long after their playing days are over, but Chappell still
commands the loyalty of those who played under him. This says something
about his character and personal charisma.
I got to know Chappell on the several tours we made of Australia from the
1980s, and used these opportunities to pick his brain, get insights into why he
was so successful as a captain. Essentially, as I understood, this was because
he was always looking to take a match forward, not waiting for things to
happen.
I got to know him better when we became fellow commentators for Mark
Mascarenhas’s WorldTel. Like me, Mark too admired Chappell hugely, and
there were several evenings we spent discussing cricket’s past, present and
future.
He had the reputation of being abrasive, but that was far from the real
Chappell as I discovered working with him. True, he could be as blunt as a
shovel, irrespective of the reputation of the other party. But not pointlessly;
only if he believed there was an absence of reason or misuse of position by
the other.
I love his droll sense of humour too. It takes a while to get used to it
because he is not the boisterous, guffawing kind. He has biting wit, and, with
age, this has become even sharper.
When Mark was around, evenings used to be great fun because they both
were masters at leg-pulling, though in contrasting style. Mark was large and
loud, with a Yankee’s penchant for drama and over-the-top debates. Chappell
would be surgeon-like, using his words like a scalpel to make his point.
Most of the time, he was an original in such matters, but on one issue I can
claim he was my follower. I remember a match in Colombo which WorldTel
was broadcasting. It rained and rained that day, ruining any prospect of play.
Mark, who was in the box with us, turned to me and said, ‘Looks a total
washout; hard luck guys,’ implying that there was to be no payment. My
response to him was, ‘Once the tie is worn and we are at the ground, the
metre’s running, Mark.’ Chappell loved this so much that it became his
standard dig at Mark whenever play looked doubtful.
Chappell has an elephant’s memory. He remembers everything about
everybody he has met, and particularly those he’s played with or against.
Over the past few decades, over several conversations, I’ve discovered his
fascination for two players: Doug Walters and Erapalli Prasanna.
Walters he holds in high esteem for his skills and match-winning abilities;
so much so that Chappell was willing to look the other way at some of
Dougie’s indiscretions. Prasanna he admired for his skill and mastery over
flight, the ability to deceive the best batsmen in the air.
If you press the play button on these two players, Chappell will spend at
least a couple of hours on each.
He is a brilliant, incisive commentator because he’s proactive, and can
read and analyse proceedings swiftly, more often than not ahead of everyone
else. But that’s just one part of why he is so admired among fans and the
cricketing fraternity. The other is his candour. He says it as he sees it, without
beating around the bush.
He may be wrong at times (though that hasn’t happened often), and never
hesitates to correct himself. His passion and love for cricket overrode all
other affiliations and considerations. When Greg Chappell asked Trevor
Chappell to bowl underarm against New Zealand, Ian Chappell was the
biggest critic of his brothers, especially Greg who was then captain.
I’ve always enjoyed Chappell’s company. There are no false starts with
him. What you see is what you get. He is an excellent storyteller who can
have you in splits with his anecdotes and impersonations. Whenever we
toured Australia, my wife, Ritu, and I would look forward to an evening or
two with Chappell. He always came armed with some bottles of fine wine
and new stories.
Outside of cricket, what you also get is a man who values loyalty and
friendship. He came to Bangalore for Mark Mascarenhas’s funeral. He
needn’t have. But then he wouldn’t be Ian Chappell.
BORN TO LEAD
Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi
Mansur Ali Khan ‘Tiger’ Pataudi was the biggest cricket star in India in the
1960s and 1970s when I was growing up. Boys would cut out his pictures
from newspapers and magazines for their scrapbooks, and budding cricketers
would wear their peak cap or floppy hat at a sharp angle like Pataudi did,
without quite understanding why he wore it like that.
I heard a lot about Pataudi once I got into cricket as a schoolboy. He was
the toast of the country, even when he had lost the captaincy in 1970-71
through a casting vote by then chairman of selectors Vijay Merchant. It was
not just royal lineage which made him headline-worthy; he played with style
and aplomb and abundant charisma ever since his debut in 1961-62. Because
he was my all-time favourite Gundappa Viswanath’s first captain and mentor,
I felt greater affinity, loyalty and respect for him.
When the West Indies toured India in 1974, the two most important
players for me were Viswanath and Pataudi. In different ways, they made the
series memorable. Viswanath was in perfect form, and Pataudi, having
regained the captaincy, inspired a come-from-behind revival, which saw
India level the series 2–2 after being 0–2 down. Though he didn’t do much
with the bat, Pataudi’s influence on that series was enormous. Without his
leadership, it was believed – and rightly so – that India would have got a
hammering.
I watched the fifth and last Test of that series from the North Stand in
Wankhede Stadium. To my dismay, Vishy failed to get a century by just 5 runs
in the first innings, and, to my acute disappointment, Pataudi did not get too
many in either innings and retired from the game. India lost the Test and the
series, but won the respect of the cricket world for the manner of their
fightback.
It wasn’t until this series that I realized the handicap with which Pataudi
had been playing throughout his career. My admiration for him grew by leaps
and bounds, though the full import of what it meant to play with the sight in
one eye virtually nil came much later, after I started playing international
cricket myself. Even with normal eyesight, it takes a lot of practice, toil and
adjustment to judge line and length correctly. How much more difficult must
it have been for Pataudi? When you consider his achievements in that
perspective, one can only marvel at what might have been had fate not
intervened.
Many years later, on one of the tours to England, I was seated at the same
dinner table as former England captain Brian Close. Brian reeled off
anecdotes of playing against Pataudi before he had lost his eye, and was
emphatic that as a youngster, he was among the best in the world until his
unfortunate accident.
I’ve heard a lot of stories about Pataudi – the man and captain – from
those who played with or against him, like Vishy, Bishan Singh Bedi, Sunil
Gavaskar, Anshuman Gaekwad, or those who knew him extremely well, like
Yajurvindra ‘Sunny’ Singh and Ian Chappell. They have different and
fascinating anecdotes and remembrances of the man, all converging finally to
say that Pataudi was unique.
He had natural ball sense and grace, was a fine attacking batsman in his
youth from all accounts and a brilliant fielder. Not just cricket, he excelled at
squash, hockey and snooker too. He was born to play sports. But it was as a
leader that Pataudi is best remembered.
Captains enjoy a lofty position in cricket, more so than in any other sport.
But not all captains, for reasons of ability or personality, have lived up to
this singular honour. On Pataudi, captaincy seemed to be a natural fit. He was
only twenty-one when asked to lead the Indian team in a time of crisis. Nari
Contractor, who was captaining the team, was hit on the head by Charlie
Griffith in the 1962 series against West Indies and was ruled out of the Test.
Pataudi’s youth and inexperience had sceptics wondering how he would
cope, but he showed he was to the manner born.
As captain, he had flair and charisma. Most of those who played with him
for India aver he gave the team self-belief to compete overseas. He was also
an out-of-the-box thinker. The all-spin attack which brought Indian cricket so
many laurels in the 1960s and 1970s was conceived by him. I would even
say he probably invented the forward short-leg position. Above all, he had a
talent for recognizing and nurturing young players: Vishy, Ashok Mankad,
Eknath Solkar and Gaekwad are just a few who benefited from Pataudi’s
mentorship.
I remember receiving an award from him somewhere as a youngster, but I
got to know Pataudi personally much later. We did a lot of broadcast
assignments together, and I gained a lot from his insights and how he read the
game. He had a sharp and probing mind, which, combined with his vast
experience, made him a formidable challenge for a fellow commentator to
keep up with.
I enjoyed his company outside the box too. He was a man of few words,
but whatever he said made so much sense. People thought he was aloof and
snooty, but he was a very chilled-out person once the ice was broken, and a
great storyteller with a wicked sense of humour. He could enliven an evening
like few others I’ve met. Ritu and I struck up a good relationship with
Pataudi and his charming wife, Rinku, and would visit them whenever we
were in the capital. They were always a dazzlingly glamorous couple, but
handled all the attention and fame with elegance and poise.
Though he kept himself out of administration, I thought Pataudi had a lot to
offer Indian cricket, which had grown phenomenally over the decades and
needed expert steering from those who knew and loved the game. When the
Indian Premier League was launched in 2007, Pataudi and I – along with
Gavaskar – were part of the Governing Council, and spent many evenings
together, talking cricket, and often making it a point not to talk cricket, which
was even more engaging because he was a man of such varied interests.
Alas, he left us too soon.
BANTER OFF THE BAT
Farokh Engineer
Farokh ‘Dikro’ Engineer was among the earliest pin-up boys of Indian
cricket. In the 1960s, when cricket wasn’t such a lucrative game and player
endorsements were unheard of, Farokh appeared in the ad for Brylcreem,
which ran in every newspaper and magazine. He couldn’t go unnoticed even
by those who had little interest in cricket.
As a youngster growing into the game, I was fascinated by the neat parting
of his curly hair, and the big smile on his face in the advertisement. It spoke
of confidence and success, and made me want to see my own photo in
newspapers and magazines. In a way, Farokh became an inspiration for me to
do well at cricket.
Whenever Farokh was on the field, batting or keeping wickets, the
excitement among commentators on the radio was unmistakable. It was
contagious. His exploits in the middle were dazzling. To my ten-year-old
self, Farokh seemed a fantastic action hero, hitting fours, scoring at a
scorching pace, taking diving catches and effecting lightning-quick stumpings.
In the last Test of the 1972-73 series at Bombay, Farokh smashed 121. I
didn’t get to watch the match at Brabourne Stadium, but I did follow every
ball of every match that India played through radio commentary.
When I finally saw Farokh play in person, however, it was a sore
disappointment. India and West Indies were involved in a tantalizing series
in 1974-75. The score stood tied at 2–2 when the final Test began in the
newly built Wankhede Stadium. India had never won a series against the
West Indies until then. I had a seat in the North Stand. The excitement among
fans was sky high, as were the expectations. This time the sides looked
evenly matched, but Clive Lloyd put paid to our hopes with a smashing
double century. Two of my heroes, Gundappa Viswanath and Sunil Gavaskar,
lived up to their reputations, but Farokh unfortunately got a pair, leaving me
upset for days.
That was the last time Farokh played for India. The next I saw him was in
England in 1980. I was captaining the Under-20 side. He called our manager,
Chandu Borde, his India teammate of several years, and me over for a meal.
Borde was his senior by a few years; I was his junior by a couple of
generations at least. Yet, within minutes, Farokh had us both rolling on the
floor with his jokes and wisecracks. He could bridge the gap in age and
experience without any self-consciousness. Making friends with people,
especially fellow cricketers, came naturally to him. In the forty years since, I
haven’t met a single cricketer who detests Farokh. Let me tell you, this is
rare in the fraternity!
It was on the 1980 tour itself that I realized what a big name Farokh was
in England. His personality, character and charisma had made him an
international star. Perhaps just a whit behind Mansur Ali Khan ‘Tiger’
Pataudi. Apart from Tests, his fame came from his exploits while playing
limited-overs cricket for Lancashire county along with Clive ‘Supercat’
Lloyd. These two were among the earliest professional cricketers in the
English County Championships. They played together for seven or eight
years, bringing in crowds with their dazzling batting and making Lancashire
the most coveted team in the country.
Farokh left a tremendous impression on the county and its fans. Even
today, if you go around Lancashire and talk about ‘Rookie’, everyone from
ten to eighty knows him. His cricketing exploits are part of the county
folklore. He helped them win two John Player League and four Gillette Cup
titles, a big deal in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Later, he also became
vice president of the county, so his association is deep and at several levels.
His success with Lancs should not obscure how good a cricketer Farokh
was at the highest level. In 1967, in Madras, he racked up 94 runs before
lunch against the West Indies bowling attack made up of Wes Hall, Charlie
Griffith, Lance Gibbs, Gary Sobers and David Holford. Farokh was all guns
blazing that first morning; one can only marvel at his talent and temerity.
Between 1970 and 1972, there were two series – one in England, the
other in Australia, featuring the Rest of the World. Farokh was part of both
these teams. This gives a clear idea of the esteem he was held in by the
cricketing fraternity back then. Whenever I hear criticism about his
wicketkeeping skills, I point this out, and there is silence. Speak to those
who’ve played with him, and you’ll realize how highly they all rate him.
David Lloyd for instance would never cease telling me that Farokh grew in
size every summer, but never dropped a catch. Beyond the joke, there was
undeniable fact.
Farokh and I hit it off from the first time we met. We both went to the
same school (Don Bosco), the same college (R.A. Podar), and of course,
played the same sport. Above all else, we share a similar outlook on life: the
one thing you have to be serious about is not be so serious that you miss out
on the joys of life. With Farokh around, there is always banter and laughter.
He sees the funny side of things, even when the joke’s on him, a quality that
I’ve seen in very few.
When we are together, I make it a point to speak to him in Hindi or
Marathi. His responses are typically Parsi – in tone and accent, and liberally
peppered with words that you are told as a child never to utter! Invariably,
you’ll see him with a plateful of food. He might be eighty-plus – though if
you ask him he’s likely to say just seventy – but he’ll eat you under the table.
All told, Farokh is a terrific character and loved the world over. He’s
comfortable in any surrounding, adjusts and adapts quickly to people, food
and what have you. A great salesman for the game as well as Indian cricket.
NIGHTMARE FOR BATSMEN
Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson
My father would often talk about Wes Hall and Charlie Griffith as the most
fearsome bowling pair he’d seen. But growing up in cricket in the 1970s
there was none deadlier than Lillee–Thomson. I wouldn’t meet either till a
decade or so later, but what made a huge impact on me was their devastating
bowling in the 1974-75 Ashes series, which I followed closely on Radio
Australia every morning before leaving for school.
How these two had the English batting shell-shocked became the subject
of discussion among cricketing friends. Over the next few years, as the
competition at the level I played in intensified, there were several young fast
bowlers who fancied themselves a Dennis Lillee or a Jeff Thomson. I, too,
was one of them, though I bowled left-handed.
Pras was a wily off-spinner with a vast repertoire of variations. The things
he could do with the ball was amazing as I realized when we toured
Australia in 1985 for the World Championship of Cricket. He was the team’s
manager, having retired from cricket six or seven years earlier. The midriff
bore more kilos than in his prime, the back was not as flexible, but when
Pras turned his arm over in the nets, he still got most batsmen out.
The delivery that went with the arm, with extra backspin, was deadly
even then, but the big deception came from flight. What would look like a
full-length delivery would suddenly dip, beating you for length. I am a tall
man, but even I would be foxed by the trajectory and his variations.
Pras is a jovial sort. He kept us in good form, particularly during the
World Championship of Cricket. Not just by his cheer, but also his deep
knowledge of the game.
Bedi was my bowling hero for obvious reasons. He’s probably the best left-
arm spinner ever. At least, I haven’t seen anyone come even close in the past
half-century. The languid approach and classical action was poetry. Like
Pras, he was a master of flight, though being quite a bit taller, he didn’t have
to toss the ball as much in the air.
But Bedi had the ability to make the ball ‘hang in the air’ and wrong-foot
batsmen. He also had a deadly arm ball that nipped many promising innings
in the bud as the batsman failed to read the change in line and pace. His
experiences in county cricket helped him a lot, especially in understanding
the mindset of batsmen. This was my gain from playing for Glamorgan too,
though I was hardly in the same league as him.
Bedi is a flamboyant, colourful character, hugely popular wherever he
goes, and has the media eating out of his hand. He has a terrific sense of
humour, with the ability to take a joke, which one sees in very few people.
We’ve had our fair share of disagreements on cricketing matters, but nothing
that couldn’t be resolved over a glass of beer in the evening. I enjoyed his
time as manager of the team in the early 1990s. In fact, he was instrumental in
my playing as opener in England in 1990, one of my best tours.
There was no bigger match-winner than Chandra on his day. When on song,
he could run through even the best batting line-ups. He was not just
unorthodox, but unique. He turned a handicap – his polio-affected right hand
– into an asset, leaving batsmen at sixes and sevens with his unusual action
and the pace at which he bowled.
Syed Kirmani, technically the best I’ve seen behind the stumps, often told
me that Chandra was the most difficult bowler to keep wickets to because of
his arm speed, and especially when he bowled the googly, which would get
extra bounce.
Chandra had retired from cricket by the time I joined the team, so I never
got the opportunity to play with or against him. But I did meet him several
times over the course of my nineteen-year career, as he was always at the
stadium in Bangalore to watch matches. We struck up a good equation. He
was a quiet, reticent man, but would come up with sharp analyses when you
wanted.
Among the four, I got to know Venky’s cricket skills, knowledge and
personality first-hand because we shared the same dressing room on a
difficult tour of the West Indies in 1983. He was the ultimate trier and a real
fighter. He was thirty-eight then, but bowled beautifully against the great
West Indies batting line-up of the time. Statistics do not reflect how well
Venky bowled. He didn’t have much luck with the numbers as our fielders
came under pressure and quite a few catches of his bowling were put down.
Kirmani missed a few off him, which got Venky all het up and he let the
keeper have an earful. Then Venky dropped Gus Logie in the slips off my
bowling, which prompted Kiri to tell Venky in an icy manner, ‘It happens.’
This didn’t please Venky at all, who kept hissing under his breath.
He always loved a challenge, no matter the opponent. In the Barbados
Test in 1983, Kapil asked me to open the bowling with him. Venky, who
always fancied himself against left-handers, was itching to get at Lloyd. He
asked Kapil through clenched teeth, ‘Did I tell you I didn’t want to bowl?’
Kapil tossed him the ball soon after, and Venky dismissed Lloyd in three
balls.
Had Pras not been around at the same time, Venky would have surely
played more Tests. But what is not highlighted is his overall contribution to
Indian cricket. He’s been, at various stages, leading spinner, captain,
manager, selector, and, for a long while, arguably the game’s best umpire –
making for a formidable body of work.
The 1970s in Indian cricket belonged to Sunil Gavaskar and Gundappa
Viswanath, but also to this marvellous spin quartet. Batsmen tend to get more
attention and glory in the game – particularly in India – but if one looks at
performances that won matches in that era, the scales tilt towards these
magnificent bowlers.
LEARNING IN THE BOX
Richie Benaud, Greg Chappell, Barry Richards, Tony Greig and
Nasser Hussain
Richie Benaud was one of Australia’s best players in the late 1950s and
early 1960s, and among the finest captains. Post-retirement, he was easily the
best-known TV commentator in the game.
I must confess to being somewhat overawed by him in my playing days.
We met a few times when he was on duty in Australia for Channel 9, or the
BBC in England when I was playing county cricket, but the conversations
were brief largely because I was tongue-tied. Even then – not knowing that I
would end up in the same vocation as Richie – I was impressed by the way
he carried himself, the thoroughly professional approach he had to his job.
Not a hair was out of place, not a single crease on his shirt, and the
pocket square in his jacket would be in perfect position when Richie faced
the camera. He was always immaculately dressed. This was not so much out
of vanity, as some thought, but from an acute understanding of the nature of
the medium.
I learnt a great deal from him on how to be presentable on TV at all times.
It tied into his credo that if you want to be a good pro, you better do the best
job you can, starting with being a friend, not an enemy, of the camera, and
through that to the audience you were reaching.
Television can be cruel. Even the slightest hint of shabbiness in one’s
attire, or a brief lapse in attention can be a major let-down. Benaud simply
cut down the margin of error to virtually zero, becoming the best frontman for
cricket shows and commentary in his time.
The other thing I learnt from him – though I must admit it was most
difficult to emulate – was how to keep viewers engaged without bombarding
them with excessive narrative. Richie understood better than most that TV is
a visual medium. A great deal of the action doesn’t need explaining. If
anything, doing so diminishes the impact of the visual.
In the years that I got to know him personally, I realized he was a man of
few words even when off air. But every word Richie uttered was of quality
and significance. Sometimes his monosyllabic responses carried the gravitas
of a full lecture!
His contribution to the game as broadcaster is formidable. His reading of
the game, understanding which nuances to highlight, knowledge of players
and their special skills was superb. His homework was always perfect.
Richie was instrumental in paving the path for others to follow. He had a
shrewd cricketing brain and his advice was always worth its weight in gold.
Greg Chappell was splendid with the bat. Tall and upright, with exceptional
stroke play, he dominated bowlers all over the world in the 1970s. India was
the only country he didn’t play in (among ICC full members in his time), and I
don’t subscribe to the view that he would have struggled on our slower
pitches. He scored a glut of runs in Pakistan where pitches are similar, and
also in the West Indies where tracks can be spongy, unlike the even pace and
bounce in Australia. His runs in England and New Zealand show not just
how good Greg was against both swing and seam, but also how complete he
was as a batsman.
Like all great batsmen, he had more time and stroke options at his
command, even against the best bowlers. His batting was aristocratic,
especially his ondrive, the full follow-through of the bat describing a
beautiful arc. Natural ball sense made him a clever bowler, and he was
perhaps the best all-round fielder of his time.
In the years during which I did commentary with Greg, I found him to be
not only knowledgeable, but also ahead of the game. He was forward-
thinking about where batting skills and technique were headed, what bowlers
would have to do against batting improvisations in limited-overs cricket, the
kind of temperament that optimized talent, etc. Often, while doing
commentary somewhere, I would recall what Greg had said about some
aspect of batting or bowling I was observing then maybe ten or twelve
months earlier!
I always enjoyed picking his brain because he was so clear in his
thoughts. Of course, asking his younger brother, Trevor, to bowl the underarm
delivery in the final of the triangular ODI series against New Zealand in
1980-81 wasn’t a great example of how to play the game, and this aberration
has been like an albatross around his neck.
Greg is very different from his brother Ian Chappell. The latter is
forthright at all times, whereas Greg tends to be reticent when he doesn’t
know the people around him. That said, he can be just as explosive as his
brother when it comes to defending a point of view.
I was delighted when he became India’s coach. I don’t know exactly how
things soured between him and Sourav Ganguly, but it is unfortunate that
Greg’s tenure became controversial and was brief, for he had all the
credentials to make a big impact. What looked a win-win situation ended up
sadly becoming a loss for both parties.
Having watched footage of Barry Richards playing against the best assembly
of fast bowlers the world has seen during the World Series Cricket, one
could only marvel at how late he played even the quickest deliveries – with
great results. And this towards the fag end of his career!
Barry could play only four Test matches before the curse of apartheid
ended his Test career. Yet, in that brief period, he made 508 runs, which is
fabulous. If this is not enough to establish him as the best batsman in the
world in the early 1970s, his record in first-class cricket should push the
verdict in that direction.
Playing in a match for South Australia against Western Australia in 1970-
71, Barry got 325 runs in a day against the likes of Dennis Lillee, Graham
McKenzie and Tony Lock. That must have been some knock!
One of the first books I read as a novice cricketer was Barry Richards on
Cricket: Attack to Win. This and Gary Sobers’s Cricket Advance went some
way in shaping my fledgling career.
I met Barry when we were playing in Australia in 1991-92. He was then
CEO of Queensland Cricket. We hit it off instantly, and when we both joined
Mark Mascarenhas’s broadcast team, the rapport became even better. When I
began doing commentary alongside him, I understood what had made him
such a great batsman. His grasp of batting technique, working out the angles
which bowlers use on different pitches, among other nuances of the game,
was an eye-opener for a fledgling commentator.
Much like Greg Chappell, Barry is a visionary in the art of batsmanship,
but not restricted to just that. There is little he does not know about any
aspect of the game: on the field, and off it, into administration, marketing, et
al. I believe South African cricket could make far more use of his
experience, knowledge and stature.
He’s a fairly reserved man, and some serious family setbacks in the past
decade have sadly made him withdraw from the game to a large extent. But
Barry remains a steadfast friend, always ready with advice when I ask for it.
Nobody knew how to sell the game to audiences – anywhere in the world –
better than Tony Greig. If cricket is where it is today, with scores of players
making a decent livelihood even at the domestic level (at the international
level, it’s a different ball game!), Tony’s role in this can’t be undermined.
He was not only among the first players to join Kerry Packer, but also
went about selling the concept of World Series Cricket to cricketers around
the world. Some critics, including from within the fraternity, have called him
a huckster, but I can’t find even a few who didn’t jump on to the bandwagon
of commercialized cricket in the post-Kerry Packer era, in which Tony was a
central figure. In that sense, he was ahead of his time, and looked at
optimizing opportunities in and for cricket everywhere.
He was a bloody good cricketer too – let’s not overlook that. A fine all-
rounder and smart captain, he led England to a 3–1 win over India in 1976
for which he wasn’t given enough credit. India was a strong team at the time
with Sunil Gavaskar and Gundappa Viswanath to shore up the batting, and a
galaxy of spinners to choose from.
Tony was extremely popular in India. He had a knack for understanding
the sentiments and ethos of fans in different countries, and would tailor his
commentary accordingly, as he did for Sri Lanka. We would discuss this
often when the WorldTel commentary team met. In fact, this attribute of
Tony’s is something Mark Mascarenhas would highlight to me when I started
out in the media. He became an iconic figure in Sri Lanka for the support he
lent their cricket and its players.
From Tony, I learnt the importance of energy and voice modulation to
make commentary enjoyable. Too often, former players who get into the
media business live in a cocooned past. Tony was always looking to the
future and made extra effort to reach out to fans proactively – and with great
success.
Nasser Hussain is a fellow player and commentator with whom I’ve enjoyed
sharing the mic. We’ve had our powwows – some on air too – but this has
never affected the mutual respect we have for each other.
A few years my junior, Nasser had a distinguished career. There were
many with better batting ability, but few were as doughty or committed. When
the situation got tough, Nasser was at his best. Where he really excelled
though was as captain. England had got into a pusillanimous phase in the
mid-1990s and needed a capable leader with courage of conviction to pull
them out of the rut. Nasser did this with strong control over players, self-
belief, and imagination in exploiting his resources to the hilt.
As captain, Nasser was constantly seeking solutions and answers to
prickly situations, which is what also makes him such a fine commentator. He
is quick to spot trends in the passage of play, and his analyses are crisp,
cogent and convincing. He reads the game superbly and has the words at his
command to make a point without dithering.
What I like about Nasser is that while he does not mince words, he is
never over the top. He has a lot of empathy for players and acknowledges
that the vicissitudes of fortune can have a big impact in sport. This is a fine
quality to possess – especially when, at times, cricket commentary feels like
a circus show. Having played at the highest level for a number of years,
Nasser sees cricket for the gloriously uncertain sport that it is.
FRIENDS AND RIVALS
CAPTAIN OF CAPTAINS
Clive Lloyd
Clive Lloyd’s West Indies team of the 1970s and 1980s was a juggernaut,
brooking no obstacle. India faced the brunt of their power in 1983-84,
playing eleven Tests against them. Hand on heart, I can tell you that facing
Lloyd and his band was an intimidating, unnerving experience. That Kapil
Dev, Syed Kirmani and I were the only Indians who played all these matches
tells you that the ‘injured, unwell and out of form’ list was long!
West Indies under Lloyd were fearsome, but also driven to excellence.
Seven or eight members of that side, including the captain himself, would
easily figure among the greatest players of all time. The teams Lloyd – and
later, Vivian Richards – led dominated in all conditions and against all
countries in batting, bowling and fielding. For almost fifteen years, they
didn’t lose a Test series anywhere, which is a fantastic record.
Lloyd’s been accused of sullying cricket by relying on an all-pace attack.
I heard this most when playing county cricket for Glamorgan, and there isn’t
anything more ridiculous. This was just sour grapes. England were royally
hammered by West Indies under Lloyd for over a decade, and that obviously
didn’t go down well with many of their players, critics and aficionados. If I
had the resources Lloyd had, I would have done the same thing. Any captain
would.
The aim in cricket must be to win matches – within the rules of the game,
of course – not live up to some putative ideal. If fast bowlers are good
enough to win matches everywhere, the argument for including spinners
becomes redundant. And vice-versa. In India, we’ve gone long years with
three, occasionally even four, spinners because there was not enough bite in
our pace bowling.
The theory of having a balanced attack is not unmerited, more so when
you consider how the pitch and weather conditions can influence play. But
what prevails over all other factors is what combination can help win the
match. Rather than being criticized, Lloyd deserves credit for identifying a
winning formula once he had assessed the talent he had at his disposal.
Having four or six fast bowlers is not as important as having the right
quality of talent to win matches. In Andy Roberts, Michael Holding, Malcolm
Marshall, Wayne Daniel, Colin Croft, Sylvester Clarke, Bernard Julien and
Vanburn Holder, Lloyd found a rich supply of wicket-taking fast bowlers
who could be deployed in all countries and conditions. The one thing which
did help the West Indies, of course, was that the restriction on the number of
bouncers per over came much later.
Having an abundance of talented players in itself does not make a
champion side though, and this is where Lloyd’s personality made the
difference. He was a proud West Indian, had played enough county cricket to
understand the value of professionalism, and he was a very good ‘people’s
person’.
Spotting talented players, encouraging them, and binding them together as
a team are the challenges confronting a captain. Oftentimes, this can be more
important than strategy and tactical skills. Lloyd’s strength was his ability to
command respect from his players. He was like a father figure to them and
moulded them into the formidable side they became – for which he deserves
the highest praise. I watched from close quarters how he handled his players,
knowing when to put an arm around someone who is struggling, what signals
to send to someone who was being difficult that day. As a youngster on the
international circuit in 1983-84, I imbibed some of his man-management
skills which were of value to me later.
I have chosen to highlight Lloyd’s captaincy because that is his enduring
legacy. But even as a batsman, he was a champion. I saw him playing in
person for the first time during the sixth Test at Wankhede Stadium in 1974-
75. He smashed 242 not out, which not only pulverized the Indian bowling,
but also gave me, a budding twelve-year-old cricketer, some sleepless
nights.
Growing up, I read a lot about Lloyd’s exploits: his sizzling stroke play
and brilliant fielding, which earned him the admiration of teammates and
opponents alike. One person who filled me in a lot about Lloyd – as a player
and person – was Farokh Engineer, his Lancashire teammate of many years. I
always loved to hear ‘Rookie’ Engineer talk about county cricket. He had
some sumptuous stories of star players on the county circuit in which Lloyd
featured quite frequently, so that by the time I met the West Indian legend, it
felt as though I had known him for a long while.
Not that this stopped Lloyd from being ruthless on the field even with an
admiring youngster. Cricket was serious business for him. By the time we
met, he was in the sunset of a glorious career, yet a most dangerous
adversary. On his day, even into his late thirties, he could wield the bat like a
lumberjack. I haven’t seen anybody hit the ball with as much power as Lloyd.
In his younger days, I was told, the muscle in his strokes was even greater,
which is frightening. Some of this is evident if you watch his brilliant 102 in
the final of the 1975 World Cup, when he left even the Aussie fielders rooted
to their spots with his shots.
He was not above some poker-faced gamesmanship on the field either.
Often he would not give his decision to bat or field immediately after the
toss. In those days, there was no mandatory interview post the toss. Lloyd
would say he had to consult his team, go back to his dressing room, leaving
the opposition guessing and sweating, and return soon after to say, more often
than not, ‘We’ll field first.’ It was just a tactic to put the other team under
pressure.
Though he pursued success unrelentingly, Lloyd wasn’t dour, grim and
colourless. In fact, he had a great sense of humour with punchlines that would
leave you rolling on the floor.
Lloyd’s record as player is remarkable and as captain, extraordinary.
Everybody believed in the stereotype of players from the Caribbean being
happy-go-lucky. Clive Lloyd transformed them into ambitious, disciplined,
hardworking world champions, the likes of which have not been seen before
or since.
WRISTS OF STEEL
Gundappa Viswanath
Mohinder ‘Jimmy’ Amarnath was the gutsiest player I’ve played with or
against. I can’t think of another who took so many hard knocks – physically
and otherwise – in a long career, but always came back with resolve and
intent doubled. You could keep Jimmy out, but not down.
His bravado was understated. When we were touring the West Indies in
1983, he was hit on the mouth by Malcolm Marshall in one of the Tests. This
would be a terrifying experience for most batsmen, even those sitting in the
dressing room. Jimmy simply shrugged it off as one of those things that
happen in sport. He was taken off on a stretcher, came back in an hour or so
after receiving medical attention in the dressing room, and hooked the first
ball he played for six! I don’t think Clive Lloyd’s mean machine, which had
decimated rival teams, had seen any other batsman play with such force of
character against their dreaded pace attack.
Jimmy’s batting in the 1982-83 season was among the best overseas
performances I’ve witnessed. He scored 500-plus Test runs in Pakistan and
followed this up with 500-plus runs in the series in the West Indies. This,
against the likes of Imran Khan, Sarfraz Nawaz, Malcolm Marshall, Andy
Roberts and Michael Holding, among others. In that period, he was the
world’s best batsman against pace bowling. His ability to adjust from the
swing and reverse swing of Imran and Co. in Pakistan to the hard pitches and
predominantly seam and short-pitched bowling of the West Indies was
remarkable and showed what an accomplished batsman Jimmy was and what
India had missed by repeatedly picking and dropping him since his debut in
1969.
In a sense, we were kindred spirits, having started our careers as
tailenders and playing in every position from number ten upwards, before
establishing ourselves as top-order batsmen. The major point of difference
between us, of course, was that Jimmy was a medium-pacer while I was a
spinner.
Once he took up batting seriously, Jimmy bowled less and less, but was
capable of surprising batsmen with his ability to coax swing and seam
movement in his medium pace. In the 1983 World Cup, he shone as much
with ball as bat, and won Man of the Match awards in the semi-final against
England as well as the final against West Indies. Since he bowled so
infrequently in the second half of his career, many batsmen did not know
enough about Jimmy’s skill with the ball and took him lightly, only to pay the
price. In limited-overs cricket especially, he brought great value to the
captain and the team by slipping in 5-6 overs of controlled bowling.
But it was as batsman that Jimmy made a big impact. This did not happen
without huge commitment on his part. He spent hours and hours in the nets
over months and years, working on his batting technique and skills to make
the cut as a specialist. Yet, he struggled to keep his place in the national team
as one or two failures would see him dropped from the side.
Although he was a giant in domestic cricket, scoring prolifically in almost
every season and with a particular fondness for making runs against Bombay,
his international career moved in fits and starts. He made his debut in 1969
against Australia, was dropped after one match, and didn’t play a Test again
till 1976. By this time, he had made the transition from being a bowling all-
rounder to a specialist batsman who could also bowl and had a fruitful three
years. But from 1979 to 1982-83, when he was included for the tour to
Pakistan, he spent time in the wilderness. He had had his share of injuries,
which also sullied his reputation, unfortunately.
Jimmy should certainly have played for India in 1981 and 1982, because
he was in such excellent form in domestic cricket. Disappointing as these
long years being out of favour must have been, he never lost heart. He was
quite extraordinary in the way he worked on improving his batting, changing
his stance, grip and approach to get better.
The helmet, newly introduced at the time, worked to Jimmy’s advantage
because he found the hook shot irresistible. But he also had a compact and
tight defensive technique, which fast bowlers found difficult to penetrate. His
batting skills weren’t restricted to playing fast bowlers though. He was
excellent against spin, using his feet splendidly. In the Tied Test against
Australia in 1986, he and Gavaskar set the tone for our run chase by taking
the attack to Greg Matthews and Ray Bright.
Jimmy and I got along extremely well, often sharing a room when on tour.
He was always chilled out, calm and unruffled, loved banter and singing
Hindi film songs of which I knew little, but went along anyway. He was also
very disciplined. In the days when fitness was not given the importance it is
today, Jimmy set a benchmark for us.
More than anything else, I drew inspiration from his grit and gumption in
how to handle difficult situations in the middle and off the field.
RUN MACHINE
Zaheer Abbas
Sunil Gavaskar was the best opening batsman I have seen bar none. I was his
opening partner in quite a few Tests in the mid-1980s and, from 22 yards
away, what you got was a sublime tutorial in batsmanship. Stance, grip,
footwork, balance and stroke selection, judging singles and twos, running
between wickets – he was perfection personified. He handled extreme pace
with masterly technique and composure, showing no discomfort, providing
relief and education to the batsman at the opposite end as well as those in the
dressing room. Watching him bat, one got a clear idea of how the pitch was
behaving, which bowler was in good form, who wasn’t, and could structure
their innings accordingly. It was both awe-inspiring and a delight to bat
alongside him.
Interestingly, in the nets, Sunny could be a terrible batsman, often the
worst amongst us. Journalists watching us at nets would write him off based
on this, and be shocked when he came up with a brilliant knock in the match.
He was not playing the fool during nets though. He used to draw up an
agenda to work on some aspect of his batting, and once he was done, he
would enjoy himself for the remaining time.
When I made my international debut, Sunny was the biggest star in Indian
cricket. There was an unmistakable aura around him, off and on the field, and
particularly in the dressing room. The way he built his ‘mood’ up for an
innings or a match, and prepared himself – handling his kit, spending time by
himself, reading a book or going through a set of rituals before he took the
field – provided a big spike to my learning curve.
In so many ways, Sunny was my mentor. I was flown to New Zealand as
an eighteen-year-old with meagre experience in domestic cricket. He had
obviously not seen much of me, but the opinion of captains, especially if you
are of Sunny Gavaskar’s stature, are sought before any selection decision is
made. The fact that he had agreed to my inclusion was a big deal for me.
In my first couple of years in international cricket, I watched Sunny
intently, in the nets and in the middle, and started to take my own batting more
seriously. I can’t claim to have acquired even a fraction of the finesse and
mastery of his batting, but I did become adept at was how to leave
deliveries! This comes from an understanding of where your off stump is, and
Sunny’s judgement in this was without parallel. It proved a boon for me too
as my batting career progressed, especially when opening the innings.
Sunny was also instrumental in my becoming an opener. The first time,
ironically, was as his replacement. Fielding at silly point against England at
the Oval in 1982, he was hit on the leg by a ferocious shot from Ian Botham
and took no further part in the match. I had progressed from the number ten
batting position in my first Test to number eight in this one and, in Sunny’s
absence, was asked to open the innings. It was tough, but I got 66. Though, I
was back in the lower order immediately after, when he returned.
The following season, when we were being ravaged by Imran Khan and
Sarfraz Nawaz in the six-Test series in Pakistan, Sunny came to me on the
eve of the last Test at Karachi. His regular partners hadn’t clicked. He said
he wanted me to open with him. Although the webbing of my right palm was
still healing from an earlier injury, sensing a challenge, possibly a long-term
opportunity, and not the least for the privilege of batting along with him, I
said yes.
Unfortunately, Sunny fell cheaply in the first innings. I went on to bat eight
hours for 128, my maiden Test century. This was to be transformational in my
career. It helped establish my credentials for a place in the top order. I
played more regularly as opener after Sunny retired in 1987, but he was the
biggest influence in my promotion as he had more faith in me than I had in
myself!
As a batsman, Sunny was a master technician with a watertight defence.
He could play all the strokes in the coaching manual with equal authority and
poise. These virtues are usually good enough ensure a highly successful
career for a batsman. What Sunny also had was a hard, combative mindset
that refused to allow bowlers and rival teams even a blip of psychological
advantage. This put him in the category of all-time greats.
There was nothing airy-fairy about his batting. If conditions were
difficult, he would become even more particular about his stance, backlift,
and follow-through of the bat to minimize risk. If conditions were good, he
would ensure that the opportunity was not squandered, exploiting it to his
own and the team’s advantage by unsettling bowlers and the field with
classical strokes. Any which way, his immense powers of concentration,
capacity to bat flawlessly for long periods of time and insatiable appetite for
runs came through.
Failures never fazed him because they were rare. What was even rarer
was Sunny giving his wicket away cheaply. If he did get out for a poor score,
he didn’t get flustered. He would bury himself in a book, or listen to music.
He didn’t spend time brooding over it beyond what was necessary, knowing
that he could sort out the problem in his head or in the nets. Even in the
middle, when beaten, most batsmen rehearse the same stroke between
deliveries to get it right the next time. Sunny didn’t spend time on what had
happened; instead, he settled down quickly to match wits with the bowler’s
next delivery. He had the amazing ability to switch off any negative thoughts
or show weak body language that would give the bowler even a tiny
advantage.
Added to all these attributes was physical courage. Fast bowling is a
threat at all times, more so when you are opening the innings against the West
Indies in the 1970s and 1980s. The mere thought of facing Andy Roberts,
Michael Holding, Joel Garner and Malcolm Marshall would give batsmen
nightmares and worse. (I know of a few whose bowel movements would go
haywire, or who would sustain mysterious injuries on the eve of a match!)
Sunny never flinched. Not against the battery of great West Indies fast
bowlers, not against Imran, Sarfraz, Botham, Bob Willis, Richard Hadlee,
Dennis Lillee, Leonard Pascoe, not any bowler. No other batsman in the
history of the game perhaps has played so many exceptional fast bowlers
with such a high degree of success.
Supreme technical excellence was a big factor in this, but absence of fear,
I believe, was equally important. I remember batting with Sunny at Bourda
(Guyana) in 1983, when a snorter from Macko reared up and crashed into his
forehead (he was not wearing a helmet). Such was the impact of the blow
that the ball rolled back to Macko in his follow-through. I was shaken and so
too was Macko, though he tried to appear casual. But Sunny was genuinely
unfazed even though he must have been in pain. He waved away my concern,
settled into his stance, cover drove the next ball for four, and went on to
make a superb century.
The West Indies fast bowlers, dreaded by batsmen the world over, were
his favourites. He scored a whopping thirteen hundreds against them,
including four in his debut series (Sunny’s series aggregate of 774 runs in
1971 is still a record), and two in his last series against them in 1983-84 in
India. The last two were vastly contrasting in approach. The century at Delhi
in the second Test was stunningly aggressive. Sunny took on Macko, Roberts
and Holding frontally, hooking, cutting and driving with a relish that caught
fans, critics and certainly the opponents by surprise. This underscored how
he had lived most of his career, in self-denial, because of the onus thrust on
him to hold the batting together.
The double century at Madras took him past Don Bradman to his thirtieth
century. This was a masterclass of a different kind. Sunny batted at number
four in this match, but came in when the score was 0–2. It took him about a
dozen deliveries to assess the pitch, and thereafter, he lorded over the
proceedings, going on to score 236. I had a long partnership with him in this
match, and his resolve to make a big score was apparent. We spoke very
little while we were batting. He was never a great conversationalist in the
middle except to caution his partner about how the pitch was playing, the
tricks of a certain bowler or something new in the field placing.
He motivated himself by patting a spot on the pitch, no more. He put his
head down for his first 20-odd runs and then became machine-like as he
jogged past the milestones of 50, 100, 150 and 200 without blemish or sweat.
Considering he had started the series with a 0 and 7 in the first Test, he
finished on a spectacular high.
Sunny’s belief in his own ability was of Himalayan proportions. Extreme
professionalism and single-mindedness in achieving what he wanted kept
him on top even in tough situations. Once he got his eye in, you could relax
and put your feet up in the dressing room, knowing that he wouldn’t return in
a hurry. Even in domestic cricket, he was uncompromising in his quest for
runs or supremacy against bowlers.
As is well known, he once batted left-handed against Karnataka in the
Ranji Trophy semi-final in 1982. Some people thought he was taunting the
rivals and gave him flak for it. But what Sunny wanted to do was nullify the
threat from Raghuram Bhat on a turning pitch. He batted for almost two hours
as a left-hander! Likewise, people were mistaken in believing that he didn’t
wear a helmet because of bravado. Actually, he just felt uncomfortable in
one, but ask him today, and he’ll say that he was wrong in taking such a big
risk, even though he did all right!
At his core, Sunny was a fierce competitor and conscious of the fact that
he was the best in the business. I remember him telling Geoffrey Boycott,
who had gone past Gary Sobers’s record run aggregate in 1981-82, ‘Enjoy it
for a year!’ True to his word, Sunny sailed past Boycott within a short time.
In the latter half of his career, Sunny was chasing his own records. When he
reached thirty-four centuries and 10,000-plus runs, there was nobody in sight.
As captain, Sunny was shrewd and tough. He knew exactly what his
team’s strengths and weaknesses were. His Test captaincy record is modest
simply because the bowling resources he had weren’t good enough to win
overseas, unlike now. But he led brilliantly in the 1985 World Championship
of Cricket, getting the line-up of the team right by opening with
Krishnamachari Srikkanth and me, Mohammad Azharuddin at number three,
Dilip Vengsarkar at number four, and holding himself and Jimmy Amarnath
back.
His cricketing persona could be intimidating. Playing for Bombay,
Nirlons, and having teammates like Sandeep Patil, Karsan Ghavri and Dilip,
who would lighten the atmosphere with their banter, made things a lot easier
for me and other youngsters who joined these teams. But once he warmed up
to you, Sunny was a very good friend and an excellent mentor.
Sunny and I have been associated with each other in some way or the
other since 1981: in the Indian and Bombay dressing rooms, Sportsfield
Society where we reside, and the commentary box. He’s always had a mind
of his own, and an acute understanding of his station in life. His contribution
to Indian cricket is incalculable. He gave it spine and self-belief, and in
doing so, became an inspiration for generations of batsmen. He still is one.
KAPTAAN KHAN
Imran Khan
Imran Khan is one of the greatest captains and players the game has seen.
Why I hold this view hardly needs qualification. His record speaks for itself,
and, if at all further validation is necessary, it comes from the experiences of
those who played with or against him.
The first time I saw Imran play was on TV, when India toured Pakistan in
1978. He was then making a mark as one of the best all-rounders in cricket
after a rather slow start to his career. His performances in Australia in the
1976 series and in Kerry Packer’s World Series Cricket had helped his
reputation soar. Against India Imran was quick, but without having quite the
same control that would make him so formidable a couple of years later. His
big hitting, especially in the exciting run chase in the third Test at Karachi,
won him more renown in India then.
When Pakistan came to India the next season, I made sure to get a place in
the North Stand at Wankhede Stadium. Theirs was a star-studded team, in
which Imran was the biggest attention grabber – for cricketing reasons and
otherwise. Imran didn’t have a great match though, injuring himself and not
bowling in the second innings. He struggled with his fitness through the
series, which affected his team’s chances. Pakistan lost the Bombay Test and
subsequently the series against a determined Indian side.
But how brilliantly he made up for this disappointment when we toured
Pakistan in 1982-83! By now, I was part of the Indian team and got to
experience Imran’s fantastic skills – with ball and bat – from just 22 yards
away.
In his prime, in the early and mid-1980s, I’d unhesitatingly say he was the
best fast bowler in the world. He had both pace and the ability to swing the
ball lethally late. But for the injury he sustained in the series against us that
prevented him from bowling for almost two years thereafter, he would easily
have picked up 150–160 sticks more.
Imran’s strength was his remarkable control over swing and reverse
swing. The steeply curving late inswingers, or ‘indippers’ as they were
called then, made life hellish for batsmen. We did not have much
understanding of reverse swing then, and Imran had us bamboozled. His
accuracy meant there was no respite. He could vary the length of the delivery
depending on pitches, conditions and countries he was playing in. Even the
best batsmen found it difficult to cope with the late movement that would
send the ball darting in or away at the last second.
In the 1982-83 series, Imran demolished us – though we had a strong and
experienced batting line-up – on pitches that did not really support fast
bowling. Opening the innings in the sixth Test at Karachi in the series, I got to
see Imran exhibit his full repertoire of marvellous skills. I scored my first
Test century in that match, but there wasn’t a single delivery when I was not
under threat when he was bowling. Although Pakistan had already won the
series and Imran was carrying a painful calf, his desire for success was
unrelenting.
Over the next six or seven years, India and Pakistan engaged in several
contests – Tests and ODIs – and Imran easily towered over all players in his
side. This might be only perception, but he also seemed to be at his most
aggressive against India. I realized what a fierce competitor he could be
through a couple of exchanges in the middle.
In 1987, when I was leading the Under-25 team against Pakistan, Imran
arrived late to the stadium for the match. He apologized, saying he was stuck
in traffic. Fair enough, but he wanted to start bowling straight away, which I
wasn’t agreeable to as this was against the rules. Sensing the umpires were
vacillating, I told them to mind their own business and go by the book.
Imran’s message to Wasim Akram and the other bowlers in that game was to
bounce the shit out of me.
Sometime later, when we were playing Pakistan in Sharjah, I suddenly got
stomach cramps while batting and requested for a runner. Imran refused. We
were 100 something for no loss then. I fell in a couple of deliveries. From a
solid start, wickets started tumbling and we went on to lose the game chasing
a modest 240-odd.
Imran had not forgotten what I’d done to him earlier and paid back in
kind. But while he played it real hard, he left the contest on the field. Off it,
he was friendly but reserved, keeping pretty much to himself. Many thought
him to be aloof and snobbish; I think he was reserved, and not one to
socialize readily.
Among the four great all-rounders of that era, Imran was the best batsman,
technically and temperamentally. He could bat at any number and, more
importantly, according to what the situation demanded. His long stint in
county cricket and experience in the World Series Cricket had made him
value professionalism over pointless bravado. Wasim Akram told me about
the countless lectures, some of them very stern, he and other young players
got from Imran if they had thrown their wicket away or bowled poorly even
though Pakistan had won.
Winning the World Cup at the fag end of his career, when he was a quarter
of the bowler he used to be, was nothing short of extraordinary. It was sheer
self-belief that goaded Imran to chase this honour. He led from the front,
batting up the order in the semi-final and final to control the innings.
The pride that he took in playing for Pakistan not only boosted his own
performances, but also inspired several generations of young cricketers in his
country to excel. He was a demanding captain, but also made heroes of
others, his greatest quality as a leader. He was autocratic but also
inspirational, and determined to leave behind a legacy.
I admired his poise and calm demeanour on the field. He never appeared
ruffled, however grave the situation; never gave opponents an inkling that he
was under pressure. His decision-making was swift, and, if it didn’t work, he
moved on, trying the next gambit. He was a man of action, not a brooder.
Also of unwavering resolve. The cancer hospital Imran built in memory
of his mother is testimony to this. It took years to raise funds and see the
project through, but he never let up.
Soon after retiring, he joined politics, making little headway in the first
few years. When I asked Wasim Akram on one of our commentary
assignments whether Imran had made a mistake by jumping into politics, he
replied, ‘If Khan sa’ab has decided on something, he will never give up,
even if he is a hundred years old.’
A decade later, and more than twenty years after entering politics, Imran
Khan became prime minister of Pakistan.
MR PERFECTION
Richard Hadlee
Vivian Richards was simply the best batsman I’ve played against or seen. In
the last half-century at least, no one has dominated the bowling quite like
him. With or without helmet, he was a master blaster in the truest sense of the
term.
Some young sceptics question his greatness, saying he scored just over
8,000 runs and averaged a shade over 50, when quite a number of batsmen
from the modern era have achieved better stats. But this overlooks the fact
that Richards scored over 3,000 runs in the World Series Cricket at an
average of over 60 against bowlers like Dennis Lillee, Len Pascoe, Max
Walker, Imran Khan, Mike Procter and Clive Rice. For the doubters, I’d
recommend they watch the World Series Cricket on some OTT platform.
They’ll be instant converts to Richards greatness.
Stats in any case, are only an index to a cricketer’s greatness, not
necessarily complete validation – unless one is talking of Don Bradman or
Gary Sobers. A player’s true worth is assessed from the number of matches
his personal contribution helped win. In this respect, Richards stands head
and shoulders above any other batsman in the past fifty-odd years.
The number of times he got hundreds in finals – international and
domestic – remains unmatched. He enjoyed the spotlight and the big occasion
brought out the best in him. But while he loved an audience, Richards wasn’t
a show pony, rather a thoroughbred professional, who understood the
expectations reposed in him and played to meet these. His century in the final
of the 1979 World Cup is arguably the best in the history of the tournament
for the manner in which he demolished the English bowling.
He looked to be in an even more murderous mood against us in the 1983
World Cup final, smashing the bowling to all parts of Lord’s. Fortunately, he
miscued a pull stroke off Madan Lal and Kapil Dev took a stunning catch to
dismiss him. Richards would have otherwise run away with the match had he
batted a few overs more. This was the turning point of not just the match, but
of Indian cricket history.
Richards had both substance and style. Complementing his supreme talent
was a swagger that made him the centre of attraction in whatever he did on
the field. He exuded immense self-confidence, the likes of which I’ve never
seen before or since. Growing up on the beaches of Antigua, swimming,
running, playing football and cricket, had made him naturally strong and
physically intimidating. Along with a keen eye and fantastic reflexes, he used
his physical strength to great effect. He would play the ball very late, the
point of contact most often under his eye, so he was always in the right
position and could play the stroke where he wanted, not where the copybook
dictated. That was his brilliance, not a limitation, and explains the huge
success he enjoyed in England and on the turning pitches in India.
He was easily the best hooker and puller I’ve seen, reading length quickly
and getting into the correct position with twinkling footwork to send the ball
to the fence or over. Against slow bowlers, he would use the depth of the
crease to play the cut or pull the ball. An extremely tough competitor, he had
a great desire to succeed at all times and never yielded an inch.
Playing against England, especially, brought out the best in him. Theories
that he would be vulnerable against late swing or spin in bowler-friendly
conditions because he seemed to play across the line were all poppycock.
These were to do with technical orthodoxy, which players from the
Caribbean, many from the subcontinent, and even several Aussies, have
shown to be limiting rather than beneficial.
Richards had the ability to spoil a good game of cricket for the opponents
with his genius. In the first Test against us at Kingston in 1983, he smashed
61 off just 36 balls, hitting five boundaries and four sixes in a whirlwind
knock which helped West Indies win a match that had looked doomed to be a
draw.
Then there was the century he hit at New Delhi in 1987. It was a turning
track, and we had really fancied our chances, but he quashed all such hopes
with a counter-attack that was as brutal as it was brave. It was this ability –
to turn things around dramatically within a short time – that made Richards so
dangerous and special.
His overly aggressive demeanour didn’t mean he was a slam-bang
batsman. He naturally preferred attacking to defence, but he could alter his
approach if the situation demanded. In the Madras Test in 1988, which I
captained as Dilip Vengsarkar was injured, Richards batted for over four
hours in making a half-century. I tried to rile him with some pointed banter,
hoping to get him out and finish the match early, but Richards wouldn’t take
the bait. He just kept chewing gum, and glared back at me and the close-in
fielders who were trying to make him lose his cool. His stony silence and
smouldering eyes seemed to say, ‘Watch it next time, guys, I’m going to get
you.’ When we toured the West Indies a year later, he did.
From the time he scored 829 runs in seven innings against England in
1976, Richards became the game’s biggest drawcard. He brought bums on
seats wherever the West Indies played. Devastating stroke play was his
calling card, but he was also a livewire in the field and a brilliant catcher. In
a side that had so many stars, Richards stood out.
On the field, one didn’t get any favours from him. That’s how it should be
in professional sport at the highest level. We were in the same team for
Glamorgan for two years, and I really looked forward to playing with him.
Unfortunately, he was injured both seasons.
Off the field, he is a terrific guy, loves pranks and didn’t put on any airs
about being a superstar. I can say he’s a good friend of mine. Over the years,
we’ve met several times, shared a lot of old memories and spoken about new
stuff to look forward to. He still looks as fit as he did in his pomp when he
was ‘King’ Richards, proudly wearing the West Indies cap.
POWER AND PANACHE
Gordon Greenidge
When you talk about the West Indies team of the 1980s, the names that come
readily to mind are Clive Lloyd, the battery of pace bowlers and the
redoubtable Viv Richards. Gordon Greenidge is hardly mentioned in the
same breath, which is unfair to the talent he possessed and his immense
contribution to West Indies cricket, especially in making the 1980s side
possibly the greatest in the history of the sport.
Greenidge was a fantastic opening batsman, as aggressive as any that
have come from the great Caribbean lineage. He could hit the ball with brutal
power. His square cut, legendary as it was, was only one among a vast array
of strokes that singed cricket grounds everywhere.
The difference between Greenidge and all the other great West Indian
batsmen is that his technique was orthodox, almost English, if you will. This
was in part because he spent his formative years in England, learnt all his
cricket in a system that put getting behind the line of the ball, et al., as
sacrosanct. But this did not limit Greenidge’s inborn Caribbean flair. In fact,
a strong grounding in technique made him even more formidable.
Because his defence was so sound, and because he could also switch into
attack mode with aplomb, Greenidge could bat in multiple gears, which
compounded the problem for bowlers. He was comfortable on the front foot
and back, against swing, seam, the short stuff, and spin. I always found him a
very difficult batsman to bowl to as he wouldn’t allow me to settle into a
length.
Greenidge’s opening partnership with Desmond Haynes broke records –
and the resolve – of many opponents. Their understanding in the middle was
superb, especially when running between wickets. And if they both settled in,
which was often, spectators would be treated to a magnificent – albeit
painful for bowlers – jugalbandi of strokes.
Greenidge could be destructive on his own. One series I followed closely
was West Indies’s tour of England in 1984. I was only a few years old in
international cricket. The West Indies were such a dominant side (despite
losing the 1983 World Cup final just months ago) that I would track them
diligently to understand what made them tick, and if there were chinks that
could be exploited.
The second Test at Lord’s was turning out to be a close affair. In fact,
West Indies looked under pressure to survive the last day in swinging
conditions against Ian Botham, Bob Willis and Neil Foster. Having made 245
in the first innings, it seemed improbable that they would get the 342 target
David Gower had set.
In a stunning display, Greenidge scored 214 to help West Indies win. Only
one wicket fell as the runs came at more than 5 an over. He batted with the
power of a lumberjack, leaving England battered and bruised. It remains
among the most astonishing knocks in the history of cricket, and I’d strongly
recommend those who haven’t seen it yet to watch it on YouTube or some
other archive. It will also highlight the skills that made Greenidge so feared
by bowlers all over.
Greenidge scored heavily against us in the 1980s. The swift adjustments
he made from Caribbean pitches to those in India was proof of his ability to
read surfaces as well as his skill against spin. Viv Richards was the
megastar, but Greenidge was no also-ran. In fact, we spent as much time
strategizing to get him out as we did for Viv, but our success rate was hardly
enviable.
There is, of course, that one time during the 1983 World Cup final when
we got him out cheaply – among the most memorable moments in Indian
cricket history. Greenidge misjudged Balwinder Sandhu’s steep inswinger
and was bowled shouldering arms. Viv Richards’s dismissal is considered
the turning point of the match, but getting Greenidge so early was hugely
significant too.
A solid, all-conditions opening batsman who scored runs across the
world and would set up matches for his side. I’d club him with Sunil
Gavaskar, Virender Sehwag, Geoff Boycott and Graham Gooch as the best
openers in the last half-century.
GLUTTON FOR RUNS
Graham Gooch
In the summer of 1990, the India team reached Lord’s for the first Test in high
spirits; having won the two ODIs preceding the series, our batsmen and
bowlers were looking in good form.
It had been a warm English summer till the time we reached Lord’s. The
grey clouds looming overhead during toss on the first morning of the match
hinted that the weather might be turning. This prompted captain Mohammad
Azharuddin – with, admittedly, some prodding from me – to bowl first if he
called correctly.
He did, and we asked England to bat. Mike Atherton and Graham Gooch
came out to open the batting. We got Atherton cheaply. Gooch had moved
steadily to 33 when he was dropped behind the wickets. This was the
decisive moment of the match, perhaps the series. If Gooch had fallen, the
pressure on England would have been enormous, with conditions still helpful
for fast bowling. Instead, the grey skies cleared and we spent the next two
days on a leather hunt, Gooch giving us the kind of drubbing, the memory of
which still gives me aches. He played every stroke you can think of as we
threw our all at him and went on to score 333, showing our bowlers and
fielders every inch of the Lord’s ground.
This was a match in which quite a few hundreds were scored, including
one by yours truly, but Gooch overshadowed everyone. After his triple
hundred, he scored 123 in the second innings, combining an insatiable hunger
for runs with furious hitting, which enabled England to declare in time and
force a result. In the series, he scored a whopping 752 runs, the second-
highest aggregate for any captain in one series, the first being Don Bradman
with 810 against England in 1936-37 as I gather from my statistician friends.
Gooch’s runs, however, came in only three Tests, The Don’s in five, which
should establish how dominant the former was in 1990.
Gooch had a penchant for scoring runs against India, much like Zaheer
Abbas (both also scored more than 100 first-class centuries!), and the most
painful of these came during the semi-final of the 1987 World Cup at
Wankhede Stadium.
We were favourites to win this match after a string of impressive
performances, but Gooch swept us out of the final with a remarkable century.
In the post-mortems that followed the match, the Indian spinners were
widely criticized for bowling the wrong line to Gooch. This is unfair to
Gooch for it dismisses his stellar preparation. Looking back over three
decades to that innings, Gooch had played the sweep with immaculate
positioning and timing, frequently picking us spinners from off and middle.
As any overseas batsmen will attest, this is hazardous on Indian pitches. But
that day, this was the secret to Gooch’s genius.
I always found it difficult to bowl to Gooch because of his stance, with
bat held aloft. He was a tall man, swift on his feet, and would swoop down
on even a minor lapse in length. The question of what the right length to bowl
to him was worried not just me but other spinners too.
Gooch was not only a fantastic player of spin, but of pace as well, more
often than not taking the attack to the bowlers on even hostile pitches. His
performances against Australia, West Indies and Pakistan – who boasted the
best fast bowlers in that era – are hugely impressive. He had lovely drives in
front of the wicket, could hook and pull with aplomb, and was a fine reader
of late swing, making the task of fast bowlers that much harder. To score the
number of runs he did against the dreaded West Indies pace attack in their
prime, with that bat-high-in-the-air stance, shows how quick his reactions
were.
Some batsmen have higher batting averages because of the number of not
outs. Gooch’s figures might appear modest in comparison, even though he
was way ahead in performances, only because he has fewer unbeaten knocks.
His hunger for runs was amazing, as I saw in county cricket where he made
runs day after day, season after season, with machine-like regularity. He and
Allan Border held up the Essex batting for quite a few years, and I must
confess that this was one contest I did not quite look forward to when playing
for Glamorgan.
Success did not come to Gooch on a platter. He worked harder than most
for it, and was extremely demanding of fellow players to show similar
commitment. This is perhaps why he wasn’t the most popular guy in his own
dressing room when he was captain.
I’d say unhesitatingly that he was England’s best batsman in my time. To
start with a pair on debut and finish as England’s highest run getter (till
Alastair Cook overtook him), despite missing three years for going on a rebel
tour to South Africa, is a stupendous achievement.
IN THE FAST LANE
Michael Holding, Andy Roberts and Joel Garner
In the 1970s and 1980s, the West Indies were the best side in the world
primarily because they had the most destructive pace attack in the history of
cricket. Clive Lloyd masterminded the change in approach when he dumped
spin and pushed for fast bowling as the recipe for success.
It worked, not only because the tactic was brilliant, but because the
supply of fast-bowling talent was of supreme quality and, perhaps even more
importantly, unending. The problem for batsmen wasn’t to survive one or two
superb fast bowlers, but an assembly line of them.
If the regulars were ill or injured, those who replaced them were equally
good and lethal. Colin Croft, Sylvester Clarke, Patrick Patterson, Wayne
Daniel and Winston Benjamin would have been long-term frontline bowlers
in any other cricketing country. Their opportunities to represent the West
Indies were limited because Malcolm Marshall, Andy Roberts, Mike
Holding and Joel Garner firmed up their places in the side early, kept getting
better and couldn’t be dislodged.
When this era lapsed, the baton was passed on to Courtney Walsh and
Curtly Ambrose, who were no less deadly than their predecessors. West
Indies cricket hasn’t been the same since Walsh and Ambrose retired.
I firmly believe that Malcolm Marshall was the deadliest and best fast
bowler I’ve faced or seen. But the others were only marginally behind. What
was fascinating was how different they were from each other.
Michael Holding was pure joy to watch, but not to face. He could be
lightning quick, with short-pitched deliveries that flew like missiles past
your throat, nose or head. He had a deep stare too if you played and missed;
no words, just a mean, hard glare, the message of which was hardly in doubt.
Holding was a quarter-miler in his formative years, and had he not chosen
cricket, he may have made the cut, representing Jamaica at the international
level in athletics. He was tall, lithe and aesthetic; a Rolls Royce among fast
bowlers, barely making a sound, and would have spectators transfixed with
his athleticism. When he came in off his full run up, it was a sight to behold.
After he sent down a delivery, the crowd would break into a buzz,
discussing and debating what had happened, what would come next. This
was especially true when he played in Jamaica, where he was obviously
adored.
I’ll never forget on my first tour in 1983 when Holding came off his full
run up in front of a packed Sabina Park in Kingston and sent Sunil
Gavaskar’s leg stump cartwheeling almost all the way to Joel Garner at fine
leg. It was an extraordinary sight and the stadium simply exploded.
In the West Indies, Holding bowled off his full run up, but when he came
to India after the World Cup, he cut down on his pace and run up, conserving
his energy on the slower pitches. But he was no less dangerous for this; if
anything, he was more accurate, and bowled more unplayable deliveries.
After retiring, Holding took up the mike (if I may be permitted a pun), and
has enthralled viewers with his astute, candid observations delivered in the
delectable Caribbean accent. He is among my closest friends on the circuit,
and someone from whom I keep learning constantly, about the game,
commentating and life.
Andy Roberts was the most skilful of the West Indies fast bowlers I played.
He would always have batsmen wondering what he was going to do next. He
was inscrutable, hardly spoke in the middle, and his body language gave
little away. When he was on song, batsmen had to rely on instinct and luck
against him. His most dangerous delivery was the bouncer, because he had
two kinds, varying in pace, length and line. If a batsman pulled or hooked
him, he would be fending off the ‘other’ bouncer next to save his head, or get
dismissed trying to hook from an awkward position.
I understand Roberts was even more lethal in the 1976 series against
India. By 1983, he was ageing, almost a decade of county cricket also having
taken its toll. But he had become craftier, and Lloyd would invariably turn to
him for a breakthrough. He took 25 wickets when we toured the Caribbean in
1983, which shows how good he was even in his sunset years.
Joel Garner, touching the sky at 6'8" in his shoes, did not have the pace of
Macko, Holding or Roberts, but he could coax bounce out of any pitch, which
made him lethal. And he had perhaps the deadliest yorker in his time, as the
1979 World Cup final showed.
At his pace, he had to have immaculate control to be effective, and Garner
had this amply. He gave very little scope to batsmen to score singles, let
alone boundaries, bowling a good length or just short for extra bounce. It was
Garner’s parsimonious bowling as foil to Macko, Holding and Roberts that
made the West Indies bowling in the 1980s so successful. All escape routes
were sealed. A glance at the averages of these bowlers and no further
explanation is necessary. There was just no respite for batsmen!
READY FOR BATTLE
Javed Miandad
Javed Miandad was a street fighter, and I don’t mean that derisively. He was
sharp, cunning, audacious, and possessed a never-say-die spirit that kept him
in good stead both on and off the field.
Looking back, Miandad comes across as an even more multi-faceted and
fascinating batsman. He was an opportunist on the field, who relied on sharp
instinct as well as a smart reading of the situation, conditions and opponents,
but he was also a big-innings, big-occasion player. He could use patience
and stealth to win a battle in the middle, or be in outright attack mode,
playing strong, improvised strokes and using aggressive body language to
intimidate opponents. He had enormous belief in his own abilities and was
not shy of sledging a bowler, however mighty their reputation.
In fact, in psychological one-upmanship, there was no one better than
Miandad in my time. His greatness lay in his unique combination of bluff and
bluster with hardcore batting skills. His unorthodox technique did not make
him a pretty sight, but certainly made life hell for bowlers, for he had an
answer to almost everything that was thrown at him. Quicksilver footwork, a
keen eye and a rare ability to make last second adjustments in defence or
offence by shifting his grip on the bat left many a bowler wringing his hands
in hapless frustration.
In his heyday, Miandad was an athlete and a half. While most people
remember him for his batting average, the number of runs and centuries he
scored, for me the most abiding memory is his running between the wickets:
he was the quickest I’ve seen over 22 yards. He could spot runs where
presumably none existed, and would pounce hawklike on even the slightest
tardiness or lapse by a fielder. It was as if he had eyes in the back of his
head!
The capacity to convert ones into twos and twos into threes made him
even more dangerous when he was with tailenders. He was brilliant at
marshalling the strike and drove fielding teams to despair. Much like his
former captain Asif Iqbal. The two made the best pair I’ve seen where
running between the wickets is concerned.
I had yet to play international cricket when India toured Pakistan in 1978,
but that series had everybody in the subcontinent pay attention. There were
outstanding performances from both teams, but what had everyone in thrall
was the way Asif and Miandad ran between the wickets to set up victory in
the third Test at Karachi. It was simply unbelievable and, I dare say, made
India’s cricketers focus more on this aspect.
Miandad’s innings against India in the Austral-Asia Cup final in Sharjah
(1986) where his last-ball 6 got Pakistan an incredible victory and
everlasting fame for himself is still among the three greatest ODI knocks I
have seen. It was brilliant in concept and execution. A tour de force.
When the top-order batsmen and all-rounders had fallen, we were sure
Pakistan would lose the match. All Miandad was doing was picking up runs
in singles, twos and sometimes threes, almost giving the impression that he
too didn’t believe victory was possible. That was very clever deception for
he kept his team in the hunt by hogging the strike, and not allowing us to get at
the tail. It was only when the target was within striking distance that he
started taking calculated risks.
It was a masterclass demonstration on how to put up a match-winning
performance under pressure. Almost three-fourths of his innings had gone
unnoticed – even by us on the field. But Miandad’s mind was ticking all the
while, waiting to seize the opportunity.
A year later, Pakistan were in India, and I had a run-in with him after we
had won the Hyderabad ODI. It was a close match and had Abdul Qadir not
attempted a second run on the last ball of the innings with the scores equal,
the match would have been a tie. As it happened, Pakistan lost 7 wickets to
our 6, and according to the playing conditions, the match was awarded to us.
This didn’t go down well with Miandad. After the match, he came to our
dressing room, insisting loudly that we had won because of cheating. With
adrenaline still pumping, I couldn’t take Miandad’s jibes, picked up a shoe
and chased him back into his dressing room, where Imran Khan intervened
and brought peace.
The altercation was quickly forgotten, however. When the teams were
travelling for the next match, we spent time together on the flight. The
incident never featured in any conversation then or later.
Though he had to live in the shadow of Imran Khan, Miandad was a very
shrewd captain. His cricketing brain was second to none, and, as Imran’s
lieutenant, contributed a lot to his success. As personalities, the two were a
study in contrast: Imran, aloof and imperious; Miandad, always in the thick of
it, a confrontationist, so to speak. Together, they made a formidable duo.
Miandad knew every rule in the book and how far he could push the
envelope. He made it a point to know everything about his opponents. He
would find out about them through the grapevine and detect vulnerabilities in
players within minutes of their being on the field.
Off the field, Miandad was a different personality from what most people
imagine. He was friendly and jovial, a prankster who could bring the house
down with his jokes, anecdotes and mimicry. But on the field, all friendship
vanished. He was combative to the core, the kind of player you would rather
have on your own side than against.
HIS LORDSHIP
Dilip Vengsarkar
Ian Botham was the best all-rounder I’ve played against or seen. I’ve
mentioned elsewhere that Gary Sobers has been the greatest all-rounder in
the history of the game. Botham comes closest to him in my opinion for
overall impact.
My earliest memory of Botham is from watching a match at the Wankhede
Stadium. This was the Jubilee Test in January 1980, celebrating fifty years of
cricket between India and England. I particularly wanted to see him bowl
because even in my late teens I had fancied myself as a fast bowler of sorts,
though my stock-in-trade was spin.
Botham took centre stage in the Test almost from start to finish. Bowling
at full tilt, he picked up 6 wickets. India finished with a moderate score of
242, but when England were reduced to 58 for 5, it did not seem such a bad
score after all. With his side tottering, Botham took charge with a
swashbuckling century that brought England back into the match. He found an
ally in Bob Taylor, whom captain Gundappa Viswanath reprieved by
overruling the umpire’s decision for a caught behind. As I would discover
when I joined the team, that was just like Vishy. Would I have done the same
thing in his place? Certainly not!
In India’s second innings, Botham bowled with hostility and stamina,
using the cross breeze from the Arabian Sea to get a pronounced late swing.
With 7 wickets in this innings, he had 13 in the match, and a blazing century
in between. I had never seen such a spectacular all-round performance.
Botham was India’s destroyer and my new hero.
He would do one better in the 1981 Ashes. I was in England with the
Under-19 team when Botham became the toast of his country by turning the
tables on arch-rivals Australia in stunning fashion after his team was forced
to follow on at Headingley and defeat looked certain. Botham scored 50, 149
not out, and took 7 wickets in the match.
Captaincy taken away from him, career almost at rock bottom, then Mike
Brearley speaks some golden words in his ear, which changes the destiny of
the series as well as Botham’s. It is difficult to imagine how one player could
influence the course of a six-Test series so dramatically.
He always loved the big stage and, in the wake of these exploits, Botham
became a larger-than-life persona, drawing awe and admiration everywhere
he played. Next to Australia, playing against India seemed to bring out the
best in him.
In 1981-82, I was in the team that played England. It wasn’t a particularly
gratifying series for spectators with both teams locked in a defensive
mindset. Botham’s aggressive knocks did liven things up every now and then,
though what impressed me more was his incredible bowling: long spells in
hot conditions on unhelpful pitches. He had a great natural outswinger which
could fell even the most in-form batsmen. Built like an ox, he remained
seemingly tireless despite long spells of bowling. Stories swirled around
about his nocturnal adventures, but there wasn’t a single day on the field
when he wasn’t trying to dominate with bat or ball.
In 1982, when we toured England, he pulverized us with a century and a
double century in the second and third Tests, and picked up crucial wickets
in the three-Test series. I was bowling when Botham drove the ball straight
into Sunil Gavaskar’s leg at short leg, instantly terminating his series. It
didn’t look like a particularly powerful stroke, but this belies Botham’s
strength. Even his defensive prods carried great power. And if you wanted
more evidence of this, a handshake would be enough.
What Botham did with bat and ball, the catches he took, the matches he
won, sets him apart from anyone else in the era he played in, or even
subsequently. He had serious competition, of course, from Richard Hadlee,
Imran Khan and Kapil Dev, all of whom may have been better than him in
one or the other aspects of the game at different points in time. But when you
view the whole package, and his ability to win matches for England,
especially when the chips were down, the scales tilt towards Botham. Sheer
statistics tell you why he was special. He got more runs than his rival all-
rounders, scored more centuries than any of them, took 382 wickets and over
100 catches with his bucket-like hands.
When I joined Glamorgan as a professional in 1987, the best names in
cricket were part of the county circuit, and the three biggest were Botham,
Viv Richards and Imran Khan. Even out of these three, I think Botham put
most bums on the seats in his heyday.
Post our playing days, we’ve spent some fun times in England, or in India
when he’s come down for television work. He was a flamboyant player and
is a large-hearted man, living life king-size both on and off the field.
KAPIL DA JAWAB NAHIN!
Kapil Dev
Kapil Dev was the most talented of the four great all-rounders of my era.
Fans of Ian Botham, Imran Khan and Richard Hadlee might not agree, but
having watched and played against all – including Kapil in domestic cricket
over several years – I stand firm by my assessment.
Kapil was a marvellous swing bowler, brilliant attacking batsman and
superb fielder. Imran was a more organized batsman, Hadlee a technically
more accomplished bowler, and Botham was certainly more flamboyant in
all aspects of the game. But when you look at Kapil Dev’s career in its
entirety – his accomplishments and his contribution to India’s successes as a
player – you get a better perspective of his talent and the impact he had on
Indian cricket.
For a fast bowler from India to take 400-plus Test wickets seems surreal
even now. Add to this his 5,000-plus runs and it becomes unreal. These stats
highlight not just Kapil’s contribution to Indian cricket, but also establish him
as an all-time great in the annals of the game.
He was a supreme athlete, naturally fit and robust, capable of bowling
long spells without complaint. I hardly ever saw him leave the field because
he was fatigued. I can remember only two occasions when he missed a
contest. One was in 1984, when he had to skip the Asia Cup because of a
knee surgery, and the other was in the 1984-85 home season, when he was
controversially dropped for the Calcutta Test against David Gower’s team; a
decision which still evokes debate. Had he not been dropped for this Test,
Kapil would have played 132 Tests on the trot. To be able to sustain form
and fitness for so long was perhaps the most remarkable part of his career. I
can’t think of too many cricketers who played sixteen years without a break.
Certainly not all-rounders, and more so a team’s leading fast bowler.
In an era dominated by the likes of Clive Lloyd, Ian Botham, Viv
Richards, Gordon Greenidge and Graham Gooch, Kapil made a name for
himself as one of the hardest and cleanest strikers of the ball. I remember a
match against the West Indies in Nagpur where he sent a Patrick Patterson
delivery rocketing to the fence and it ricocheted back to the bowler. Patterson
wasn’t amused.
An instinctive and aggressive batsman, Kapil was always on the lookout
for quick runs. But he wasn’t a senseless slogger. He relished big shots and
most of his strokes came from hits through the line, usually smack from the
middle of the bat. He was also a superb runner between wickets, which put
additional pressure on the fielding side. He didn’t plan his innings. There
was no deep analysis. (That came when he started doing commentary!) He
was a terrific improviser, and had an excellent eye and reflexes. For
someone who played so aggressively, he was astonishingly good in tough
situations, difficult conditions and pitches.
In the only Test I captained, against the West Indies in Madras in 1988,
Kapil got a superb match-winning century on a track that had something in it
for bowlers right through. A year earlier on the same ground, he had hit a
stroke-filled century against Australia in the Tied Test which kept us alive in
the match. There were other memorable knocks too. Against England at
Lord’s in 1990, he made a breathtaking 77, tonking Eddie Hemmings down
the ground for four consecutive sixes to avoid the follow on. In 1992, at Port
Elizabeth, South Africa, he hit a rousing century in a losing cause, sending
Allan Donald and Co. scrambling all over the park. Not just centuries, there
were several half-centuries too from his bat, which made big impact in Tests.
The innings which immortalized Kapil is obviously his 175 not out
against Zimbabwe in the 1983 World Cup. It is among the most extraordinary
ODI innings for the daunting circumstances in which it was played. We were
caught on a vicious seaming track at Tunbridge Wells. The top order fell in a
heap, leaving us precariously placed. I remember being sixth out, when the
score was just 20-odd. Kapil took maybe ten or fifteen minutes to settle
down, and then suddenly his batting changed. Once he had got his eye in,
nothing fazed him. Whether fast, medium pace or slow, the Zimbabwe
bowlers came under heavy attack as he kept depositing the ball into the car
park.
His stupendous innings turned the match on its head, and triggered fresh
ambition in the side, culminating in us beating the West Indies in the final to
win the title. Kapil’s role in this triumph was salutary. He led from the front
at every opportunity. If his innings against Zimbabwe revived our fortunes
and our appetite for victory midway through the tournament, the catch in the
final, a steepling skier, to dismiss a rampaging Viv Richards virtually sealed
the final. His sunny personality, always brimming with optimism, was
infectious and rubbed off on us all through the tournament.
I’ve spent many words extolling Kapil’s batting, but it was his bowling
which had a larger influence on Indian cricket. No Indian pace bowler before
him had taken 100 Test wickets. In fact, pace bowlers were few and far in
between, and those who played for India barely survived a few years.
Kapil’s arrival was transformational. Overt dependence on spin ended with
him. India’s use of the new ball was no longer just perfunctory, but became a
weapon.
An outstanding outswing bowler, accuracy and control were his greatest
strengths, and very rarely did I see him being taken apart by any batsman
anywhere. Unlike his batting, which was spontaneous, in bowling, Kapil
applied measure and method to prey on batsmen, invariably making early
inroads into the opposition’s batting. He was technically perfect and
classical in approach, leap and delivery stride, bowling from very close to
the stumps, getting the ball to swing late both ways.
The outswinger was particularly deadly and got him many famous
victims. Few fast bowlers have used the grip and the seam better than him.
Just how good he was is evident in his success on heartbreak home pitches
where fast bowlers have generally struggled, and against the terrific batting
line-ups of Pakistan, West Indies, Australia and England – both at home and
away. Had he got some more support from the other end, and with better
close-in catching, Kapil’s stats may have been more impressive.
His biggest contribution to Indian cricket was in sparking off a fast
bowling revolution in the country. If India has a dozen pace bowlers to
choose from today, it is because of Kapil Dev’s influence in the 1980s on
young cricketers coming up the ranks.
I played my entire Test career with Kapil Dev in the team and shared a
warm relationship with him. We had our run-ins, but that was only because of
Bombay v Haryana or West Zone v North in domestic cricket, which was
always a grudge contest. Otherwise, his brilliance as an all-rounder always
had me in awe.
An amusing thing about Kapil was his reluctance to speak in Hindi, which
came naturally to him. At all times, and specially in press conferences, he
would insist on talking in English. What he said could be misconstrued by
those around him, but Kapil didn’t care. I too would answer all questions in
English, even those asked in Hindi, but today, when it comes to describing
Kapil, I can only borrow the ad line which he made famous with his exploits:
‘Kapil Dev da jawaab nahin!’
TERMINATOR
Malcolm Marshall
I rate my centuries in the West Indies in 1983 and 1989 as the most gratifying
of my career. In that period, the West Indies had a hostile all-pace attack that
was difficult to play anywhere, but even more so on their home pitches.
The pick of the West Indies bowlers in my time was Malcolm Marshall.
He joined the team a few years after Andy Roberts, Michael Holding and
Joel Garner, integrated himself with these classy bowlers to form a fearsome
foursome, and swiftly surpassed them in wickets and skills.
If you travel the world and ask the leading batsmen of that era about the
bowlers they were most intimidated by, I am sure several of them will point
in the same direction. Many of them might still be bearing scars from facing
him on the field. If they got a fair few runs against him, like I did, these
became landmarks to cherish forever.
Not as tall as the typical West Indies fast bowler, Macko was no less
menacing. He bowled at a torrid pace and with a fire that just wouldn’t die
down, whether in his first spell of the day or last. On any surface, he would
get his deliveries to skid through because of his bowling action. He literally
sprinted in to bowl, itself a frightening sight, and combined with his whippy
action, it gave batsmen very little time to adjust to line and length.
Like Wasim Akram, he was not dependent on help from the pitch. He
could swing the ball at extreme pace, vary his length, and change the line by
going over or round the wicket without losing control. Round the wicket, he
was particularly nasty because the line was very difficult to pick. His
accuracy meant there was little respite for batsmen. We survived his overs on
tenterhooks.
When there was no assistance for swing or seam, he would bowl just
short of length, using his shoulders and back to get extra bounce, getting the
ball to snort at the batsman. Physics tells us all deliveries will lose velocity
after pitching. In Macko’s case, this was marginal. Unlike for most bowlers,
Macko’s bouncer would hasten off the pitch. That was the impression one got
even if it seemed scientifically impossible. Most times, this would be a
‘throat ball’, but occasionally, as the unfortunate Mike Gatting realized when
he had to pick up the debris of his shattered nose from the pitch after he had
failed to fend off a short-pitched delivery, it would go for the face. In the
1983 World Cup, Macko’s ball hit Dilip Vengsarkar on the mouth,
terminating Dilip’s appearances in the tournament.
In both my centuries in the West Indies – at Antigua in 1983, playing in the
middle order, and Bridgetown in 1989 at number three after Navjot Sidhu
had been dismissed first ball – Macko put me to severe test, with pace, late
movement and a generous sprinkling of bouncers. He kept me guessing with
his length too, drawing me on to the front foot, pushing me back, constantly
probing with subtle changes.
We got Macko at his best in two series in 1983, home and away, and he
was the vital difference between the two sides, particularly on slow Indian
pitches. It is my opinion that from the quartet of great West Indies fast
bowlers, Marshall troubled Sunil Gavaskar the most. I can offer Macko no
greater tribute, as Sunny was the master technician at that time. That I lasted
on the field against him raised my own self-esteem by several notches and, I
guess, gathered his respect too, for we would often discuss batsmanship and
batsmen.
Like Imran Khan bowling at his peak in the 1980s, Macko cleaned up
every team that he played against in that era. He did so for a longer time,
without sledging or abusing batsmen, but he did have a menacing glare for
those who hit him for a boundary or so. He just hated conceding runs.
His presence on the field would electrify fans, especially in the
Caribbean, and specifically in his hometown, Barbados, where he was a cult
hero. I can still hear the raucous Saturday crowd cheering Macko past Lance
Gibbs’s record as the highest wicket-taker for West Indies. He was 3 wickets
short when the Test began and when he claimed his fourth, Kensington Oval
exploded.
Our rivalry on the field was intense, but off it, we became very good
friends. Without ball in hand, Macko was a genial bloke with a lively sense
of humour. He once came to my house in Sportsfield Building with Des
Haynes. My Bombay colleague Alan Sippy played barman to indulgence, and
together the two Bajans brought the roof down, prompting Sunny Gavaskar to
come down three stories from his apartment to check on why the loud
laughter sounded so familiar. He ended up joining Macko, Dessie, Alan and
me for a long night of fun and banter.
Alas, Macko left this planet too early.
NEVER SAY DIE
Allan Border
Allan Border is a man of few words and magnificent deeds: a hero, without
the accompanying brouhaha, for his batting, but also how he led Australian
cricket from despondency to eminence as captain.
I learnt a lot from Border – and Javed Miandad – about how to approach
the sport, and borrowed a lot from them to improve my own game. These
guys had a core of steel and played hard, in fact even with meanness, in the
middle. An early lesson was that you can’t be namby-pamby when playing at
the highest level. Batting, for instance, is not just about technique, style and
flair; it is also about making runs when they matter most, even if not
attractive to everybody. You don’t play sport to win over admirers but to win
matches.
Another – and equally important – thing I learnt from Border was to leave
the pressures and bitterness of battle behind on the field after stumps have
been drawn for the day. We’ve had our share of sledges and verbal jousts,
but once the match was over, he would be the first to offer a beer. And
advice for any young cricketer, which I latched on to eagerly in my early
years. We’ve shared as much time in rival dressing rooms, as with each other
after a day’s play or between matches.
Border came into the side at a time when Australian cricket was
doddering. The best names had defected to the World Series Cricket, and
selectors were looking here, there, everywhere for replacements. Border
was among the dozen or so young players blooded in international cricket in
this period. However, only a few of them went on to leave a lasting impact
on the sport, and only one – Steve Waugh, who came in the mid-1980s –
played for as long and as prolifically as Border.
The batting stats of Border and Waugh are fairly similar, and both men
captained Australia. If Waugh shows up as a more successful captain it is
because bald figures don’t provide context to situational hardships that
demand leadership skills in a match, a series or an era.
Border’s captaincy period is a major inflection point in Australian
cricket. When he took over, the team was in the doldrums. By the time he
retired, he had led Australia to a World Cup win (1987) and also helped
recover substantial ground that had been lost in Test cricket.
As a new captain put in the hot seat for which he was hardly prepared, it
wasn’t easy for Border. His story is as much about trying to actualize his own
talent and ambition as coping with apprehensions about a team he had taken
charge of in extenuating circumstances, after his predecessor, Kim Hughes,
quit in tears.
Border wasn’t a unanimous choice as captain. The media was hostile to
him because he wasn’t a natural communicator. He was thought to be
diffident, or worse, lacking imagination as a captain. But that was far from
the truth. I saw Border’s nerve and grit first-hand at the memorable Tied Test
against Australia at Madras in 1986, the toughest match I’ve ever played.
The see-saw battle put all twenty-two players in the match to severe
scrutiny, but it was the captains who were under most pressure. Though I still
maintain that umpire Dara Dotiwalla made a mistake in giving Maninder
Singh leg before wicket, bringing the Indian innings to an end one run short of
victory, there is also no doubt that had Border not maintained his composure
and trusted his bowlers right till the end, the Aussies might have lost the
match much earlier.
The 1987 World Cup victory that followed soon after catapulted Border
to greater heights as a batsman and brought him enormous respect as captain.
His handling of a young side that beat Pakistan in the semi-finals and England
in the final – among the biggest upsets in cricket history – was exemplary.
One doesn’t associate ‘style’ with Border’s batting; dogged, gritty, brave,
stodgy, sticky are adjectives that come to mind readily. Let me add two more:
lion-hearted and versatile. He was at his best when circumstances were most
daunting.
The runs he scored against – and in – the West Indies, then the premier
side in the world, his twin 150-plus knocks in Pakistan, and several
impressive innings in India are testimony to this. As is his time in England, of
course, where he batted with huge success for Australia, Essex and
Gloucestershire.
In the latter half of his career, Border became a father figure to a whole
generation of Aussie cricketers who would have been the poorer without his
mentoring. He was largely instrumental in shaping the career of Shane Warne,
Australia’s highest wicket-taker in Tests.
There have undoubtedly been bigger stars in Australian cricket, with
better batting averages and win percentages as captain. But when you
consider his overall contribution to the sport, Border stands on a pedestal all
of his own.
ELEGANCE AT PLAY
David Gower
Left-handers are generally very attractive to watch, but even among them,
David Gower was the most elegant I’ve seen. He never hit the ball, he
stroked it, with timing, finesse and grace that left one spellbound.
Tall and upright, he had a lovely relaxed stance from which he would
launch into defence or attack with such ease that it almost seemed casual. He
was often taken to task by the English media for being too laid-back – as both
batsman and captain – when in fact, he was anything but.
We played a lot of cricket against each other between 1981 and 1990 – in
Tests and county cricket – and he never came across as someone who wasn’t
serious about what he did on the field, be it batting, fielding or captaining the
team.
Gower could be a fierce competitor as I saw for myself when England
toured India in 1984-85. I captained the Under-25 team against Gower’s side
at Ahmedabad, and watched him wrestle with his own batting, as well as the
struggles of other batsmen. He looked in scratchy form in the first innings, the
timing awry and footwork sluggish. There was no pace in the pitch and he hit
one straight back to me as the ball stopped a bit.
Captains always look for vulnerability in opponents, and it seemed to me
that Gower, England’s best batsman, was not in the best form. We won that
match by an innings, sixteen-year-old leg spinner Laxman Sivaramakrishnan
exposing England’s frailty against spin.
Word spread quickly, and I added my own bit to Sunil Gavaskar, who was
captaining the Indian team, which included young Siva too. In the first Test in
Bombay, our target was Gower; we wanted him for as few runs as possible.
Kapil Dev dismissed him in the first innings and, in the second, I had him
caught close in. Siva took 12 wickets on debut, England collapsed and we
won by eight wickets.
After that first Test, Gower was a beleaguered batsman and captain.
There was nothing to suggest that a recovery from this situation was possible,
so comprehensive had been our win. Yet, despite the loss and his own
inadequate performance, Gower recovered from there to lead England to one
of its finest overseas campaigns, and beat us 2–1. There have been
subsequent instances when a series has been turned on its head in India
(2001: India beat Australia 2–1 after losing the first Test; 2013: England beat
India 2–1 after losing the first Test; 2020: India beat Australia 2–1 after
losing the first Test), but the 1984-85 England team was the first to breach
this hurdle.
Gower made this possible through patience and astute planning, neither of
which he is given enough credit for. The team under him wasn’t the strongest.
But he got the best out of his players, especially spinners Pat Pocock and Phil
Edmonds, to turn the tables on us. Perhaps playing away from home helped
Gower. In England, his poor batting form might have compelled a change in
captaincy. In India, he had the latitude to bring his tactical and man-
management skills to the fore even as runs deserted him.
In that series, Gower scored just 167 runs, and overall, in India, he
scored 558 runs in twelve Tests, which is just about modest. But it would be
misleading to believe he wasn’t adept at playing on slow turners. Factor in
449 runs in three Tests against Pakistan and 131 in a solitary Test against Sri
Lanka, and it is evident how good he actually was against spin on slow,
turning tracks.
This was because he was such a good judge of length. When one talks of
Gower’s batting, it is his aristocratic cover drives that dominate the
conversation, but when bowling to him, I found he was brilliant at the cut and
pull strokes as well, because he could read the length so well and so early –
probably why he was so successful in Australia and the West Indies.
Gower was always under the scanner as captain. He was thought to be a
tad frivolous, and without the capacity to harness the team because some
critics reckoned he was self-indulgent. This was utterly ridiculous. He was
individualistic, but only with the bat; it did not come from a place of self-
centredness. He was a stylist with a capacity for risk-taking that doesn’t
come easily to batsmen who think averages all the time. As a captain, he was
not overly aggressive, but sound in dealing with prickly situations and
teammates.
I’d agree, as far as cricketers are concerned, that he was a non-
conformist. Not in terms of batting technique, but in his outlook to the game
and life in general. He loved and lived the good life. Cricket for him was a
task but also fun. His natty dress sense, passion for wine and fine dining
added to the aura of his personality, but he didn’t let fame or money go to his
head.
We quit around the same time, but commentary frequently brought us
together. He is a fine reader of the game, and even when he was critical of a
player or a team’s performance, he expressed it with balance and empathy. A
droll, sophisticated sense of humour endeared him as much to fellow
commentators as to fans.
Gower is a thorough gentleman and a great ambassador for England
wherever he goes.
PRINCE AMONG BATSMEN
Martin Crowe
I was in the Under-19 India team that toured Sri Lanka in 1979. The island
country hadn’t yet got Test status, but informal cricket exchanges between our
countries were fairly frequent.
By this time, the BCCI – as I was to gather later – was pushing for full
membership for Sri Lanka in the ICC. While that would take a year or so
more to come into fruition, junior-level cricket between our two countries
became regular and took place in a more structured manner.
In one of the matches at Colombo during the 1979 tour, after the fall of the
second wicket, the batsman who came in at number four was a chubby
youngster. He had a nice pot belly, and walked to the wicket with a waddle,
twirling his bat.
While he was taking guard from the umpire, there were some jokes
exchanged among our players (mainly in Hindi, so as not to be rude),
mocking the batsman’s expansive girth, and how he did not look like a
sportsperson at all and so should be easy to dismiss.
The smiles and jokes vanished swiftly when the left-hander started to bat.
A couple of overs to get his eye in, and after that he simply decimated our
bowling, smashing a brilliant hundred that left the bowlers with wounded
egos and fielders sore from chasing leather. Those of us who played that
match knew then itself that Arjuna Ranatunga was a special talent, someone
who would play for his country sooner rather than later.
Over the next fifteen years, India and Sri Lanka met each other often. In
all those contests, Arjuna Ranatunga was the biggest thorn in our side. I got to
know him extremely well during this time, which helped me understand why
he was so successful as a batsman; more importantly, what made him the fine
captain he was and the big influence he left on the game.
As a batsman, Arjuna was hardly a stylist. His defensive strokes were
ungainly jabs, and drives in front of the wicket lacked the finesse and grace
normally associated with left-handers. But this did not mean he was error-
prone. In fact, he was among the most resourceful batsmen I’ve seen or
bowled to.
Because he was a fine reader of pitches and conditions, he could adjust
and adapt swiftly. If you thought he was slow on his feet because of his girth,
he could surprise you with his speed while running between wickets or while
fielding.
He favoured horizontal bat strokes. The cut, pull and hook came readily to
him because he was very good on the back foot. He was also exceptional at
playing the sweep against spinners – always crucial on tricky subcontinental
tracks. He had a strong streak to improvise too. Once set, he was difficult to
contain.
I’ll sharpen – and shorten – this description to say Arjuna was a left-
handed Javed Miandad, in his batting as well as mindset for the game. Like
Miandad, he was cheeky and street-smart in everything he did on the field.
He was driven by pragmatic pursuit of survival and run-scoring, uncaring
about niceties of classical technique. He never ever had his tail between his
legs, was always ready for a scrap even against the strongest opponents, and
relished playing on the nerves of his rivals.
Where Arjuna differed vastly from Miandad was in captaincy. Few
understood and read the game better than Miandad. Arjuna went a step ahead
in this as a leader who commanded the respect of his team and had a vision
on how to take Sri Lankan cricket ahead.
Arjuna was a tough character who made his country – players and fans –
believe they could take on the world. Till he became captain, the Sri Lankans
were thought to be splendidly talented cricketers, but softies, and not very
good at handling pressure.
Arjuna changed that by personal example in the fearless way he batted,
but even more so with the way he motivated his team members and stood by
them in crises. That is the hallmark of a leader, and such guys always have
my admiration.
His support for Muttiah Muralitharan, who was called out for chucking in
Australia in 1995, was stormy and unsavoury, but changed the way the world
perceived Sri Lankan cricket. The clear signal Arjuna sent out was he wasn’t
going to be bullied.
His captaincy in the 1996 World Cup was masterly. He was the one to
spot Sanath Jayasuriya’s potential as a destructive opener, and made Romesh
Kaluwitharana his partner in the tournament. One-day cricket had seen a
pinch-hitting opener, but two together was new, and wreaked havoc on
opponents. The self-belief he instilled in the dressing room saw Sri Lanka
pull off their staggering win.
His entry into politics after he retired didn’t surprise me. In cricket,
Arjuna clearly enjoyed handling the power and responsibility that came with
captaincy. It fed his intellect, kept him involved in the play and allowed him
to shape the future of the team. He sees himself as a man of destiny: as in
cricket, so in the wider game of Sri Lankan life.
STRAIGHT SHOOTER
Dean Jones
Dean Jones’s sudden demise during the 2020 IPL season came like a
sledgehammer blow. Filled with disbelief on seeing the news on TV, I called
up some people I knew at the Star Sports network. Their affirmation sent me
into deeper gloom. Cricket had lost a stalwart, and I had lost a dear friend.
Deano and I were of the same vintage. I had started a little earlier, but our
careers more or less coincided, which meant running into each other often in
the 1980s. Once we found common ground, we often shared thoughts on
fellow players, from our own teams and others.
Our conversation wasn’t limited to cricket. We talked of this, that, and
everything under the sun – especially food. I take pride in the refinement of
my palate and love a good meal, but Deano was a gourmand. He could
discuss food in as much detail as he did cricket in his professorial bit for TV
channels. Whenever he was in Mumbai, we would meet at my house or some
restaurant of his choice. And vice versa when I was in Melbourne. One of my
most memorable days Down Under was spending Christmas Day with Deano
and his family (after we had retired). Not just the food, wine and occasion, it
was the Jones’s who made the day for us.
But it hadn’t always been so hunky-dory. Deano and I were extremely
competitive, and this showed in our early years in international cricket when
India played Australia, and we clashed with each other on and off the field.
Neither wanted to cede an inch. While the senior pros knew when to switch
off, our battles would continue much longer. Some years later, when we had
both settled down in international cricket, we genuinely warmed up to each
other, and built an abiding friendship, based on mutual respect and trust that
lasted till his unfortunate, premature death.
The turning point of sorts in our relationship was the Tied Test in 1986.
We thought the Aussies would be easy to overcome on a slow turner in the
heat and extreme humidity of Madras. Many overseas teams have come to
grief in those conditions – in my time, as well as before and after. However,
the match didn’t pan out as we imagined because one Mr Dean Jones played
the innings of a lifetime.
There were many heroes in that extraordinary contest, but the player with
the most influence in the match was Deano, who made 210 runs in really
tough conditions.
In the course of that innings, he puked, cursed and was close to tears for
long periods, but always defiant. His double century was testimony to his
character and determination. After he was dismissed, he had to be taken to
hospital and put on a drip. But he gave his team the runs and captain Allan
Border the confidence to make a terrific sporting declaration, enough to win
a Test.
We took the challenge head on, and the result was a memorable tie, only
the second in Test history. That match changed the mindset of a lot of young
cricketers in that game, Deano and me included. His rise as a Test player of
consequence started from here.
Deano was a flamboyant cricketer. His prowess as an ODI player was
such that it tended to undermine his Test performances. But he was brilliant
in the longest format too. How many players have averaged 46-plus after
fifty-two Tests? He was one of the many pupils Allan Border mentored, but
I’d venture that Deano was Allan’s favourite for his vivacity and
commitment. He was terrific both on and off the field.
Looking back, it seems strange that he was in and out of the Test team. I’d
say it wasn’t so much for lack of talent but because of his outspokenness,
which is seldom appreciated by those in authority. That said, he was easily
among the finest ODI players – not just in his era, but of all time – and never
out of the Australian playing XI.
He had the strokes, the speed – when running between the wickets and
fielding – and the daring to take on the opposition in the powerplay. Not just
that, his thought process while batting in ODIs was ahead of most players of
his era. He’d anticipate bowlers and pick up gaps in the field which other
batsmen couldn’t. He was a terrific all-round batsman, good against pace and
spin, quick on his feet, never afraid of taking on the stiffest challenge. Along
with Viv Richards and Javed Miandad, Deano was the best ODI batsman in
the 1980s. Like Miandad, Deano could get under the skin of the opposition.
Sometimes, this boomeranged, like when he asked Curtly Ambrose to take off
his wristband for no particular reason and Australia had to pay the price for
it. I don’t know what his teammates told him after that Ambrose demolition
act, but it couldn’t have been pleasant.
However, Deano was his own man and could ruffle a few feathers, as
player and later as commentator. This got him into a spot of bother at times.
While he could be indiscreet, I’ll vouch that he was never mean or
malicious. We spent a lot of time together in Singapore, working for ESPN,
and I always found him to be fair. His knowledge of the game, its history, and
his reading of match situations was excellent. We had our differences on
issues, but nothing that couldn’t be resolved over a pint of beer.
Deano wasn’t dogmatic. Cricket for him was not just livelihood, but life.
He was always thinking ahead, always young at heart. Such a tragedy to see
him leave the field so early.
DAREDEVIL
Aravinda De Silva
Aravinda De Silva was the ultimate big-match player. I’ve seen many very
good players get jittery and lose their nerve when the stakes are high. With
Aravinda, it was the other way around. He got easily bored in run-of-the-mill
contests, but would be a batsman transformed when the demands were
tougher.
His magnificent contribution in Sri Lanka’s 1996 World Cup victory
stands testimony to this quality – particularly the way he batted against India
in the semi-final and Australia in the final, the two strongest teams in the
tournament.
In the emotion-charged semi-final against India at Kolkata, he came in to
bat when Sri Lanka were rocked by Javagal Srinath who had taken 2 wickets
in his very first over. The situation at that stage, if not suggesting
hopelessness, called for a measured approach at the very least. Instead,
Aravinda decided to dominate this psychologically crucial phase by taking
the attack to the Indian bowlers. And how!
He made 60-odd runs, which was worth more than a century in the context
of the match. His masterly batting tamed both pace and spin, loosened India’s
vice-like grip on the match, and gave his own bowlers a fighting total to
defend. As it turned out, on a rapidly wearing pitch, India went into terminal
decline once Sachin fell, and Sri Lanka won with plenty to spare.
The venue of the World Cup final was Lahore and Sri Lanka’s opponents
were Australia. This was a grudge match, for the two countries had clashed
more than once on the field – and several times off it – through strong
statements against each other on the issue of Muttiah Muralitharan’s bowling
action. Though the match was being played in the subcontinent, Australia
were clear favourites because of the quality and experience of their line-up
which boasted Mark Taylor, the Waugh twins, Ricky Ponting, Michael Bevan,
Glenn McGrath and Shane Warne, who had hit top form.
I was among those calling the final on TV. Australia scored a modest 241,
but most of us in the commentary box believed this was good enough to quell
Sri Lanka, given the pressures of a final and the presence of Warne to exploit
a slowish track. As in the semis, Sri Lanka lost 2 quick wickets again, but
Aravinda came up with a masterclass century, not only salvaging the innings
but leading the run charge in such commanding style that one could almost
see the Aussies waving the white handkerchief.
This was a vastly different Aravinda from the one I had first seen in 1985
when we toured Sri Lanka. He made his Test debut against us as a nineteen-
year-old in the first match at Colombo, and we got some idea of his prowess
when he hit Kapil Dev for a couple of sixes in his first over as Sri Lanka
tried to chase an impossible target in the second innings.
Aravinda’s daredevilry had got our dressing room talking, though only
briefly because he was not our main threat. This came from seasoned
batsmen Duleep Mendis, Roy Dias and Ranjan Madugalle, and pace bowlers
Rumesh Ratnayake, Ashantha de Mel and Saliya Ahangama.
I kept track of Aravinda’s career because he was not only a very
organized batsman, but also an attractive one. In his early years it had
seemed he was more interested in having a blast, being a show pony. But as
he matured – and I think his captain Arjuna Ranatunga had some role to play
in it – he controlled his aggression without compromising, taking toll of run-
scoring deliveries. County stints with Kent also helped him value his wicket
and runs.
Over a period of time, Aravinda grew into a superb all-round, all-wicket
batsman, always attractive to watch. His repertoire of strokes was full to the
brim. My favourite was the cover drive, played on the up off the back foot.
Only Sachin, among those I’ve seen, played this stroke better.
We’ve had an enduring friendship for almost four decades. A warm man,
and a great host, Aravinda is the man I call first when in Sri Lanka.
WAZ TO MY SHAZ
Wasim Akram
Although Malcolm Marshall was the best fast bowler I’ve ever played,
Wasim Akram comes a close second. I consider him a ‘freak’ for I have seen
none other with the same talent or variety as Wasim at his best.
He could bowl from over or round the wicket without losing even the
slightest control. Adapting swiftly to a different line is not easy, especially
for a pace bowler, which shows how much quality time Wasim spent in the
nets to master this.
He also had the widest range of deliveries among the fast bowlers I’ve
played or seen. He could bowl really fast, or cut down pace to almost slow
medium, but what made him especially dangerous was late swing and
reverse swing – particularly the latter, which he would use cleverly to
bamboozle even well-set batsmen.
Reverse swing is possible when the shine on one side of the ball is
maintained by constant polishing. Making some nicks and dents on the other
side and picking the seam also helps, provided of course you don’t get
caught. In the past, bowlers could get away with this rather easily, but with
TV cameras now catching every bit of the action, there is serious threat of
being caught and penalized.
When I was playing, Pakistanis were masters at ‘preparing’ a ball for
reverse swing. Imran Khan was its finest exponent in the 1980s. Imran had
learnt the craft from Sarfraz Nawaz, who was nearing the end of his career
when India played Pakistan in 1982-83, but was still wily and dangerous.
It was from these two that Wasim imbibed the best lessons in reverse
swing. In fact, he went a couple of notches higher in skill. Being a left-arm
bowler made it that much more difficult for right-hand batsmen to read him,
but it was his genius in all conditions that makes Wasim arguably the best
left-arm pacer ever.
A hefty guy with large hands, he used this to his advantage by changing his
grip on the ball for different deliveries. I don’t think he left even a centimetre
of leather or seam left unexplored to improvise.
Wasim’s bowling style was somewhat unorthodox. He didn’t have a big
final leap as most fast bowlers do. Rather, he steamed in and delivered the
ball with a whippy action, putting a lot of shoulder and back into it,
surprising batsmen with the pace or bounce he could get off even a short run
up.
He used the crease superbly too, and his ability to use a new or old ball
equally well posed serious problems for any batsman. He was one bowler
who didn’t need a pitch or conditions to make him effective. In all the years
I’ve played and watched cricket, I can think of only two bowlers who were
not stymied by an unhelpful pitch. Macko was one, Wasim the other.
He was mentally very tough too, and a challenge always spurred him on.
When we toured Pakistan in 1989, Wasim was struggling a bit with a dodgy
groin . We thought, ‘Chalo, it’s one less stress for our batting unit.’ But he
came back stronger and faster in each spell, picking up crucial wickets.
In limited-overs cricket, his accuracy and control over late swing and
yorkers made him the most difficult bowler to play in his time. The shorter
version of the game demands constant improvisations like cross-seam grip,
variations in pace, slow and quick bouncers, etc. And in this, Wasim was
way ahead of his contemporaries. He could catch batsmen completely
unawares, as we saw in the 1992 World Cup final where his two wickets off
successive deliveries turned the match in Pakistan’s favour.
I have a great personal equation with Wasim. He’s a terrific bloke, easy-
going, hassle-free, and loves the good things in life – which is how I see
myself too. For all his achievements, he’s incredibly modest about his stature
in the game.
I had several years playing hard cricket against him and he was always
looking to hit my stumps, head or toes! He never gave an inch. But post-
retirement, when we did commentary together, we found a chemistry that
made all our contests in the middle something to enjoy rather than remember
with bitterness.
For the decade or so that we shared the commentary box together, I had
more fun with him than anybody else. The Shaz & Waz Show, put together by
ESPN Star Sports in the breaks during matches, became so popular largely
because of the spontaneity in our exchanges. There was little that was pre-
determined apart from the instruction that there should be a lot of banter and
fun. That was easy as we got along like a house on fire, often ending up on
the same side of a debate as our thoughts on cricket and life are so alike.
TOUGH COOKIE
Steve Waugh
Steve Waugh, a few years my junior in both age and cricketing vintage, was
one of the toughest blokes I encountered on the field. In a long and
distinguished career, he performed far above what most people thought he
would, simply because he was mentally so tough.
Like his first captain, Allan Border, Steve’s determination and
willingness to go to any length to succeed were his biggest assets. He had a
never-say-die attitude and wore his ambition on his sleeve, uncaring about
what anyone else thought.
I played a lot against Steve, not just in international cricket, but also in the
English county circuit where he was a pro for Somerset. We were both young
then, and I found him to be a hardcore competitor. He would mutter things
under his breath at rivals even then, hoping verbal volleys would distract
them. He kept up the sledging throughout his career, but, like most Aussie
cricketers, didn’t carry grudges beyond the field.
He was not as outgoing with opponents as the late Dean Jones, also part
of the young brigade nursed by Border into international eminence. Deano
would readily spend time in the opponents’ dressing room after a day’s play.
Steve was reserved and would open up only with a few. Many cricketers on
the circuit found him aloof and self-absorbed. I found him easy to talk to once
the ice was broken when we were playing county cricket. Perhaps this was
because we belonged to the same age group. Also, playing as an overseas
pro has challenges, and sharing experiences was of mutual benefit.
My introduction to Steve had come before I began playing county cricket.
It was on my first tour to Australia in 1986 that I heard about the Waugh
twins, Steve and Mark, who were being spoken of very highly in cricket
circles Down Under. The Waugh brothers, in fact, were being compared to
the Chappell brothers. Those were mighty boots to fill. The contribution of
Ian and Greg Chappell to Australian cricket would fill up a library. Not
unexpectedly, there was a fair amount of scepticism about Steve and Mark
too.
In his debut Test, against us at Melbourne in 1985, Steve couldn’t make an
impact. He fell victim to Laxman Sivaramakrishnan’s delivery in the first
innings for 13 and, in the second, I bowled him round his legs for 5. I recall
his bewildered look after the ball hit the stumps. But he recovered his
composure quickly, and walked off with a steely expression to suggest there
would be days when he would get my better.
Not every young cricketer, however talented, can succeed or sustain
initial success at the highest level. To survive a long career, requires grit,
determination and ambition in huge measure. That Steve went on to play for
almost a decade and a half after that shows mental toughness and strength of
character to succeed.
Steve came into his own in the 1987 World Cup as an all-rounder.
Mentored by Border, who had played often enough in the subcontinent to
know the pitches and conditions, he became a foil to the fast bowlers,
bowling medium-paced cutters with immaculate control, so much so that he
was used by Border in the death overs. He made an impact with bat and ball
in the two league matches we played, though his best performance was
against Pakistan in the semi-final, where his gutsy, aggressive hitting in the
end overs proved to be the difference between the two teams.
The next big step was in succeeding as a batsman in England. Coping with
swing and seam movement, sometimes for two or three days, is the stiffest
test for overseas batsmen. It’s in contrast to the conditions in Australia,
where pitches have more bounce, though not so much lateral movement. Runs
didn’t come to him on a platter. He had to work hard on technical adjustments
for the softer English pitches, but over time he established himself as the
most reliable, if not the best, batsman in those conditions.
Waugh’s captaincy record is quite remarkable. By the time Mark Taylor
retired, the Aussies were the best side in the world. But even the best set of
players needs to be held together by a strong man at the top. Steve was not
the most liked in his own team, but became one of the most successful
captains, which reflects well as much on the Aussie ethos as his own
leadership abilities. His personal batting form ensured there would be no
upheavals.
Not as naturally gifted as his twin, Mark, Steve made up for it with fierce
determination. Mark’s biggest asset was his wonderful hands, in batting and
fielding; Steve’s was mental toughness. In a crisis, his resolve to succeed
would get even stronger. If I have to pay money to watch, it would be for
Mark, but if I have to depend on someone to save my life, I’d pick Steve.
FAST FRIENDS
Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh
Of the eleven Test centuries I’ve scored, the one which gave me most
satisfaction was the 107 against West Indies at Barbados in 1989. It nudges
ahead of my maiden century against Pakistan in 1982-83 and the double
century against Australia at Sydney in 1991-92 simply for the challenges
involved. The Kensington Oval in those days was still fiery, the raucous
crowd was braying for our heads while we battled to put up a decent score in
the second innings against an attack that boasted Malcolm Marshall, Ian
Bishop, Curtly Ambrose and Courtney Walsh. I have never felt so intimidated
while batting.
Macko, of course, was the best fast bowler I’ve played. He was in his
element on his home ground, and being egged on by hysterical fans to go past
Lance Gibbs’s record of 309 wickets. Ian Bishop was the quickest among
West Indies’ fast bowlers then, a strapping young man who bowled excellent
lines and a superb outswinger. It’s a pity that his career ended prematurely
because of injury for he looked destined to become an all-time great,
following in the footsteps of Andy Roberts, Michael. Holding, Joel Garner
and Macko. Like this great quartet, he had a quiet demeanour on the field, and
a mean hunger for wickets.
Walsh and Ambrose were relative newcomers. Hailing from Jamaica,
Walsh was touted as successor to the great Michael Holding. He was tall,
athletic and his run up, if not as silken as Holding’s, was smooth and pleasing
to the eye. He had made his debut in 1984 and, with the old guard barring
Macko fading away, was just about coming into his own. Ambrose was from
Antigua like Andy Roberts. He was a rookie, having debuted only a season
earlier. He was very dissimilar to Roberts in physique and bowling style:
skyscraper tall, not genuinely quick but fast-medium and not reputed to be
very hostile.
The thinking in our dressing room was that if we could see off Macko and
Bishop, we would have a fair chance in the match. Our thinking was wrong.
Though Bishop took 6 wickets in our first innings and Macko took 5 in the
second, Walsh and Ambrose kept things so tight when the two main wicket-
takers were off the attack that we had no respite.
To score substantial runs against the West Indies in those days, you had to
steel yourself to bat four or five hours. These guys gave nothing for free.
Batting for so long involved taking some blows on the body, arms, etc. I
batted for more than four hours for the century, but I can’t remember a single
loose delivery from either bowler. I played most deliveries off my chest, and
they weren’t even bowling short!
We could score only 251 in the second innings; West Indies won by eight
wickets to take the lead in the series, which they eventually won 3–0. By that
time, both these bowlers had ensured their places in the Test team. Within a
year or so, they had become the leading bowlers for the West Indies. When
they retired, Ambrose and Walsh were regarded as among the best fast-
bowling pairs in the history of the game.
Looking back, I’d say they rank among the top ten of all time for their
economy and strike rate, and the number of wickets they took and matches
they won. They were a study in contrast as fast bowlers, but together made a
tough pair to face.
Ambrose could drop the ball on a penny anywhere in the world – such was
his accuracy, control and ability to adjust length swiftly. He had a smooth run
up, but his great height enabled him to get tremendous bounce from any pitch.
This was the key to his success. He gave batsmen no leeway, forcing them
into mistakes whenever they tried something adventurous. After all, you can’t
remain runless for eternity. And even if your defence was rock solid, an
unplayable delivery would be just around the corner.
Ambrose was an enigma, calm and phlegmatic even during a torrid spell,
hardly betraying any emotion. He would go about his job like a thorough
professional, but if you rattled him and if he got angry there was a heavy
price to pay – as the late Dean Jones, and even the English team, realized on
several occasions. A riled-up Ambrose would blow like a typhoon.
Remember the match against Australia at Perth when he took 7 wickets for 1
run in a spell? If a bowler has this kind of ability, to pick up 5–7 wickets in a
few overs, my advice to the prudent is to not provoke him.
All told, Ambrose was a champion fast bowler, an unsmiling assassin
always preying on batsmen, sometimes on a short fuse. Who would have
thought that after retiring, he would become a guitarist in a rock band and
play in nightclubs in Antigua! An iconoclast if ever there was one!
Courtney Walsh walks into the Hall of Fame for the number of wickets he’s
taken as well as the sheer longevity of his career. He was an outstanding
bowler who absorbed the pressure of bowling a humongous number of overs
all over the world without ever losing his cool. At most, you’d see an
eyebrow go up, as if perplexed at the unfairness of a situation.
With over 500 wickets, Walsh – the first bowler to get past the milestone
– occupies a special place in the pantheon of bowling greats. He was unlike
most of the other West Indies fast bowlers I played. They were all wicket-
takers used in short bursts, but Walsh was a workhorse; he never tired.
Because the supply of fine West Indies fast bowlers had dwindled somewhat
by then, Walsh actually did the work of two. This was most admirable. Even
in conditions which gave little help, he kept coming at you, over after over
with consistent pace and hostility, not saving himself an ounce of energy, not
ceding an inch to the batsman.
He could surprise batsmen on any surface. They might think that he was
slackening just a little bit, when, suddenly, he would surprise them with a
delivery that erupted from just short of a length. I’ve been at the receiving
end a fair number of times. My counsel to myself and my batting partners was
always, ‘Watch out for this guy when he looks the most spent.’
Above all, Walsh deserves credit for captaining the West Indies team with
distinction. He was a great ambassador for the game too, and his choosing to
not run out Saleem Jaffar in the 1987 World Cup is testimony to how he saw
and played the game.
Walsh and Ambrose were the last great pair of West Indies fast bowlers.
Hopefully, a new generation will take the helm soon, for losing both players
almost simultaneously cost the team heavily. In a way, this was also Brian
Lara’s bad luck. Imagine if these two had been around with Brian in full
form!
Walsh and Ambrose were a splendid pair of bowlers and good friends
too. I was keen to catch up with them when we toured the West Indies in
2019. Walsh came over for a drink and we reminisced about old times over a
few pints. Ambrose was held up somewhere else and couldn’t make it, but I
hope to held up with him one of these days, and show him a few spots on my
arms and ribs where I was hit by the pair of them. The bruises have gone, but
the memory exists.
HEART-THROB OF A BILLION
Sachin Tendulkar
Sachin Tendulkar enjoys Don Bradman-like stature in the game. I’d say
probably greater in terms of influence, given that the times he played in saw
the cricket universe expanding to numerous countries and becoming a
multibillion-dollar industry.
Apart from making Indian cricket strong, relevant and lucrative, Sachin
was the most talismanic player and biggest ambassador internationally in this
period of growth. His batting exploits and his endearing persona made him
cricket’s biggest draw. The BCCI certainly had to expand the dimensions of
its coffers because of his enormous appeal!
A player’s mettle is determined not by runs and centuries they make in a
brief productive phase, but longevity of career. Cricket history is replete
with those who hit a purple patch for a few years but couldn’t sustain at the
same level thereafter. The truly great have the remarkable ability to maintain
a high level of excellence for a decade or more, with very few troughs.
Sachin’s international career was monumental, lasting twenty-four years. I
am loath to compare him with former greats who had similar tenures in
international cricket – certainly not Bradman, who undoubtedly represents
the pinnacle of batsmanship. Different eras throw up different challenges, and
players should be assessed accordingly. Modern batsmen have a couple of
distinct advantages in that they don’t have to play on uncovered pitches and
have fantastic protective gear, without which their struggle would be greater.
On the other hand, their predecessors didn’t have to prove themselves in
different formats, which requires versatility in skills, or travel to so many
countries so often, and therefore, adapt and adjust to different conditions.
All things considered, sustained excellence comes only to a few. Sachin
stands at the very top in this exclusive cluster. Add to this the persistent and
humungous pressure of the expectations of a billion-plus obsessive fans, and
his batting exploits acquire an extraordinary dimension. Indians adore their
cricket heroes, but are also unforgiving to those who fail to meet their
expectations. Sachin was unfazed by this onus and hardly ever failed in his
long career, which is mind-boggling.
He seemed special from the time I first saw him. Prolific run-scoring as a
schoolboy got him into the headlines. Word travels fast on the Bombay
cricket circuit and I was eager to see first-hand how good Sachin was. What
I saw impressed me immediately. He had so much time to play shots. He was
making tall scores too, which reflected both appetite and aptitude.
He made his Test debut in Pakistan in 1989 when only sixteen. When most
boys are still growing physically and tackling teenage troubles, Sachin was
battling against Imran Khan, Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis with
considerable skill and, more importantly, a big heart. In the team, we were
all excited about the youngster’s talent, and also curious to see how he would
fare at the highest level. Not every promising youngster goes on to become a
successful cricketer. Progress from the junior to senior level comes with
many hurdles, the main one being self-doubt.
However, I don’t think self-doubt featured in Sachin’s mind at all. He
exuded confidence from day one and was an eager learner, wanting to get
better and better with every match. Early on the tour, he came and asked me if
he was being too hasty in playing shots. Perhaps a tad too much was my
sense, for he wanted to dominate bowlers as soon as he came in. My advice
to him was to always be positive, but understand conditions and bowlers
first, give them respect till you have got your eye in, and then take over. He
finished the Pakistan tour with two Test half-centuries.
Less than a year later, he saved us a Test match at Old Trafford with fine
technical skills and a steely temperament. His ability to absorb pressure and
hardship without flinching was remarkable, especially at that stage in his
career. It was against Australia in 1991-92, though, that Sachin took giant
steps towards becoming the master batsman everybody now acknowledges.
Watching him from 22 yards away as we put up a partnership of just under
200 at the Sydney Cricket Ground in the 1991-92 Test, I realized how
enormously gifted he was. His technique was purer than anything I’d seen in
somebody so young. Everything was out of a coaching manual, or better.
He had a strong streak of defiance in him then. I was having a constant
powwow with the Aussie bowlers while getting to my double century and
was actually enjoying their needling because it only made me more
determined. Soon, Sachin was also being targeted. ‘Don’t worry, I’ll also
give it to them,’ he told me matter-of-factly in Marathi.
I told him not to bother, to just concentrate and ignore the distraction. He
did that, raising the bar even higher as he hit Merv Hughes and Craig
McDermott with power and precision. Once Allan Border and Co. realized
the sledging was actually having the opposite effect on the youngster, it
quickly stopped.
In the last Test of the series, we suffered a massive defeat on a fiery Perth
pitch, but Sachin’s masterful 114 in the first innings became the highlight of
the match. The manner in which he flayed the strong Aussie attack, rising on
his toes for back foot cover drives or cuts belied his relative inexperience
and revealed his class.
I rate it as among the top three of his fifty-one Test hundreds. After that
innings, he made the number four spot in the Indian batting order his very
own. Within only a couple of years in international cricket, Sachin had made
an indelible impact on the game. The question now was not whether he was
as good as his early potential suggested, but how far he would go?
I won’t go into details of his career as these are widely known. The
quality of his batsmanship was superb. Technically, I would rate him
Gavaskar’s equal among all the batsmen I’ve seen: an almost impenetrable
defence, impeccable judgement of line and length, strong off front foot and
back, decisive in his footwork, possessing every stroke in the book, knowing
which ball to hit, and consistency in run-scoring wherever he played. Add to
that a fantastically composed mind that could not be flustered easily; in fact,
it fed on challenges. In limited-overs cricket, he showed a keen sense for
improvisation to go with classical, orthodox batting. I think playing as an
opener in ODIs helped Sachin immensely even in Tests. It kept his reflexes
sharp and was instrumental in him playing for so long.
The race for batting honours with the likes of Brian Lara, Ricky Ponting,
Rahul Dravid, Jacques Kallis, Inzamam-ul-Haq and Kevin Pietersen, among
others, kept his competitive juices flowing and enriched the game.
My career ended in 1994 and I shifted quickly into the broadcast universe
after meeting Mark Mascarenhas of WorldTel, who I then introduced to
Sachin. I’m glad Mark had the vision to take charge of the young player’s
career. He was like a father figure to Sachin, and saw in his talent and mass
appeal a way to make cricket grow exponentially. Unfortunately, Mark died
in a car accident in early 2002. But the brief partnership between him and
Sachin had gone a long way in redefining Indian cricket.
Sachin’s career reads like a fairy tale. He hardly put a foot wrong from
his teens till he retired at forty. He was masterly with the bat, and dignified in
whatever he did on and off the field. To remain controversy-free for over
twenty-five years in the public eye is impossible to imagine, especially
amidst the noise and din of Indian cricket.
Because runs and centuries appeared to come so easily to him, the hard
effort – physical and mental – behind them is often glossed over. But anybody
who’s played the game at the highest level will tell you that nothing comes as
a freebie; everything has to be earned.
Six attempts at the World Cup are proof of Sachin’s perseverance. So
many great players have never seen a World Cup title. He never gave up and
was finally rewarded when India won the title in 2011. By the time he retired
a couple of seasons later, Sachin had all the batting records one could think
of.
Pint-sized in physical stature, but a colossus all the same.
THUNDERBOLT UNLEASHED
Waqar Younis
Fast bowlers are most dangerous when they hunt in pairs. The West Indies in
the 1980s went a step ahead and used a four-man pace attack that earned
them unchecked success. But this was an aberration. To have so many
bowlers of similar wicket-taking quality in all conditions is an act of fortune.
Generally, if a team has even two incisive fast bowlers – and a spinner or
two in support – it will win more matches than lose. Ray Lindwall–Keith
Miller, Fred Trueman–Brian Statham, Dennis Lillee–Jeff Thomson and, in
recent times, James Anderson–Stuart Broad are some of the great pairs that
have made a huge difference to the results of the matches they’ve played in.
They’ve also made fast bowling thrilling to watch, though the batsmen who
faced these bowlers would not have felt as enthusiastic.
I’ve held back one pair from the list above; I can’t make up my mind if
this wasn’t the most destructive combination ever. Since there’s no yardstick
by which an answer to this can be found, I’ll take the easy way out: in my
time, there was no deadlier duo than Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis.
I’ve already mentioned how Wasim was the best fast bowler I had faced
after Malcolm Marshall. In the cluster of great fast bowlers, Waqar isn’t too
far behind either. When the two bowled from opposite ends, it was a furious
assault of pace, swing, yorkers and bouncers that left little scope for batsmen
to escape.
I remember one match, in particular, between Pakistan and England at the
Oval in 1992. Even on TV, their bowling was breathtaking. Wasim cleaned
up the England batting in the first innings, taking 6 wickets, while Waqar
blew away the top order in the second innings in which he took 5 wickets.
Between them, they took 15 wickets in the match; England lost by 10 wickets.
In this partnership, Waqar was not a foil to Wasim but an equal. In fact,
for the first few years after they came together, he was perhaps feared more
because of his greater pace and hostility, which began with his long, sprinting
– and somewhat menacing – run up. Firing thunderbolts with late swing that
crushed the toes and souls of batsmen, Waqar was often unplayable at his
peak in the 1990s. Again, because he was essentially a swing bowler, his
success was not dependent on the pitch.
Waqar made his Test debut against us at Karachi, the same match in which
Sachin Tendulkar too made his entry into international cricket. There was a
great deal of interest around these two young players who had already built a
reputation for themselves.
Imran Khan, always on the lookout for new talent, had fast-tracked Waqar
into the Pakistan team and there was a buzz when the young bowler took the
field for the first Test. The entire Indian team was in the porch of the dressing
room to see him take the new ball because of what we had heard about him.
Waqar was tearaway quickie then and picked up four wickets in the first
innings, but he didn’t yet have the same control or swing that was to make
him so dreaded a few years later. With Imran as mentor and Wasim as
colleague, he improved by leaps and bounds.
While both could work up furious pace – Waqar more so when he was
younger, and Wasim almost throughout his career – they were of contrasting
styles, and not just because one bowled left-handed and the other right.
Wasim was more slippery because of his action, which camouflaged the ball,
not allowing the batsman to read what delivery might come up next. He had a
quick arm action, was a master of late movement either way and his bouncers
were vicious.
Waqar was nastily fast, steaming in off a long run up, every stride adding
to his aggression. He had a slightly round-arm action, which made his short-
pitched deliveries less dangerous than Wasim’s. His forte was pitching a
fullish length, allowing optimum scope for late movement. The pace at which
Waqar bowled also meant that batsmen, perforce, had to make a very late
call on how to play the swing. At his peak, he was probably the greatest
exponent of inswing. His ability to curve the ball in late, like a hissing snake,
was unbelievable and left in its wake many a shattered stump and tattered
reputation.
When in full flight, a great sight, best seen batting from the other end or,
even better, from the safety of the dressing room.
TWINKLING FOOTWORK,
DAZZLING STROKES
Brian Lara
Brian Lara and Sachin Tendulkar were the two best batsmen of their
generation. This has been said so often as to have become a cliché, but it’s
true. I followed their entire careers, as a fellow player initially and then as a
commentator – and believe me, it is very, very tough to choose between the
two.
Being contemporaries helped both batsmen as they fed off each other’s
achievements, and inspired each other to greater heights. This also helped
cricket become a bigger spectacle and expanded the fan base for the sport
worldwide. Both had immense pride in their own ability, and the race for
batting supremacy produced many thrilling moments and memorable knocks.
Even when they were playing other opponents, the Sachin v Lara rivalry
never ceased.
While both were geniuses with the bat and notched up those several
thousand runs each, Sachin and Lara had some key dissimilarities. One was
right-handed, the other left-handed. Sachin was immersed in classically
orthodox technique, punctuated with amazing improvisations in limited-overs
cricket, whereas Lara was bursting with exotic Caribbean flair that always
set the pulse racing in any format.
I’ll cease the comparison here and focus on Lara, who not only lived up
to the wonderful legacy of West Indies stroke players, but left his own mark
to match that of the likes Frank Worrell, Everton Weekes and Clyde Walcott,
Gary Sobers, Rohan Kanhai, Viv Richards, Gordon Greenidge and Clive
Lloyd.
Lara first caught my eye in 1989 when we were touring the West Indies.
He was playing for the Under-23 team and made 182 sparkling runs against
us at St. Kitts island. Yet, I can’t recall him hitting one ball in the air! Despite
being so young, his use of feet to our spinners was incredible, especially so
since our attack included leg spinner Narendra Hirwani, who had taken 16
wickets on his Test debut just the previous season, and off-spinners Arshad
Ayub and M. Venkataramana.
Belying his inexperience, Lara treated them all with utter disdain, almost
as if this was some friendly club-level match. I wasn’t in the playing XI, but I
didn’t miss a single minute of his knock, so compelling, such a joy he was to
watch.
Even at that early stage in his career, his genius was evident in his
strokes. Lara’s flowing drives came with a high backlift and an equally
flamboyant follow up, the cuts were fierce and timed to perfection, and he
pulled with quicksilver footwork to get into the right position. We were all
surprised when he couldn’t break into the West Indies team in that series.
Lara seldom needed to hit the ball in the air to score at a rapid pace. He
mitigated the risk element, but was supremely adept at picking gaps in the
field – which explains why he could make such tall scores throughout his
career. His splendid timing would send the ball to the fence ‘like a tracer
bullet’, to use my favourite phrase. In his Test career, he did employ the
lofted stroke frequently, but judiciously, ensuring he cleared the fence or the
field when he did so.
Though he made thousands of runs against pace, the hallmark of Lara’s
batsmanship for me was how he played spin. One normally expects West
Indian batsmen to be masters against fast bowling, but this guy was a maestro
against slow bowlers on difficult pitches in their own den. I haven’t seen
anybody play slow bowling better.
He would dance down the track with twinkling footwork, taking swift and
precise steps to the pitch of the ball, in defence or attack. Being a naturally
attacking batsman, more often than not, it was the latter. That he scored more
than 600 runs against Muttiah Muralitharan at his peak in Sri Lanka in 2001
is testimony to Lara’s prowess against spin even on pitches that afforded
sharp turn. No other batsman has scored as many runs in three Tests
anywhere in the subcontinent. Murali took 24 wickets in that series, which
puts Lara’s ‘one-man show’ into perspective.
On his day, Lara was a spectator’s delight and an opponent’s nightmare
because he would be impossible to contain. In fact, Lara posed a serious
challenge to commentators too, because he could exhaust your vocabulary,
phrases and imagery soon after taking to the field.
Look at those Himalayan scores: 501 not out, 400 not out, 375, nine
double centuries, two triple centuries … Gosh!
A true-blue genius. Enough said.
SUPREME SOLOIST
Sanath Jayasuriya
Sanath Jayasuriya transformed the face of one-day cricket batting during the
1996 World Cup. He was a brilliant stroke player and several of his innings
were breathtaking. I’ve been on air on quite a few occasions when he’s
batted, struggling to find words which would adequately describe the tenor
of his innings as he went about slamming fours and sixes with complete
disdain.
One such knock was against Pakistan in Singapore in 1996. Jayasuriya
took the bowling – which included Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis and Shoaib
Akhtar – to the cleaners, getting his century in just 48 balls! In the 2003
World Cup, we would see something similar when Sachin Tendulkar and
Virender Sehwag turned the heat on these bowlers. However, Sachin and
Viru were world renowned for their stroke play. In 1996, Jayasuriya hardly
commanded the same attention, and his furious, world-record-setting innings
took everyone by surprise.
Jayasuriya’s record was broken by fifteen-year-old Shahid Afridi a mere
seven months later as Pakistan exacted revenge on the Sri Lankans for the
trauma in Singapore. Sandwiched in between these centuries was the World
Cup, which brought Sri Lanka its highest cricketing accolade, and Jayasuriya
into the limelight.
The Singapore century was to be the precursor to his supercharged batting
in the World Cup. Martin Crowe had innovated with a pinch-hitting opener in
the 1992 World Cup. In a stunning masterstroke, captain Arjuna Ranatunga
opened with two in 1996.
Small-made wicketkeeper Romesh Kaluwitharana, who batted right-hand,
joined the left-handed Jayasuriya in a move which surprised many, including
me. Ranatunga was taking a big risk. But over the next few weeks, as the
opening pair created pandemonium with their unrestrained, aggressive
batting, it became clear that the captain knew what he was doing. He had
worked it out correctly that the subcontinental pitches in the 1996 World Cup
would be batsmen-friendly, even in pace and bounce, and full of runs.
Moreover, the white ball, now in use in ODIs, did not get quite the same
movement, which mitigated the risk of extravagant stroke play.
More than technical ability and stuff, however, what matters in such
situations is the captain’s faith. Ranatunga did not give Jayasuriya and
Kaluwitharana the licence to fail; rather, he gave them the confidence to
succeed. Together they powered through some of the best bowling attacks in
the world and helped Sri Lanka notch up a spectacular World Cup win.
At his best, Jayasuriya was virtually impossible to contain. Strong
forearms helped him get strength from a shortish backlift, and tough wrists
gave the ball direction to beat the field. Since he had a penchant for playing
lofted shots, fielders, more often than not, became superfluous. He was brutal
with his cuts, pulls and hooks, latching on to even the smallest mistake in
length or line with explosive strokes, the sounds of which would resonate
round the stadium and leave bowlers crestfallen.
From the 1996 World Cup, Jayasuriya went from strength to strength. He
lost Kalu as a partner, but found a niche for himself as a supreme soloist,
able to win matches off his own bat, and sometimes with the ball too. Again,
strong fingers to complement powerful arms, shoulders and wrists, helped
him get the ball to rip and bounce off pitches where other spinners
occasionally struggled.
He wasn’t only a limited-overs specialist: fourteen Test centuries,
including a mammoth 340 against India, show how good he could be in the
longest format too. But he was at his most dangerous and exhilarating best in
the shorter formats. A match-winner who helped his country rise to the top.
SUPER HIT
Inzamam-ul-Haq
There have been several brilliant fielders in cricket, but none with the
electrifying appeal of Jonty Rhodes. He transformed this aspect of the game –
otherwise not spoken of in the same breath as batting and bowling – forever
with his deeds.
Jonty made fielding sexy and spectacular. He came to prominence in the
1991-92 World Cup when he ran out Inzamam-ul-Haq with a direct hit while
still airborne. South Africa did not win the Cup, did not even reach the final,
but Inzy’s run-out became the abiding image of the tournament.
After making a huge impact in the World Cup, Jonty announced himself in
the Test arena with another sensational effort, of which I have first-hand
experience. India’s first Test in the 1993 series against South Africa was at
Durban. The third umpire was brought in for the first time in the game, and
many of us wondered if this wasn’t too gimmicky and encroached on the
relevance of the actual contest between bat and ball. We would know soon.
Sachin Tendulkar and I were batting together. He played a ball to point
and I remember shouting ‘No!’ from the non-striker’s end at the top of my
voice, because I could see Jonty lurking at point. Alas, it was too late. Sachin
had barely stepped a yard or so outside his crease for a single when Jonty
swooped down on the ball and, in a flash, hit the stumps with a direct throw.
Sachin, a fine runner between wickets, had barely started retracing his steps.
The entire sequence of dismissal couldn’t have taken more than a couple
of seconds. Jonty’s speed and accuracy stunned everybody on the field. Even
the umpires weren’t sure. They went up to the third umpire for a referral.
Sachin was found out of his crease. Thirty years later, I think I was lucky in
not going for the single as I would have been run out by miles.
Thereafter, we were not only wary of Jonty, but, if truth be told, scared of
him. Even if he was positioned a little deeper, we would avoid taking a run if
the ball was hit in his direction. If the ball went past him, we settled for a
single instead of attempting a risky second run. Mind you, we were playing a
South African team that was renowned for its fielding prowess. But none of
them had the same impact as Jonty. He put the fear of god in batsmen.
What put him a couple of notches higher than other great outfielders of my
time – perhaps in the history of the game – was his uncanny anticipation. If
you were playing off the back foot, he would be 3–4 yards towards the ball
almost before you had even completed your stroke.
Having heels on wheels can give you speed, which is not to be scoffed at.
But anticipation is something else. It is instinctive and intuitive. When allied
to speed in running, it makes for deadly ability. This is what made Jonty into
a global star.
WHITE LIGHTNING
Allan Donald
Allan Donald was lightning quick. Let me amend that a bit; he was
frighteningly quick! South Africa – like Australia, England, West Indies (for
a long while) and Pakistan – has a tradition of producing top-quality fast
bowlers, and Allan is arguably the best they’ve ever had. To take 330
wickets in seventy-two Tests at an average of 22-odd puts him in the league
of all-time greats.
Cricket historians will want to remind me about Peter Pollock from the
past and Dale Steyn in recent years. There is no denying that these two are
phenomenal fast bowlers, as borne out amply by their career statistics. But
having faced Allan in his prime in 1992-93, I can’t see any other South
African bowler ahead of him.
As a side, we were always wary of Allan, who had come into the series
with a mighty reputation forged in county cricket. Before the Tests began, a
great deal of our discussions and planning centred on how to thwart him
particularly. Our new coach then was Ajit Wadekar, no mean batsman against
pace in his day, and he spent long hours trying to impress on us how to tackle
this looming menace.
But theory is one thing. The proof of the pudding is in the playing. And, in
this case, also in the suffering! Throughout that series, Allan haunted us like
few fast bowlers had done. The pitches weren’t particularly pacy or bouncy,
yet in four tests he managed to get 20 wickets at an average below 20. He
was that quick in the air!
Athletic and supremely fit, Allan covered a longish run up at full throttle.
Legs like tree trunks gave him the traction to balance his delivery stride,
honed over years of county cricket, perfectly. He put all his strength into his
arm, shoulders and back for the delivery.
In that series in 1992-93, we didn’t see him using too many variations. He
didn’t need them. He just ramped up speed and hit the spot slightly short of
length – not easy to drive nor easy to play horizontal bat strokes –
relentlessly, and kept us hopping and hoping. He was at his fastest and
destructive best in the third Test at Port Elizabeth, picking up 12 wickets in
the match on a slow pitch. But for a breathtaking, counter-attacking century
by Kapil Dev, we would have finished under 100 instead of making 215,
with Allan getting 7 wickets.
I first heard of Allan when playing for Glamorgan. Rodney Ontong from
South Africa was a fellow pro at the county. One day, he mentioned there
was a young kid from his country who wanted to bowl to us in the nets. I’d
just returned from a fairly successful tour (for myself, as a batsman) of the
West Indies in 1989, and was familiar with playing extreme pace. This
possibly made me a trifle casual in the nets, and I found myself being tested
severely by this young lad, who was bowling as fast Malcolm Marshall, Ian
Bishop and Courtney Walsh.
Word about the young fast bowler spread rapidly on the circuit. Next
season, Allan was snapped up by Warwickshire as an overseas recruit. The
relationship lasted his entire career. I had asked Ontong later why he let
Allan go to another county. I think he still regrets that.
Allan’s transition from county to international cricket was smooth. I think
he was yearning to be on the big stage, and prove himself against the best
batsmen and teams. The break came at the right time for him. He was just
about twenty-five when South Africa was reinstated as a Test nation in 1991
in international cricket. Further delay could have killed Allan’s career and
cost the game a great luminary.
For fast bowlers to succeed, their mental make-up should be right. They
must be aggressive at all times, and this should be communicated effectively
to batsmen; not through sledging or confrontation, but through speed, control
and accuracy.
Allan was not guileful. He enjoyed bowling quick, and knew early on that
he made the most impact with this. He was at batsmen all the time. A slightly
square-on action made him very difficult to face, even more so when he went
a little wide of the crease, slanting the ball back into the batsman, often
chasing him.
Allan was the key man in South Africa beating India in that Test series,
the first ever between the two countries. It was called the Friendship Series.
His approach was anything but. As the next decade would show, he enjoyed
scalping not just Indians, but players of all nationalities.
KING OF SPIN
Shane Warne
Shane Warne is the best spinner I’ve seen. Hang on, I’ll extend the scope of
that statement. He is perhaps the best spinner the game’s ever seen. He may
not have the record for the highest number of Test wickets, but what he could
do with ball in his hand was magical and was the reason for many of
Australia’s victories in his era.
Some part of this praise comes from my own experience of playing
against Warne. He made his debut in the Sydney Test against us in 1992,
where both Sachin Tendulkar and I got centuries. Warne got only one wicket
in the match, mine, after I had made 206, but this didn’t stop him from giving
me a dramatic ‘send off’ and pointing towards the pavilion disdainfully.
His bowling figures in that match were terribly unflattering – 1–150 – but
you would have never guessed this from his demeanour on the field. He had a
sharp tongue, as brash rookies – especially Aussie – usually do. But I
realized during that innings itself that Warne had a sharp mind too.
He enjoyed mental jousts with batsmen from the beginning of his career,
and his battle with Sachin – who was a few years younger than him, though a
few years his senior in international cricket – was something I enjoyed
watching from the other end. It would be dishonest of me to claim that I knew
exactly how the careers of Sachin and Warne would play out, but I could
sense their latent greatness even then. The young leg spinner hadn’t had a
productive debut, but there was no doubting his chutzpah.
At the post-match presentation ceremony, where I got the Man of the
Match award for my double hundred, Warne walked past me, chest still
puffed out, though it looked likely he might be dropped for the next Test. I
found his positive attitude admirable. Holding him back briefly, I told Warne
not to be disheartened, that he’d bowled really well and would be getting 6–
7 wickets in an innings in the future for bowling far worse. Sure enough, he
got 7–52 against West Indies soon after he had regained the favour of the
selectors.
The turning point in Warne’s career was getting Mike Gatting’s wicket
with the ‘Ball of the Century’ at Old Trafford in the first Test of the 1993
Ashes series. By then, Warne had proven himself in Sri Lanka and New
Zealand as well as at home, and had become an integral member of the team.
Nothing stirs the imagination of fans and critics in Australia and England
like the Ashes series and those who succeed in this contest. Gatting’s wicket,
which spurred Australia to a series win, also put Warne into the spotlight.
While this made him world famous overnight, it also put him under
immense pressure. Apart from handling his new-found celebrity status, a task
in itself, he would no longer be assessed by the earlier yardstick as a bowler;
he’d changed the benchmark for himself. This can be very demanding on a
young player. There are plenty of precocious young cricketers – batsmen and
bowlers – who have fizzled out after a brilliant start when put to the test by
opposing captains and players. Or because they couldn’t cope with the
pressure.
Warne, however, not only relished the attention, but saw it as motivation
to get better and better. His career after 1993 takes on an upward trajectory
that dipped but occasionally over the next fifteen years. Along with Glenn
McGrath, he formed a pace–spin duo that took Australian cricket to great
heights.
Skill itself can take a player only so far. It is the other attributes that make
a player truly great. What stood out for me was Warne’s temperament and
readiness to compete in any situation. He was very tough in the mind,
unwilling to ever give up. If the opposing side needed just a single to win a
match and Warne was thrown the ball, he would make the batsman earn it.
There were no gifts when he was bowling. Most of the half-volleys, full
tosses or half-pitchers he bowled were to try and seduce the batsman into
making errors.
Warne’s ability to read a pitch, a match situation and set up batsmen was
quite amazing. He was not only technically brilliant, but loved engaging in a
battle of wills with batsmen, out-thinking them, and leading them to their
doom. For this, control over line and length had to be impeccable. He was
not a restrictive bowler; leg spinners rarely are, but Warne could veer
towards the other extreme, of constantly attacking, not waiting to wear down
batsmen. His strong wrist and shoulder would help give the ball a rip that
few spinners have matched.
Most bowlers first experiment in the nets. Warne was unafraid to do this
during a match if he felt it would work. This made his repertoire of
deliveries inexhaustible. If he didn’t have one planned for a particular pitch
or situation, he would come up with one! Some of his deliveries would rate
among the best in the history of the game. These were instrumental in
changing the course of an innings (as happened most memorably in the 1996
World Cup semi-final against West Indies at Mohali), a Test and even a
series.
Warne’s track record in India, however, is not particularly impressive.
During the 1998 series, in particular, I thought Indian batsmen, especially
Sachin and Navjot Sidhu, thwarted him with excellent prior preparation, and
then took the attack to him, not allowing him to settle. Even in 2001, he was
still recovering from a shoulder injury and was below his best. Yet, he never
gave it away.
I loved watching Warne in the middle, and I’ve enjoyed sharing the mic
with him in the commentary box as much. He’s got the gift of the gab and also
a sharp mind. He can pick up nuances and trends in a match ahead of most,
and like my all-time favourite Aussie, Ian Chappell, is always looking to take
the game forward – as a player earlier, and now as an analyst. We share an
excellent rapport and our conversations have ranged from poker to porn, with
a lot of cricket in between!
Warne’s status in the game is that of a titan. At a time when it looked like
slow bowlers were becoming history, he, along with Muttiah Muralitharan
and Anil Kumble, helped revive spin bowling. At his best, he was pure
theatre, whether marking his run up or running in to bowl, or appealing for a
dismissal. He didn’t always succeed, but he managed to give batsmen
sleepless nights.
A larger-than-life character who embellished and enriched cricket
enormously.
INDIAN ATTACK’S LYNCHPIN
Anil Kumble
Sourav Ganguly ranks – quite rightly – among the most influential cricket
players, not just in India, but in the sport itself. He was made captain of the
Indian team at a very difficult time after the unsavoury match-fixing scam
broke in 2000. Indian cricket was in a shambles. Fans were understandably
angry and dejected. Considering the number of names that were tossed
around in the inquiries and the court cases that followed in different
countries, the reputation of the game was massively sullied.
Sourav was still a youngster, having made his debut only four years
earlier. To a lot of people on the outside, the BCCI’s decision to make him
captain didn’t seem too clever. Some fellow cricketers too felt this way. I
remember there was much cluck-clucking among former players when he was
chosen to lead the side.
What were the apprehensions? Sourav had had very little experience of
captaincy at that point in time. Moreover, he was emerging as a major
batsman and being handed over the captaincy in such a deep crisis would, it
was feared, affect his batting. Captaining the Indian team is always onerous,
and these were extraordinary circumstances.
Among the seniors in the team, Sachin Tendulkar had just resigned the
captaincy. Anil Kumble and Javagal Srinath had both been around for a
decade, but selectors everywhere in the world are reluctant to make frontline
bowlers captain. Rahul Dravid was the only other option. It was a toss-up
between the two. Sourav got the nod, and it proved to be a turning point in
Indian cricket.
For someone so young and inexperienced, Sourav handled the
responsibility with remarkable aplomb. Some players come into their own
when circumstances are most difficult. Sourav showed his mettle during his
captaincy, leading the team with confidence, imagination and flair. The first
Test series he captained was against Australia in 2001. The Aussies were on
the rampage in those days, having won sixteen Tests on the trot, before being
stopped by Sourav’s team. After losing the Mumbai Test, India were on the
ropes before the sensational turnaround in Kolkata. The team’s victory in
Chennai not only clinched the rubber, but also breathed new life into Indian
cricket.
I must rewind a bit and talk about my earliest impression of Sourav. We
were together on the tour of Australia in 1991-92. I was a decade old in
international cricket by then; he was a promising youngster whom many
people had spoken highly of. Unfortunately, Sourav didn’t get to play in any
of the five Tests on that tour. Shy and reserved, he kept largely to himself, or
spent time with Sachin with whom he had played at the junior level. He was
of slender build, but packed a lot of punch in his strokes when he played in
the nets. He always looked eager to make an impact, but with so many
established batsmen around, he failed to impress the tour selection
committee, even though we were struggling as a unit.
Apart from his batting, Sourav was also a handy medium-pacer, able to
swing and cut the ball, which caught my interest. I was representing the Tatas
in club cricket back home, and we were looking for an all-rounder of his
kind. I spoke about Sourav to the Tata cricket team management, and he was
soon recruited by the club.
For all the potential he showed so early, Sourav disappeared from the
national scene for a few years. But it hadn’t done his form any harm, as he
showed when he resurfaced on the radar of the national selectors. His skills
had been honed further, and he was also more mature, ready to make a mark
at the highest level.
With centuries in his first two Tests against England in 1996, he was off
to a galloping start in international cricket, making up for lost time with style
and determination. He fit into the Indian team smoothly, becoming a key
constituent in the formidable batting line-up that would emerge with Dravid,
V.V.S. Laxman and, later, Virender Sehwag joining Sachin.
One hardly need spend too many words on Sourav’s batting. He was an
elegant batsman, with offside strokes that were nothing short of majestic. His
arms flowed freely when he was playing off the front foot, and a strong
bottom hand would come in for those off the back foot. His penchant for
lofted shots in front of the wicket served him – and the team – excellently in
ODIs. He could clear the infield with ease, and batting at the top, made the
most of field restrictions. Along with Sachin, Sourav formed one of the great
opening partnerships in limited-overs cricket.
His lasting impact, of course, is as captain. He was a very good reader of
the game, and would get under the skin of opponents, which served him and
the team well, especially when playing at home. What stood out most was the
faith and the conviction he showed in the youngsters in the team. A whole
bunch of players who served India with distinction – Viru, Yuvraj Singh,
Harbhajan Singh, Zaheer Khan – started out and grew into match-winning
performers under his leadership. Captaincy is not just about tactics but also
trusting in talent.
My relationship with Sourav has often come under the spotlight. Our so-
called ‘differences’ have been chaat and bhelpuri for the media, which went
to town on them, especially because of the dynamics in selecting the chief
coach in 2016 and 2017. In fact, it was nothing more than two people seeing
the same situation differently.
SPIN WIZARD
Muttiah Muralitharan
Could Muttiah Muralitharan spin the ball even on glass? I don’t remember
when, but I did ask him this as a rhetorical question once. He didn’t answer,
but his quizzical look seemed to say, ‘Do you doubt this?’
Having watched Muralitharan bowl in several series and tournaments, in
both Tests and limited-overs cricket, from the commentary box, I can say,
without hesitation, that he was a genius. True, he bowled with a bent elbow,
and was subjected to severe scrutiny for his action, especially in the early
part of his career, but medical tests showed that the flex was natural, which
is good enough for me. This was a handicap and Muralitharan deserves
credit, not brickbats, for turning it into an advantage.
For a while, in the mid-1990s, when he was called out for chucking in
Australia, I thought his career might take a nosedive. But Muralitharan found
a staunch supporter and mentor in Arjuna Ranatunga, and survived that
trauma to become a champion bowler. He owes his former captain around
600 of his 800 Test wickets!
His career stats, which I checked recently, are astonishing. The strike rate
is 55, which is fantastic for a slow bowler. He’s taken 5 wickets in an
innings sixty-seven times and 10 wickets in a match on twenty-two
occasions, which is incredible! Against England at the Oval in 1998, he
picked up his career-best Test wicket haul of 16 wickets, 9 of which were in
the second innings (one batsman was run out). Barring Jim Laker, who got 19
wickets against Australia at Old Trafford in 1956, no other spinner has got so
many wickets in a match in England.
Muralitharan’s biggest strength was his ability to get turn on any surface.
Though an off-spinner, he could actually spin the ball both ways. With him,
the doosra was not the delivery which went through with the arm, holding its
line, but turned like a genuine leg break.
Over the years, subsequent bowlers have tried to acquire this skill, and,
among current spinners, Ravichandran Ashwin is a master at it. Even so,
Muralitharan was unique. He could use his wrist to bowl off-spin and fingers
to bowl leg spin! The flex in his arm enabled him to turn the ball on any pitch
and to a substantial degree. Normally, wrist spinners get more turn and
bounce, but Murali could surpass even them by using just his fingers.
Like all great bowlers of pace or spin, Murali’s mastery over line, length
and turn was impeccable. The last attribute is particularly important,
especially on pitches that afford help to slow bowlers. Too much turn is
actually counterproductive as it can take leg before wicket decisions out of
the equation.
But while accuracy and control are at the core of good spin bowling,
deception is at the heart of great spin bowling. This is what made Murali,
like the other genius Shane Warne, the nemesis of batsmen. He could make
the best batsmen double guess their decisions and entice them into error as if
this was routine work. Of course, it wasn’t. It’s just that Murali was a
wizard.
NO ESCAPE FOR BATSMEN
Glenn McGrath
Glenn McGrath was without doubt one of the most formidable fast bowlers
of his time. He was not of express pace, which meant that he had to develop
other weapons to pick up wickets. That he finished with 563 Test sticks at an
average of 21.6 shows just how good he was.
McGrath’s greatest strength was his control over line and length. This
might seem clichéd, but when one considers that he seldom faltered in these
attributes, whether playing in Australia, England, India, South Africa or
wherever else, it becomes remarkable.
Over 90 per cent of bowlers take time to adjust to pitches and conditions
in different countries. The rest who manage to do this swiftly are from the top
drawer. McGrath not only adjusted and adapted almost immediately, but was
also a serious wicket-taker in every cricket-playing country, which puts him
in the top 5 per cent in the history of the game.
His consistency was amazing. I’ve been behind the microphone for almost
all his matches against India – home and overseas – as well as ICC
tournaments, and marvelled at his superb technique and fierce commitment to
excellence. Over after over, match after match, series after series, he would
land on the right spot eight times out of ten. This shows how quickly he could
assess pitches, for no two 22-yard strips are identical even in the same
country, let alone the world. There wasn’t a single surface where you could
take him lightly. Even on a feather bed, he’d find the right length and line to
hold batsmen on a leash. If there was any juice in the track, batsmen were in
woe.
I’ve talked about control and consistency as his best virtues, but McGrath
also had ample skills. In fact, he was among those fast bowlers who could
swing the ball in the air as well as seam it off the pitch with equal facility,
not unlike the great Richard Hadlee. This combination of excellent swing and
seam bowling made him dangerous even though he lacked high pace.
Moreover, where fast bowlers tend to slacken their effort on slow pitches in
frustration, McGrath would revel in such conditions.
On sluggish tracks and in conditions unfavourable to fast bowlers, he
would introduce variations of pace and length with nagging accuracy, and
dismiss even well-set batsmen in conditions not favouring fast bowlers with
remarkable frequency. There would be no let-up in his aggression.
Another trait McGrath shared with Hadlee was utter professionalism.
Both were feisty and combustible. But while they could lose their temper
every now and then, they never let this affect their control. Many bowlers –
fast and slow – lose their cool if hit by batsmen for too many runs, or if a
fielder drops a catch, or if there is a lot of play and miss, with luck not going
their way. Their control slips and, with mounting anger, so does the prospect
of claiming wickets.
McGrath, like Hadlee, would recover swiftly from a bout of ill luck,
becoming even more resolute to get the better of the batsman. The pace
would go up a notch, control over length would become sharper, and the
batsman would be probed evermore. This kept opponents from getting under
his skin, especially after he became a major player and realized that getting
into scraps with batsmen was unnecessary. And if a scrap was inevitable,
he’d recover his wits quickly and bowl even better.
McGrath was a very intense competitor. He never yielded an inch, not
even when the match was petering out towards a draw. He loved big
matches. They would prime him up to play at his best. The more reputed the
batsman in front of him, the more motivated he would be and the harder he
would strive. His contests against Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara, the two
best batsmen at that point, are the stuff of legend.
In the 1999 World Cup, India had to beat Australia to stay alive in the
tournament, but McGrath got his main prey – Sachin – early, and the team
collapsed. In the 2003 World Cup, after Australia had posted a mammoth
total, India’s hopes had rested squarely on an in-form Sachin getting a big
score. McGrath felled the maestro in the very first over, snuffing out India’s
chances right at the beginning.
Australia has a long and rich tradition of producing great fast bowlers,
Ray Lindwall and Dennis Lillee among them. Glenn McGrath has certainly
earned the right to be placed on the same pedestal as these two.
STALLONE MEETS
SCHWARZENEGGER
Matthew Hayden
Matthew Hayden is not the kind of man you want to mess with on a cricket
field – or even in arm-wrestling. I am not slight of build, mind you, but
meeting this imposing specimen for the first time, even I felt puny.
Tall, barrel-chested, with a slim waist, big hands and arms, and legs like
tree trunks, he looked a cross between Stallone and Schwarzenegger, oozing
power from every inch of his massive frame. I could well imagine why
bowlers dreaded him in the middle.
I started paying serious attention to Hayden during Australia’s tour of
India in 2001. Some Aussie cricketers I was in touch with told me to watch
out for the big left-hander. ‘Powerful striker,’ said one. ‘The big threat to
your side,’ another cautioned. All of which seemed a trifle exaggerated at the
time.
Steve Waugh’s team, apart from the captain himself, boasted of his brother
Mark Waugh, Michael Slater, Justin Langer and upcoming youngster Ricky
Ponting – a clutch of fantastic batsmen. What could be so special about
Hayden? Moreover, several promising overseas batsmen had been bested on
slow turners.
By the end of the series, though, Hayden had scored the most runs from
either side. More than even the brilliant V.V.S. Laxman. What impressed was
that the Aussie left-hander not only played slow bowling well, but how
brilliantly he read and adjusted to the pitches to take the attack to the
spinners.
With his long reach, he used the sweep and slog-sweep brilliantly to
unsettle bowlers. Not since Graham Gooch had swept us out of the 1987
World Cup semi-final had an overseas batsman played this shot so
effectively. But while Gooch had done this in one match, Hayden did it in all
three Tests, clinching the series for his team almost single-handedly.
Only batsmen of very high calibre bat like this on subcontinental pitches.
For someone who grew up at the pacy Gabba to work out a way to master
spin on Indian pitches showed deep intent backed by a lot of hard work in the
nets and mental preparation. My view about Hayden was hastily revised.
Over the next few years, he went a few notches higher in my esteem,
particularly in 2002, when I was in South Africa on a commentary
assignment. Australia v South Africa does not have the romance of the Ashes,
nor the new-found competitive richness of Australia v India, but it is a
bitterly fought contest nonetheless.
Having high-quality fast bowlers in both teams means there is a lot of
aggro and bouncers involved. This series was played under a lot of tension
too. Hayden showed up marvellously in the rubber, taming an attack that had
Allan Donald, Makhaya Ntini, Jacques Kallis and André Nel. He batted with
supreme authority, and breathtaking strokes. Adam Gilchrist and Ponting
made a lot of runs too, but they benefited from Hayden’s dominant batting at
the top. In the two years that I had been following his career regularly, he had
shown adaptability, skill and toughness to succeed in all conditions.
Together with Virender Sehwag, Hayden was the most destructive and
intimidating opening batsman in the first decade of this century. Both batsmen
flayed bowling attacks all over the world, that too in brutal fashion, leaving
bowlers and opposing captains in despair. While it may have appeared from
the outside that they were slam-bang hitters, both worked out the percentages
of the shots they played very shrewdly. Theirs were calculated assaults, not
mindless slogging; the point of departure being that Viru had more bravado
while Hayden used more muscle. What separates sloggers from genuine
attacking batsmen is the latter’s consistency in scoring and performance in
big innings. Both these batsmen come through this litmus test superbly. In
fact, it’s uncanny how similar their Test batting stats are in terms of matches
and innings played, runs scored and career averages. Both had fairly long
careers, made runs everywhere, with plentiful centuries each. For good
measure, both also have a triple ton (Viru has two) to their credit. Such run-
scoring can’t be a fluke; rather, it is a sign of greatness. But more than the
stats, it was the fear they put into their rivals, which gave their respective
teams big advantage.
First with Slater and then Langer, Hayden formed hugely productive
opening partnerships which helped win Tests at home and overseas. Coming
in at the top of the order, he and Gilchrist caused mayhem for years in white-
ball cricket, apart from helping win important titles.
Hayden was a pivotal figure in the great Australian team between 1995
and 2008. A lot of attention – and for good reason – has been heaped on
Steve and Mark Waugh, Ponting, Shane Warne, Glenn McGrath and Gilchrist,
but not enough on Hayden, without whom the Aussies may not have been as
successful in that period.
We hit it off at our first meeting and our friendship has grown over the
years. Whenever the ‘Big Fella’ is in town, which has been fairly often since
he retired, we find time to catch up over a drink and a long cigar.
Hayden’s call-it-as-I-see-it commentary has won him millions of new
fans, and his ‘masterchef’ skills have endeared him to a completely different
world of admirers here, making India, as he puts it, his second home.
FIGHT TO WIN
Ricky Ponting
I was doing commentary in South Africa in Jacques Kallis’s last Test when I
realized that his batting and catching record more or less matched Rahul
Dravid’s, and the bowling stats were similar to Zaheer Khan’s! Considering
that Dravid and Zak are among the finest players in the game in the past
twenty to twenty-five years, Kallis’s cricketing credentials become even
more stellar.
For good measure, Kallis scored a century in his final Test which helped
South Africa beat India and clinch the series. He was thirty-eight and looked
good for a couple of years more at least. Neither his reflexes, speed between
wickets or pace in the bowling seem to have suffered.
But the best players are loath to plod on and become lacklustre
performers. The signal to quit can come from the body or the mind. I suppose
he was jaded from having played non-stop for eighteen years.
Kallis had by then played 166 Tests and 328 ODIs. The statistical aspect
of his career is dazzling. In red-ball international cricket, he had 13,289 runs
and claimed 292 wickets, in the 50-over format he had 11,579 runs and 273
wickets. The best attributes of a cricketer are defined by success in the five-
day format. In Tests, Kallis had averaged 55.37, higher than other batting
superstars of his era barring Kumar Sangakkara, but including Sachin
Tendulkar, Brian Lara, Ricky Ponting and Dravid.
His 292 Test wickets came at an average of 32.65. This may not seem as
imposing as his batting record, but when you juxtapose the two functions, the
bowling figures are no less impressive. And there are 200 catches too.
Extraordinary!
You would not want to compare anyone with Gary Sobers, but if there is
one player who provokes such comparison, it is Kallis. The numbers stack
up in his favour more than for any other all-rounder. Apart from Sobers,
Kallis is perhaps the only player who could walk into any side on batting or
bowling ability alone on consistency of performance over a long period of
time. Imran Khan, Ian Botham and Kapil Dev were equally good in either
department for some number of years, but not over almost two decades.
I would imagine a small pool of cricketers compels development of all-
round skills, which is why South Africa boasts such a rich legacy of quality
all-rounders, more than any other country in the past fifty or sixty years.
Eddie Barlow, Mike Procter, Clive Rice – against whom I played a lot in
county cricket – Brian McMillan, Shaun Pollock, Lance Klusener, were all
world-class players.
Kallis, like Pollock and Klusener, had a full playing life unlike Procter,
Rice and McMillan who lost several years (Procter and Rice almost their
entire careers) because of the apartheid-linked ban imposed on South Africa.
But even so, Kallis’s wondrous exploits leave no doubt where he stands,
irrespective of the era.
Powerfully built, with an Arnold Schwarzenegger-like torso and legs as
sturdy as oak trees, Kallis became the pivotal figure in the South African
team from the time of his debut till he retired because of his multi-tasking
prowess. He was tireless, capable of batting long hours with great
concentration, or bowling long spells without flagging.
Unlike most all-rounders who tend to be flamboyant in one or both
functions, Kallis was classically orthodox and a hard-nosed, hard-working,
high-quality, high-achieving cricketer. His game was structured on solid
technique, which lent easily to finesse. This made him attractive to watch and
hard to get the better of.
In a team that had Graeme Smith, Hashim Amla and A.B. de Villiers, his
was still the hardest wicket to get. With a wide repertoire of strokes at his
command – those on the off-side being his hallmark – he could tame the best
bowling attack, wearing it down with immaculate defence or controlled
aggression.
As a bowler he didn’t get the accolades he deserved. Playing alongside
Allan Donald, Pollock, Makhaya Ntini and Dale Steyn, all superb pacemen,
cast him in a supporting role. But on his day, Kallis could be their equal in
pace and skill.
Many Indian batsmen of his time told me he was the most difficult to face
because of the shoulder and back strength he put into his bowling, getting
awkward bounce even on lifeless pitches.
For around six or seven years, the South Africans were the best
performing side overseas. Kallis’s versatility and ability to adapt to different
conditions quickly was a big reason for this. What surprises me, though, is
that they failed to win any major ICC title despite having a player of Kallis’s
supreme ability in their ranks.
Very unassuming and low key despite his magnificent achievements,
Kallis is a real heavyweight in the annals of the game.
MIGHTY WALL
Rahul Dravid
Like Sunil Gavaskar before him, Rahul Dravid was the bulwark of the Indian
team in his era. I watched him play from the time he made his debut in 1996
till he walked off the field for the last time in 2012, and he belonged to a
category of batsmen all too rare in the sport – even more so now with the
proliferation of T20.
Dravid was the fulcrum of India’s batting. With his resolve and capacity
to bat for long periods unflinchingly against the best attacks and in the most
daunting circumstances, he not only scored thousands of runs himself, but
allowed other batsmen in the side to bat more freely. To be honest, some of
the accolades these batsmen received should have actually accrued to him!
His strength of character came through not just in the tough situations he
overcame, but also how he slipped into a supporting role without ever trying
to upstage his partner. The true value of his batting is revealed when you go
through the stats for the series he played in: he was usually the leading or
second-highest run-scorer, without any show of flamboyance.
Dravid had a watertight technique and a temperament that could not be
distracted from the task on hand. His powers of concentration were
astonishing. He could bat an entire day – as he and V.V.S. Laxman did so
memorably in Kolkata in 2001 – without wavering in attention, simply
gritting his teeth and sticking to the task. That he has 200 catches to his credit,
a majority of them while fielding in the slips, further highlights the focus he
brought to his game.
Apart from being technically superb, Dravid was gutsy, intelligent and
diligent. He worked very hard on his game to become among the most
formidable batsman of his generation. He was not called the ‘Wall’ for
nothing. Once he settled down in the crease, he was a most difficult batsman
to remove. Bowlers and rival captains would be reduced to hand-wringing
frustration as he shut out everything else from his mind, made occupation of
the crease and scoring runs his sole purpose. Barring his last series in
Australia in 2011-12 where every Indian batsman struggled, Dravid’s
consistency in a sixteen-year career is remarkable. He batted as if his life
depended on it. Every batsman strives to do this, but not all have this fierce
determination.
He wasn’t a grungy, unattractive stonewaller. He had an attractive cover
drive, played the square cut beautifully and had an amazing pull shot. These
strokes are usually the staple of attacking batsmen. Dravid had made defence
his forte for a purpose. It’s often overlooked that he scored almost 11,000
ODI runs too!
Most major batsmen develop their skills swiftly through watching,
learning and playing, reach their peak by the time they hit thirty, then plateau
at a level of excellence which becomes their hallmark. Dravid was among
the few I saw who kept evolving with each passing match, series and year. In
2011, at thirty-eight, he scored three centuries in four Tests in England,
countering the late, probing swing of James Anderson, Stuart Broad and Tim
Bresnan with jaw-dropping technical finesse. He had made three centuries in
four Tests in England earlier too, in 2002. The one at Headingley was
particularly memorable for how he blunted England’s pace attack in
conditions tailor-made for them and notched up 600-plus runs. Still, I believe
Dravid in 2011 was exceptional; not just because he was in the evening of
his career, but also because Indian batting, unlike in 2002, was struggling
badly.
From 2002 till he retired a decade later, Dravid was at his peak. The
series in Australia in 2003-04, when he scored over 600 runs again,
announced him as a world-class batsman. While conditions for batsmen can
often be more challenging in England, where technique is concerned, playing
the Aussies is tougher because of their no-quarter-given approach, especially
when facing them in their own backyard. The pitches are harder, with extra
pace and bounce, and the close-in fielders are always in the ‘ears’ of the
batsmen with the choicest of words and phrases to distract and demoralize.
But Dravid remained unfazed in the face of the Aussie attack. The bounce and
pace didn’t unsettle him, nor did the sledging.
In fact, in time, his indifference to these tactics came to be so well known
that not just the Aussies, but all opponents recognized the futility of trying to
needle him. The more his opponents tried to provoke him, the stronger he
became mentally, getting even more focused and tighter in his batting. He’s
played poor shots, sure. All batsmen do over the course of their careers,
even the best in the world. Yet, I can’t remember an occasion when Dravid
threw his wicket away because he got cheesed off with the banter around
him.
Although India drew the Test series against England (2002) and Australia
(2003-04), Dravid played a stellar role in both. While Sachin Tendulkar was
dominating the world stage, Dravid was just as consistent, weathering many
storms.
I found him very impressive as a captain as well, an aspect of his cricket
career which hasn’t got enough attention. He led India to Test series’ wins in
the West Indies and England after decades, and was instrumental in India
beating Pakistan on their home ground for the first time ever, scoring two
centuries and guiding the team with sensible attacking captaincy.
Off the field, Dravid is relaxed and easy-going, not as intense as he used
to be in his playing days. As coach, I’ve been in touch with him regularly,
inquiring about young players he’s mentored in the Under-19 or Under-25 age
groups. He’s always been up to date and forthright in his assessments. A
great batsman and true role model, Dravid is earnest, dedicated, and very
good with youngsters because he has an open mind and puts in serious effort
to understand them. In his new avatar as director of cricket operations at the
National Cricket Academy, he should do a fabulous job. I hope at some stage
he will take up the reins as India coach too.
EPIC CHASER
V.V.S. Laxman
V.V.S. Laxman does not have the batting average of a Sachin Tendulkar or a
Rahul Dravid, but his contribution to Indian cricket is memorable for the
number of important match-winning innings he’s played. His back-to-the-
wall 281 against Australia at Kolkata in 2001 was one such epic innings that
redefined Indian cricket.
When I started played county cricket for Glamorgan in 1987, people were
still discussing Ian Botham’s incredible 149 in the 1981 Headingley Test that
helped England win against all odds after being asked to follow on. VVS’s
performance in 2001 was no less impactful.
Australia had come to Kolkata on the back of sixteen consecutive wins.
India was still reeling from a massive defeat at Mumbai in the first Test.
More despairingly, the shadow of the match-fixing scandal involving Hansie
Cronje and a clutch of home players loomed over the country. The odds were
stacked heavily in favour of Australia.
How this hopeless situation was transformed into a winning one makes
for a remarkable story. It hinges on one of the great partnerships in the history
of cricket – 376 between VVS and Rahul Dravid – and one whole day when
Australia failed to dislodge either. I was privileged to be doing commentary
for that match, which allowed me to see VVS’s mastery first-hand.
For all practical purposes, the Test and the series was lost after India
were bundled out cheaply and asked to follow on by Steve Waugh. Then
came the VVS–Dravid partnership that turned the match on its head. Both
batsmen had a point to prove. VVS, with a half-century in the first innings
when the other batsmen had failed, was promoted to number three in the
second innings. He grabbed this opportunity to leave his stamp with the
innings of a lifetime. Dravid, pushed down the order from number three to
number six, would have been determined to regain his original position.
The way these two, especially VVS, thwarted and then tamed the Aussie
bowling attack is the stuff of legend. Glenn McGrath was a threat on any
surface, but by the fourth day, as the wicket started showing wear and tear,
the bigger danger came from Shane Warne. How VVS dismantled Warne was
an object lesson in attacking batsmanship against a top-class spinner on a
pitch that had turn. He read Warne from his hand, went back and cut him
against the spin in vacant spots on the offside, or stepped down the track for
drives on either side of the wicket. No matter what Warne threw at him, VVS
refused to allow him to settle down. The amazing knock of 281 elevated him
into the big league, and made India’s batting history considerably richer.
A wristy and stylish player like his predecessor from Hyderabad,
Mohammad Azharuddin, VVS was an aesthete’s delight. Unlike Azhar, who
was slender and sprightly with wrists that seemed to have flubber in them,
VVS was more heavily built, the wrists less tensile, and played more in the
V, at least to start with. While Azhar’s stroke play could be exotic, VVS was
more in control, especially in defence. His excellent improvisation skills
would come into play the longer he batted. And he had steel in his spine.
Adverse conditions and situations brought out the best in him. While
comparisons with Azhar are not unjustified in batting similarities, I think
VVS was more like Gundappa Viswanath from the 1970s. He rose a notch
higher under pressure, delivering when the team needed it most.
Few have batted better than VVS on the hard, bouncy tracks in Australia
or on the slow turners in India, which shows his versatility and capacity to
adjust. Against pace and spin, he was one of the finest timers of the ball in
his day. He hardly ever slogged the ball into the air; he didn’t need to
because he found gaps in the field so easily. Batting in the company of
tailenders brought out his best improvisations. He was an astute reader of
what the opposition would try to do and adapted his game accordingly. In
farming the strike, I’d say VVS was just a shade behind Miandad, the best
I’ve seen, and on par with Steve Waugh.
He wasn’t the swiftest runner between the wickets and in the field, but
one must remember he played with dodgy knees for most of his career.
Running ability never remains the same after your knees have been operated
on. Ask me; it ended my career early. Still, VVS worked very hard to
maintain the standards required, and, in the process, became an excellent slip
fielder.
I have a lot of admiration for VVS. He’s soft-spoken, but not malleable.
As he did in the middle, he can stand his ground on any issue with
conviction, but without rancour. A likeable man who played for the country
with pride and excellence, leaving an everlasting impact.
STYLE AND SUBSTANCE
Mahela Jayawardene
Harbhajan Singh was a crucial part of the Indian bowling attack during the
decade he played cricket for India. In Bhajji, Anil Kumble found a fantastic
ally, and Bhajji a mentor in Kumble. The two struck up a partnership that
would win many matches for the country.
Bhajji was a feisty cricketer. I observed almost his entire career from the
commentary box, met with him frequently and never found him bored,
fatigued or cold to a challenge. From the moment he made his debut, he was
hungry for success; even criticism about his action did not faze him. Players
with lesser determination would have become morose and dejected, for his
career was on the line, but Bhajji became more resolute. He sorted out the
problem swiftly, and became a better and more dangerous bowler, as the
Aussies learnt in the dramatic 2001 series.
Steve Waugh’s team was unarguably the best in the world then and on a
winning streak. India were without Kumble, their champion bowler,
especially on home pitches. Much has been spoken and written about how
V.V.S. Laxman and Rahul Dravid turned the series around at Kolkata with
their magnificent partnership, but Bhajji’s role in India winning the series
was no less significant. He took a whopping 32 wickets in just three Tests.
The next best wicket-takers for the team were Sachin Tendulkar and Zaheer
Khan with 3 each! Despite the ‘miracle’ that VVS and Dravid pulled off in
Kolkata, India would have lost the series if Bhajji hadn’t taken 15 wickets in
the deciding match at Chennai.
I hadn’t seen such deadly bowling by an Indian spinner since Kumble’s
10-wicket haul against Pakistan in 1998. With his jaunty run up and moderate
pace bowling, Bhajji extracted mean bounce and turn from the pitch to have
the Aussie batsmen in all sorts of trouble.
Bhajji wasn’t a classical off-spinner in the Erapalli Prasanna mould, nor
was he peculiarly individualistic like Muttiah Muralitharan. He found his
own style and rhythm which served him well for almost two decades across
all formats of the game. Some critics thought that he didn’t flight the ball
enough. Perhaps. But he played to his strengths: powerful fingers that gave
the ball plentiful revs, exploiting any turn and bounce in the pitch to the
fullest, and a deceptive doosra which brought about the downfall of many.
What I liked about Bhajji was that he never backed away when conditions
were not favourable. I’ve seen him so often, in Tests, ODIs and T20s, giving
it his all even though everything seemed ranged against him. And it paid off –
you can’t have 417 Test wickets if you are not good enough.
On the field, he could be a confrontationist, and get under the skin of
batsmen. This worked to his and the team’s advantage. As a player and
captain in my day, I was always wary of those cricketers who lived by
niceties to impress those writing in newspapers or doing commentary rather
than trying to win the match. In my team, Bhajji would have been an early
pick.
He was very underrated as a batsman. With two Test centuries to his
credit, he certainly had the potential to contribute more runs.
Between them, Kumble and Bhajji took 1,000-plus Test wickets. It’s very
difficult for one bowler to take 600-plus wickets if there is no support from
the other end. These two complemented each other superbly, and, on Indian
pitches, made life hell for visiting batsmen.
GAME CHANGER
Adam Gilchrist
Adam Gilchrist is an easy selection for any team in any format at any time in
the history of the game. His explosive stroke play, clubbed with fine
wicketkeeping skills, make him arguably the most influential player of his
generation and the greatest wicketkeeper ever.
Australia has traditionally produced wicketkeepers of very high pedigree.
Indian players of the 1960s I spoke to rate Wally Grout, who came to the
country twice, very highly for his skills on slow, turning pitches with low
bounce. In my time, Ian Healy was a constant feature of the Australian side.
Healy was not only technically magnificent behind the wickets, but also made
important and impactful contributions with the bat. His keeping especially to
Shane Warne in his early days gave the young leg spinner a lot of confidence.
Though he might be a little behind Grout and Healy for sheer technique,
especially on slow pitches, I would put Gilchrist ahead of the other two
simply because of his ability with the bat. As a wicketkeeper, he was top-
class, swift of reflex, at times acrobatic, and supremely fit, hardly ever
missing a match. But when you attach batting ability to his KRA, he becomes
peerless.
In ninety-six Tests, Gilchrist made seventeen Test centuries at an average
over 47. These are stats that would be the envy of any top-order, frontline
batsman. Add to this his strike rate – 80-plus in Tests – and you get an idea
why Australia were such a formidable side in the decade he played.
There were no half measures in Gilchrist’s batting. He could make a
mockery of any attack on any pitch with his free swing of the bat, playing
strokes in front of the wicket like he was teeing off on a golf course. He was
unafraid of lofting the ball into the air, which made it difficult to set a field
for him.
Gilchrist’s attacking batting in the number seven position meant Australia
could sustain a high scoring rate till late in the order. It also meant that
opponents would frequently find their hopes dashed just when they thought
they had things under control.
In the memorable Test series against Australia in 2000-01, which India
won 2–1 after a sensational 281 by V.V.S. Laxman in Kolkata and some
touch-and-go moments in Chennai, it was in the first Test in Mumbai that
Gilchrist shone. His counter-attack, paired splendidly with some big hitting
by left-hander Matthew Hayden, turned things around at a time when it
seemed like Australia were in deep crisis.
Gilchrist batted in two gears – top and overdrive – and this would leave
opponents brutalized. In 2002, at Johannesburg, he changed the course of the
match in a little over two hours, scoring 204 at almost a run a ball. In 2006,
England were at the receiving end as he made a century off just 57
deliveries, just a ball slower than Viv Richards’s then world record. There
were plenty of such knocks, some of them cameos, not more than 30 or 40
runs, but vital to the team’s cause.
Gilchrist was equally destructive in ODIs, where he opened the innings
with Hayden for a large part of his career. They formed as devastating a pair
as West Indies’s Gordon Greenidge and Desmond Haynes, and played a big
role in Australia’s three consecutive World Cup wins between 1999 and
2007. Gilchrist scored half-centuries in the 1999 and 2003 semi-finals, and a
smashing century in 2007, aided by a golf ball embedded in his batting glove
for a better grip.
Some player, Gilly!
ALL-SHOT WONDER
Kumar Sangakkara
No matter the type of ball – new or old, red or white – Zaheer Khan was an
outstanding fast bowler. His great strength was his ability to ‘read’ batsmen
and then set them up to make a mistake. But for injuries, he would surely
have finished with 400-plus Test wickets.
I haven’t seen a better exponent of reverse swing from India than Zak.
Kapil Dev was a maestro who could swing the ball both ways and late. He
was classically orthodox, and did not experiment much. In fact, he started
doing so with reverse swing only towards the end of his career, when Manoj
Prabhakar shared the secret with him!
Zak surpassed even Manoj where reverse swing was concerned. He was
quicker through the air and disguised it quite superbly to leave batsmen
guessing. How to ‘make’ a ball for it to swing the ‘other way’ is one part of
the theory; the other, and perhaps the more important part, is concealing
which side of the ball is shinier and pitching it at the right length and line to
trouble batsmen. Gripping the ball so as to hide it from the view of the
batsman while running in to bowl, without appearing self-conscious or
awkward, requires experimentation and practice. Smart batsmen are always
looking for signs to tell them what a bowler is up to.
Historically, Pakistanis have been most adept at reverse swing. Wasim
Akram was the best I’ve seen in keeping batsmen guessing how his next
delivery would behave. Waqar Younis was only a little behind. After they
retired, Zak was the best exponent of reverse swing in international cricket
for almost a decade.
The best cricketers are eager and quick learners. Starting as a tearaway
fast bowler, Zak realized two things: if he couldn’t hone his skills to a high
degree quickly, and didn’t learn how to conserve energy, his career in Indian
cricket would be short-lived. On the international circuit, he got the chance to
pick the brains of guys like Wasim, but what helped him most was a stint in
county cricket.
Being on the county circuit for a couple of years is invaluable education,
especially for young cricketers. For reasons I haven’t been able to fathom,
too few Indian players make use of this opportunity. In a way, the IPL affords
young players similar exposure. They brush shoulders with the best
cricketers, learn from them the skills and temperament required to survive.
But the IPL is only the T20 format; county cricket is still the better learning
ground for the longest format of the game.
Zak was a changed cricketer after he played county cricket. He made the
shift from being a reasonably good fast bowler into a testing, probing,
threatening swing bowler against the best batsmen in the world. In 2007, he
was the key figure in India’s Test victory over England after twenty-one long
years and remained the spearhead of the bowling attack till he retired.
In limited-overs cricket, he enjoyed equal success in this period because
he adapted so well to using the white ball. In the 2003 and 2011 World Cups,
Zak was India’s highest wicket-taker. In fact, in the latter tournament, he
bowled three maiden overs and picked up two wickets to start with in the
final. He didn’t get enough praise for this, though it was instrumental in India
winning the title.
He was a very motivated competitor who bowled his heart out in Indian
conditions that, till very recently, hardly helped fast bowlers. While Kapil
Dev is the fountainhead of India’s fast-bowling prowess today, Zaheer Khan,
without doubt, has been the one to accelerate the transformation – with
Javagal Srinath acting as a vital bridge between the two. And Zak has done
this not only by his own performances, but in the mentoring role he took on
himself even while playing. In 2007, when I took over briefly as coach
(against Bangladesh), I spent some time with Zak and realized the influence
he was already wielding over fellow bowlers in the team.
Fast bowling is not an easy task. If you don’t love it, you can’t do it.
Likewise, mentoring is extremely difficult unless you have the personality for
it. If you don’t enjoy it, you can hardly inspire others with your ideas and
skills.
Zak was an out and out competitor, but also a very relaxed human being
who didn’t stress beyond a point. He loved the game, enjoyed travelling, was
comfortable in diverse surroundings and company. An asset on the field, in
the dressing room, anywhere really.
As coach of the Indian team, every young fast bowler I’ve met in the past
six or seven years has something to thank Zak for. Any player, young or old,
can turn to him for advice at any time. He parts with expertise readily, and
with a smile, just as he played his cricket.
DEMOLITION MAN
Virender Sehwag
Virender Sehwag was unarguably one of the greatest batsmen of the modern
era, and someone who entertained fans with his attacking stroke play
wherever he went. Most batsmen change their approach as they get older,
either to preserve their average or conserve their fitness. Viru changed
neither his approach nor his style; he zoomed through his career in top gear.
That he was so successful over such a long period of time made him a
great asset for India in every format. He set up more wins than anybody else,
at least in the first decade of his career, because of the scorching pace at
which he scored. He could pummel the best bowlers into submission in a
frontal attack and was dreaded by the best.
To average 49 in Tests, batting the way he did was remarkable. He was a
high-risk player for sure, but not a ‘maaro ya maro’ slogger. His mind was
always ticking, looking for opportunities to score and he would work out the
success/failure percentage of strokes instinctively. His strike rate – 82.23 in
Tests, 104.33 in ODIs and 145.38 in T20 internationals – is extraordinary by
any reckoning, and is a testament to his skill. He just enjoyed batting and
flaying the leather off the ball gave him even more pleasure than statistical
milestones. That is perhaps why he was always humming a song when
batting!
Any batsman who hits a Test triple century in his career earns
immortality. Viru scored two. He would have got a third too, against Sri
Lanka at the Brabourne in 2010, but fell on 293 trying to reach the landmark
with a big hit. He had twenty-three centuries in 104 Tests, which is a high
conversion rate, and highlights yet again that he was not a slogger.
The first time I saw Viru bat was in Los Angeles in the late 1990s for
India A in a tournament organized by Mark Mascarenhas. Conditions in LA
were not suited for cricket, but Viru played some superb cameos on dirty
tracks, which caught my eye. He seemed different from other players in the
same age group. I discovered soon enough just how different when I watched
him score a century on his Test debut at Bloemfontein in 2001, robbing me of
adjectives as he put up a big partnership with Sachin Tendulkar, matching the
maestro stroke for stroke.
There were two major inflection points in Viru’s career. The first was
soon after his debut century batting number six, when he was promoted to
open the innings at a time when India was struggling for stability at the top.
Many thought he didn’t have the technique to play the new ball, especially
when it was swinging. But Viru was never short on self-belief. He made a go
of it with smart, percentage cricket and bravado.
The second was the brilliant 195 against Australia at the Melbourne
Cricket Ground (MCG) in 2003-04. He had a few centuries to his name by
then, but bashing up the Aussie bowlers on the first morning in a Boxing Day
Test brought him centre stage in the cricket world, a spot which he wouldn’t
vacate till the last year or so of his career.
That MCG innings was magnificent. I remember fellow commentators and
I getting into breathless description and explanation of Viru’s dashing
approach, explosive strokes, and finally, his dismissal for 195 trying to reach
a double ton with a six! When I look back to that innings, I can’t help but
marvel at what Viru achieved subsequently. He may have failed to get a
double century then, but by the time he finished, eleven of his twenty-three
tons were in excess of 150, six went past 200 and two were triple centuries.
Mind-boggling!
What made Viru distinctive was eye–hand coordination. He used his
hands with more dexterity than any other batsman I’ve seen in modern
cricket. He also had free-flowing arms which allowed him to play all kinds
of shots once he had adjusted to line and length. The fact that he chose attack
as the best from of defence often brought his technique into question. But
what a lot of people forget is that Viru actually had a very sound defence.
You can’t be a good player off the back foot otherwise. This helped him keep
good balls out, yet not let anything loose go unpunished. While his repertoire
of strokes was vast, it was Viru’s decisiveness that set him apart. He was
hardly ever caught in no man’s land, was wonderfully inventive, and had the
amazing ability to find gaps in the field against fast and slow bowlers.
One of his finest innings was the 293 against Sri Lanka at the Brabourne
Stadium in 2009, when he repeatedly cut Muttiah Muralitharan from the leg
stump since the onside was packed with fielders. Even the champion off-
spinner looked willing to wave the white handkerchief in the face of Viru’s
assault.
Clarity of thought was his biggest strength on the cricket field. He didn’t
seem to have any doubt about what he wanted to do. At all times, he was
very positive in his mental outlook, and this extended to life outside the field
too. I never saw him down in the dumps, whether he made a century or a
blob. He’d be whistling at the breakfast table or when taking strike in the
middle.
Viru Sehwag was unique. A once-in-a-generation player.
SULTANS OF SWING
James Anderson and Stuart Broad
I consider my contests (as a batsman) against Imran Khan, Ian Botham, Kapil
Dev, Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis as among my most memorable and
gratifying for the challenges they posed with their late swing. And though I
never played against him, just from watching him perform, I think James
Anderson could easily be part of this exalted group.
I’ve observed Anderson from the start of his career, and his evolution
from a tearaway fast bowler into a maestro of swing and seam. That he can
take wickets on helpful home pitches, as well as on dead-as-dodo tracks in
the subcontinent is truly admirable.
The length of Anderson’s career is amazing, and is a tribute to both his
fitness and skills. He’s been playing international cricket for eighteen years
now (as I write this), a statistic that finds few parallels among fast bowlers.
For all the workload he’s carried, the pace at which he still bowls and the
control he exercises are remarkable.
Over the years, England has produced some exceptional swing bowlers
because of the conditions they grow up in: Brian Statham, Fred Trueman,
John Snow and Botham to name a few. Anderson’s not only a worthy
upholder of this lineage, but easily the best swing bowler from anywhere in
the last quarter of a century. In English conditions that are helpful, I’ll go a
step further and say he’s probably been the best of them all.
What makes Anderson so good?
Swing and seam bowling at its best is pure art, no less. It requires
nuanced understanding of how to grip the ball, how to hold the seam and
wrist in different positions, how much to polish the ball, which side to
expose for particular kind of movement, when to release the ball, what line
and length to bowl in different conditions and on different pitches. Swing
bowling is not just about how much movement one gets. If atmospheric
conditions are helpful, banana swing can come easily, but is not necessarily
rewarding once batsmen get used to it. It is late movement, often not more
than 6–7 inches, that troubles even the best batsmen most.
Anderson has all these qualities and then some. His run up (neither short
nor extended), pace (which he can vary from medium to fast), ability to
conceal the ball from the batsman’s sight (not unlike Akram), final leap and
side-on delivery stride are all classical. Taken together, these add up to a
sublime expression of talent.
What makes him so successful, though, is a highly competitive and astute
mind. Of some spinners, it is said they have the temperament of fast bowlers.
Similarly, swing bowlers can have the temperament of spinners: patient,
guileful, building up pressure steadily on a batsman, inducing errors by their
constant probing through variations in length, line and deviation. Anderson
belongs to this category.
He has been able to take so many wickets because his basics are so
strong, and because he has improvisations that even the best batsmen struggle
to spot early. He is so damn accurate that he will drop the ball on a penny all
day. His use of the crease is subtle and smart, control over swing and seam
total. He moves the ball both ways and keeps nagging at a batsman’s
technique or temperament relentlessly, always on the lookout for any
weaknesses to exploit.
Like all great bowlers, Anderson’s a fine reader of batsmen, and enjoys
the ‘battle of wits and will’ against the best because he has such enormous
self-belief in his own abilities. His contests with Virat Kohli in the 2018 Test
series in England were memorable because each wanted to dominate the
other. This brought out the best in both players, raising the level of play to an
enthralling level.
Very early in the series, I remember Virat driving him through the onside.
When he walked past him after that, Anderson said to him, ‘That’s the last
such stroke you’ve played in the series.’ And that indeed was the last one,
though Virat scored over 500 runs!
When you talk of Jimmy Anderson, you can’t not bring Stuart Broad into the
conversation. As a combination, they’ve been absolutely brilliant and have
helped each other – and England – superbly from the time they teamed up.
Between them, they have picked up more than 1,000 sticks in Test cricket
alone. This is a phenomenal achievement and puts Anderson–Broad in the
same league as other great fast bowling pairs who have taken the game to
new heights. Think Ray Lindwall and Keith Miller, Brian Statham and Fred
Trueman, Wes Hall and Charlie Griffith, Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson,
Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis, or any combination you may want to
choose from the great line-up of pace bowlers the West Indies had in the
1980s and 1990s.
Anderson and Broad differ from each vastly, and while that makes
watching them operate in tandem delightful, it also makes life that much more
difficult for the batsmen who have to face them. Anderson is a sublime artist,
a true-blue master of swing and seam bowling. Broad also gets the ball to
swing late and both ways, but because he is considerably taller than his
partner, he can get disconcerting bounce and pose a different set of problems.
Having to constantly adjust their style against the pair’s top-class bowling
attack becomes a challenge for even the best batsmen.
Broad’s a tough competitor and is always gunning for the batsman. He can
go wide of the crease and send a ball thudding into the ribcage of batsmen
who are inattentive, nervy or of tardy reflexes. Since he puts a lot more
shoulder into his bouncers, these come more quickly off the pitch than
batsmen expect.
He is one of those bowlers who can get into spells that decimate batting
line-ups. We’ve seen that against India, and, more tellingly, in a couple of
Ashes series played in England. In the 2019 contest between the arch-rivals,
he carried the bowling in Anderson’s absence with great responsibility.
Broad’s most sterling quality is that he’s been an avid and constant
learner. He does not give up if things don’t pan out favourably, as they often
do in sport, or rest on his laurels when he’s done well. He’s just got smarter
and better with every match.
I was on the air when Broad was hit for six sixes by Yuvraj Singh in the
2007 T20 World Championship. Not all the deliveries were bad, but that
evening, Yuvi was in irrepressible form and I can’t think of many bowlers
who could have stopped him.
Broad was just twenty-one then. To be roughed up in this manner would
have destroyed any bowler’s confidence, leave aside a rookie’s. Bowlers –
pace and spin alike – don’t like to be hit freely by batsmen. His comeback
since the mauling from Yuvi’s bat has been quite remarkable. His batting has
come down a notch from his early days, but his bowling’s improved
substantially, which is what England needed more of.
I played a lot with his father, Chris, who was an opening batsman. I never
thought the son would be anything but a batsman because Chris was so
obsessed with it, talking technique and discussing other batsmen all the time.
I was somewhat surprised when I learnt that Stuart had grown up to be a fast
bowler.
What’s common between father and son on the field, though, is a short
fuse. Chris had a fiery temper and Stuart is not known to hold back when
needled. Aggression is in the Broad genes I suppose, but where cricket is
concerned, the son has made it count more than his dad.
MR SIXER
Yuvraj Singh
I was in the commentary box when Yuvraj Singh hit Stuart Broad for six sixes
in one over in the inaugural ICC World T20 Championship in 2007. After he
hit the third, I told myself, ‘Be prepared for something special.’ When he hit
the fourth, I could almost foresee what would follow.
When I hit six sixes in an over in a first-class match for Mumbai against
Baroda many years ago, the first three had been to step up the run-scoring.
The fifth and sixth were adventure and ambition riding on an adrenaline rush.
The crucial one was the fourth; a hump that had to be overcome with method
and measure.
I could sense not only how pumped up Yuvi must have been after hitting
that fourth six, but also how downcast young Broad, then only twenty-one,
would have been. Tilak Raj, whom I hit for six sixes, put his best effort in the
fourth delivery. Once that sailed out of the park, his shoulders sagged, the
psychological battle was lost, and the next two deliveries were bowled by a
shell-shocked zombie. It was much the same with poor Broad.
Not many players have hit six sixes in an over in any format and, if I may
brag a bit, for those who have, the thrill and satisfaction of doing so remains
for a lifetime. Yuvi, till then a fantastic batsman, became an icon as he
achieved this in an international tournament.
I started calling him ‘Junior’ after that scintillating innings, and he started
addressing me as ‘Senior’. In the decade and more since, our camaraderie
has extended beyond the six-hitting record we share. Yuvi is an easy-going,
flamboyant character and our fondness for similar things has made our
relationship not just hassle-free, but pleasurable.
There is also history attached to the relationship. Yuvi’s father, Yograj
Singh, and I made our Test debut in the same match in New Zealand in 1981,
and became very good friends. Yograj was a strongly built fast bowler, who
should have played much longer for India. Unfortunately, some ill luck and a
fiery temperament, which often saw him at odds with authority, cost him an
extended run in the national team.
But Yograj was determined to make his sons represent the country, and, of
the two boys, Yuvi showed the promise and desire to go beyond just playing
cricket as a hobby. I would hear stories about young Yuvi from fellow first-
class players from the north and Makarand Waingankar, journalist and talent
scout for several state associations, who was also their family friend.
Initially, the reports were more about how tough Yograj was on his son,
how hard he made him train, but gradually I began to hear about how Yuvi
was beginning to blossom into a well-built, attacking player with a wide
range of powerful strokes and a swagger that was more pronounced than
even his father’s.
A part of Yuvi’s journey as a junior cricketer has been captured in the
movie on M.S. Dhoni. Even at that level, he was feared in his age group. He
was seen as a star and behaved like one. Tall and rangy, he had a strong
physical presence and abundant talent.
From the time he donned India colours, Yuvi became an instant hit with
his dashing batting and brilliant fielding. A high backlift and follow-through
also made him attractive to watch. Strong arms and shoulders helped him
pack great punch in his strokes. Off the front foot especially, he’d lean into
the strokes, putting his full weight into them to leave fielders gaping. For the
sheer power he exhibited, I’d put him in the Gordon Greenidge, Vivian
Richards and Kapil Dev category.
In his heyday, Yuvi was a tremendous crowd-puller. His ability to hit
sixes was quite remarkable. He had an easy swing that would send the ball a
long distance. This made him extremely popular with fans and the dread of
bowlers. When in full flow, he was a real entertainer.
Yuvi’s slow bowling abilities were underestimated. As he showed in the
2011 World Cup, he was canny and controlled, probing batsmen all the time.
I don’t think he ever wanted to be a bowler, but evolved into one because the
team needed someone to trundle a few overs. The ‘pie chucker’, as he got to
be known, started having fun doing this and ended up becoming India’s MVP
in the 2011 World Cup largely because of his bowling.
Sadly, this was also the time he was diagnosed with cancer, and while he
survived the disease doughtily, medication and the prolonged treatment
seemed to take a toll on his fitness. He was never the same superb natural
athlete again and his career tapered off prematurely.
Given his talent, Yuvi’s Test record is perhaps a little disappointing. But
in ODIs, he was absolutely brilliant. If I had to pick an all-time great side in
this format, I would choose Yuvraj Singh unhesitatingly.
MR 360 DEGREES
A.B. de Villiers
Along with Virat Kohli, A.B. de Villiers is the world’s best batsman across
all three formats I’ve seen in the past decade or so. Like Virat, ABD’s genius
is not only in the quality of stroke play and capacity to score runs
consistently, but also his versatility. Both men can switch between Test and
limited-overs cricket, and between ODIs and T20s with ease. Where most
batsmen show stress and strain in making technical adjustments for different
formats, Virat and ABD do it almost subliminally, settling quickly into
rhythm, and scoring heavily to leave opponents fretting and fuming.
Playing together for the Royal Challengers Bangalore has helped them
both grow in stature as batsmen. The IPL is a T20 league, but when you
spend so much time together, on and off the field, conversations and
discussions will undoubtedly extend to other formats and experiences in the
sport. Both Virat and ABD have benefited enormously from being teammates.
I first saw ABD in South Africa during a commentary assignment for
SuperSport. He was among the young batsmen coming into the national team
then. Hashim Amla was another, and in South African cricketing circles, both
were being hailed as batsmen with a great future.
It did turn out as expected, but, at that time, neither ABD nor Hashim were
able to make a great start to their Test careers. Frankly, my first impression
of ABD wasn’t very good. He was obviously a terrific athlete while fielding
and running between the wickets. I learnt that he was a multi-discipline
sportsman; he even fenced! However, as a batsman, he looked loose, jumpy
and vulnerable.
When I saw him a couple of years later though, there had been a
remarkable transformation in ABD’s batting. In place of the gawky young
man with a jack-in-the-box approach was a well-rounded, secure,
consummate batsman, who could take bowlers apart with a mix of classical
and improvised stroke play.
Not having read or heard about it, I don’t know if something specific had
triggered the change in him. I think it was more the experience of
international cricket, learning from others, and hard work in the nets that
helped ABD vault himself to a higher level of batsmanship. Plus, of course,
the desire to be recognized among the best.
Such ambition is often overlooked by pundits and critics, when in fact, it
plays a big role in how careers are shaped. Players aspire for greatness,
setting benchmarks for themselves with those from the past, and compete
intensely with their own contemporaries for top honours. I’ve realized this
even more after retiring, and particularly after becoming a coach and
interacting with young players from all over the world.
By the time ABD was a few years into international cricket, leading
batsmen like Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, V.V.S. Laxman, Ricky Ponting,
Matthew Hayden, Graeme Smith, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Younis Khan and
Mohammad Yousuf were approaching the end of their glittering careers. A
void was opening up at the top, and the likes of ABD, Hashim and Kevin
Pietersen – to name just three – were among the more gifted prospects aiming
to fill it.
ABD’s exploits hardly need statistical detailing. These are too well
known. The impact and influence he’s had on his team, his own country and
elsewhere, on budding cricketers the world over, and the legacy he will
leave behind are invaluable.
His ‘360-degree’ batting has captivated fans. Like Viv Richards in his
heyday, ABD can make a mockery of the bowling with his sheer all-round
game. He might not have the brute power of Chris Gayle, but when it comes
to ‘manipulating’ the field, there has been no one better.
His maturity shone in the way he adapted to Test cricket after some initial
hiccups, and became selective in his shotmaking. When you have the ability
to come up with three shots for the same ball, it can be a problem. Some very
gifted batsmen were guilty of profligacy and failed to fulfil their potential.
ABD’s consistency shows he did not take his talent for granted. He’s got
several match-saving innings to his credit, including a heroic one against
India when they toured South Africa in 2013. In 2015, playing in India, he
and Hashim batted dourly for hours, determined to save the match.
Ultimately, they couldn’t, but their intent, temperament and skills as they
batted on a wearing turner were remarkable.
In white-ball cricket, ABD’s batting, especially in the slog overs, takes
one’s breath away. You expect something extraordinary from him, and
invariably, he delivers. His biggest asset is anticipation; it’s almost as if his
sixth sense tells him what the bowler will be attempting which allows him to
make the adjustments to target an untenanted part of the field. In this aspect,
he is unique.
It’s a pity that ABD gave up on Test cricket so early. I was surprised
when he announced his decision. He was in peak form and fitness, and
looked good for at least 3,000–4,000 runs more, which would have put him
among the best of the best.
Looking back, I think it was mistake to saddle him with the captaincy. In
South African cricket, this responsibility sits better on guys like Graeme
Smith and Faf du Plessis, who are thicker-skinned and can absorb the
pressure better. ABD had so much to do with bat and in the field – including
frequently keeping wickets – that he shouldn’t have been burdened further.
Apart from being a magnificent batsman, ABD has been a great
ambassador for cricket: one of those players who will not have a line uttered
against him by any of his peers, teammates or opponents, which speaks
volumes of his character and the way he played the sport.
ACE OF PACE
Dale Steyn
Dale Steyn steaming in from his full run up, wicketkeeper standing deep, four
or five slip catchers in place, match in the balance – this rates among the
most thrilling sights in international cricket. Technically and aesthetically, he
was in the same category as Dennis Lillee and Richard Hadlee – and
matched their mean desire to take wickets.
Steyn had a superb action and fantastic skills that could not be suppressed
by conditions and pitch. Like Lillee and Hadlee in their heyday, Steyn could
induce pin-drop silence in the stadium or raise the excitement to a crescendo,
depending on whether he was playing at home or away. Rival dressing rooms
would be on tenterhooks, irrespective of where the match was being staged.
I saw a lot of Steyn in South Africa in the first decade of this century
when I was a regular in the SuperSport commentary team. He looked like the
perfect athlete who could have excelled in any sport. Fortunately, he chose
cricket, and embellished it as few fast bowlers have done.
From his very early days, he looked a match-winner, bowling at a
scorching pace, with a superb natural outswinger, and an equally deadly
delivery that held its line. I also saw in him the mean and relentless desire
for success that typifies great fast bowlers.
With experience, Steyn added more ammo to his arsenal and became even
more difficult for batsmen to handle. Apart from raw pace, he now had
deceptive bouncers, late swing and reverse swing, and bowled with supreme
control. His appetite for wickets had become gluttonous.
Steyn’s biggest strength was he could win games from tough positions.
The batting side would be chugging along comfortably, and then suddenly, in
a short, sizzling burst, he would wreak havoc on their side, turning the game
upside down. I remember a post-lunch spell in Nagpur in 2010 when he
cleaned up India, taking 7–51. The ball had started reversing a bit, Steyn
smelt blood, ran in to bowl even faster, got the ball to move in the air at high
pace and the Indian innings was soon in tatters.
At the Wanderer’s in 2013, playing against India, Steyn had his tail up,
and Rohit Sharma simply couldn’t put bat to ball. Not for want of trying, it
was just that Steyn was in unplayable form. Of course, Rohit then was not the
batsman he would become some years later, but he was still a gifted batsman,
among the best in India.
Steyn could wreck strong batting line-ups with ease, and he did this not
once or twice, but so often that he became the most successful and feared fast
bowler in his prime. In South Africa, he would get wickets rapidly, and
without conceding too many runs, which made him the most valuable player
of his team, besides Jacques Kallis.
He was not just a giant at home though. His numbers in Australia, India
and England are splendid, and one of the main reasons why South Africa had
such a fine record overseas too. Even when he cut down on his run up later in
his career, Steyn could bowl full throttle – supported by strong shoulder,
back and leg muscles – to surprise batsmen with pace and bounce.
I always fancied him in Test matches rather than in limited-overs cricket.
He was hugely successful in ODIs and T20s too, but the best expression of
his skills and natural aggression came in the longest format of the game. Over
a ninety-three-Test career Steyn picked up 439 wickets with a strike rate
better than Waqar Younis’s and Malcolm Marshall’s. What better validation
of his capabilities can there be?
For me, he was South Africa’s best fast bowler bar none. Allan Donald,
Shaun Pollock, Makhaya Ntini belong to a league of excellent fast bowlers
from South Africa, especially since the team’s return to international cricket.
But Steyn is numero uno.
ALL-FORMAT FORCE
Hashim Amla
I first saw Hashim Amla in his debut series in India and wasn’t terribly
impressed. The high backlift and a seemingly predetermined trigger
movement from the stance were not signs of a batsman who would last too
long. At the international level, bowlers and opposing captains are quick to
spot even the slightest vulnerability.
I thought Hashim would struggle on the slow, turning pitches of the
subcontinent (which he did in his first series), as well as in England where
the ball swings late or can seam devilishly off the pitch all day. Batsmen with
high backlifts can be delayed coming down on the ball. Moreover, it needs a
still head and sure footwork to counter lateral movement.
Not that batsmen with high backlifts haven’t excelled in such conditions.
Zaheer Abbas made tons of runs for Pakistan on home pitches and in
England, as did Mohammad Azharuddin for India. They were so full of
strokes, stylish and difficult to control largely because they played the ball
late, the bat coming down from way above their shoulders.
Both Zed and Azhar, however, possessed excellent footwork from their
very early days. Hashim’s footwork looked jumpy when he first came to
India in 2004. This made his defensive technique seem particularly
disorganized. But within a few years, he showed my first impressions about
him were flawed with his heavy run making.
Hashim was not a tearaway success. It took him a while to settle into the
game. But once he had made minor technical adaptations, he flowered into a
truly brilliant batsman. For a couple of years at least, he was easily among
the top three in the world, and clearly among the best in South Africa’s
cricket history.
What I had originally believed to be Hashim’s shortcoming – the high
backlift – was to become the woe of bowlers all over the world. His
footwork was never in the classical mould, like Sunil Gavaskar, Sachin
Tendulkar, Gordon Greenidge or Jacques Kallis. But all great batsmen don’t
necessarily have to become exemplars of coaching manual prescriptions. The
key to successful batsmanship is to be able to play through the line
consistently, except in horizontal strokes like the hook, pull, cut.
For these, batsmen have to make their own individual adjustments to
reach a degree of comfort playing pace or spin, and on all kinds of pitches.
This requires hard work in the nets, a mind that seeks lessons from others
through constant self-analysis. One doesn’t excel at the highest level just like
that. It requires a lot of effort, physical and mental, and loads of ambition.
Once Hashim had worked out the technique that suited him best, he fast-
tracked into eminence. Tensile wrists and crisp timing – like Zed, Azhar and
V.V.S. Laxman – made his strokes, played a nanosecond later than most
batsmen, beautiful to watch.
What impressed me about Hashim’s batting was not just the delectable
quality and wide repertoire of strokes, but also his temperament. He could
adapt quickly to different pitches and bowling attacks without making it seem
onerous. This made him an extremely versatile batsman. His patience and
diligence helped him score over 500 runs in the 2010 series in India, 300 in
an innings in England, while fasting, and a blistering century in Australia, all
within a year and a half. Unsurprisingly, on home pitches, he was a master.
Alongside his fantastic run in Tests, Hashim was highly prolific in ODIs
too. In fact, for a longish period he was perhaps the best in the world in this
format as he reeled off centuries with assembly line production regularity.
When T20 cricket arrived, some believed he would be a misfit in a format
which put a premium on power strokes. But he left critics dumbfounded with
his ability to improvise or invent strokes which made the scorebook dance
with runs against his name.
The value of Hashim’s batting for his team was in the momentum he
created. Unless circumstances demanded attrition, he scored runs – from the
start of an innings – at a tempo that kept taking the game forward, creating the
opportunity for his team to win.
His form sadly dipped in his last few years in the game. Having followed
South Africa’s cricket for a long time, I thought captaincy was an unnecessary
burden on Hashim. It drained him mentally. He felt the pressure acutely,
which resulted in failures, and a consequent sense of non-fulfilment that
lingered on even after he surrendered the captaincy.
Like Gundappa Viswanath, Hashim is an extremely likable man, but too
nice a bloke to be captain. You need thick skin and cussedness to succeed in
the top job. In his case, it must have been even more difficult considering the
societal and cricket system as it exists in South Africa.
While his record as captain is unimpressive, as batsman, Hashim Amla
was a delight, a class apart and among the greatest batsmen in his country.
GREAT CAREER, INTERRUPTED
Kevin Pietersen
It’s a matter of regret for cricket that Kevin Pietersen’s career was truncated
when he was still at his peak. He was good for at least 2,000 Test runs more
when he fell afoul of England’s cricket administration.
I don’t have sufficient information to sit in judgement on who was wrong
in the developments that unfortunately led to him losing his place. That
Pietersen did not get unanimous support from within the dressing room itself
suggests that the turmoil ran deep, and does not show him in a complimentary
light.
However, in my experience, some sportspersons can be strongly
individualistic, even maverick in their ways, as several examples across
disciplines attest. Those in authority need to understand this, especially in
team sports where the emphasis is on interpersonal relationships. As a
former captain and present coach, I have found that such players can be
tackled with a show of authority or empathy, depending on the personality or
the situation. The key is to know which approach to use with whom and
when. A mismatch or a mix and match can go haywire.
Big blokes with a strut and a swagger might exude bravado, but can also
be fragile and insecure, unsure of where they stand in the scheme of things.
Sometimes, matters can precipitate into a severe crisis so swiftly that things
get out of whack. Timing, as on the field, becomes as important off the field
in these situations. From an outsider’s perspective, I would say that the
administration and Pietersen could have both been a little more respectful
towards each other, and tried to resolve the crisis, rather than stoke it to
breaking point.
I am discussing this at some length because what was lost to the game,
consequently, was a supremely gifted player, a match-winner in any format,
and a great entertainer who drew in big crowds everywhere.
Pietersen’s urge and ability to dominate bowlers made him different from
typical English batsmen. In fact, this went against his South African pedigree
too. A bristling, confrontationist approach on the field of play made him
more like an Aussie, intent on winning every battle, with words or with bat.
His body language in the middle and readiness for a scrap made him a feared
opponent. But it wasn’t so much the aggressive approach that made him so
successful; rather, how well he allied this to his fantastic talents.
His counter-attacking 186 on a turning track at Mumbai in second Test of
the 2013 series after 2 early wickets had fallen was nothing short of genius.
England had lost the first Test at Ahmedabad; another defeat could have
finished the contest and perhaps led to a whitewash by India.
Pietersen decided, quite rightly, that the only way to survive was to take
the attack to the spinners. He did so with audacity and breathtaking strokes.
Three things stood out for me in that innings. For such a big man, Pietersen
was very light on his feet, which messed up the length of the spinners. He
was also innovative, unafraid to play the reverse sweep or making width to
cut deliveries on the stumps on a tricky pitch, unlike players from the past
who would have been trying to win the contest through orthodox technique.
This can buy you time, but not get enough runs to win a match on turners. The
third and, in the context of this match, most important thing was his ability to
clear the field, as power hitting can put spinners off their length and
demoralize them. These strokes obviously come loaded with risk. It takes
gumption to play them.
What helped Pietersen was not just the strength in his arms and back, but
also his legs. This gave him the balance needed to play those attacking shots.
Without such mooring, the probability of a mishit enhances. Pietersen’s 186
was among the best innings by an overseas player I’ve seen. I’d put it even
ahead of Viv Richards’s 109 not out at Delhi in 1987. In counter-attacking
prowess there was not much to choose between the two, except England
were already 1 down in the 2013 series; hence, the hardship factor was
greater.
This was not the first time Pietersen had helped England to a stunning
upset victory. He was among the central figures in the 2005 Ashes win, when
he established himself as a world-class batsman, capable of decimating the
best bowling attacks. As he grew in stature and experience, he also became a
marvellous improviser. The switch hit, which he introduced in the sport, was
awesome in its concept as well as in the timing and power he could bring to
it.
Being England’s best batsman put him up for the leadership job, as
generally happens. But sometimes, when such supremely talented guys are
given the captaincy, it may not work out quite as well as anticipated. As a
captain you have to put yourself in every player’s shoes. This can be quite a
complex situation, for not all players are equal in talent and temperament. It
demands steady thinking and a thorough understanding of fellow players,
their tribulations and frailties, which may not come so easily to go-getters
and self-starters.
This may have been a shortcoming in Pietersen’s captaincy. As I
mentioned, this is not easy to judge from the outside. Whenever we’ve met,
I’ve found him personable, lively and stimulating.
The big blow was not Pietersen losing the captaincy as much as cricket
losing Pietersen.
BACK IN THE DRESSING ROOM,
DIFFERENT AVATAR
CAPTAIN COOLEST
Mahendra Singh Dhoni
Shortly after the third Test at Melbourne in 2014 was drawn, Mahendra
Singh Dhoni made his decision to retire from Test cricket known in the
dressing room. The silence could’ve been cut with a knife. Not a single
player so much as shuffled their feet for a while. My jaw hit the floor.
It was surreal. Midway through the series, one of India’s greatest players
and most successful captains just walks in and announces that he’s had
enough, and is quitting the scene – and there isn’t even a flicker of tension on
his face! What should one do?
MS was India’s, in fact the world’s, biggest player then with three ICC
trophies under his belt, including two World Cups, and some very impressive
silverware from the IPL. His form was good, and he was just ten matches shy
of completing 100 Tests. Still one of the top-three fittest players on the team,
he would have the opportunity to boost his career stats if nothing else. True,
he wasn’t getting any younger, but he wasn’t that old either! His decision just
didn’t make sense.
All cricketers say landmarks and milestones don’t matter, but some do. I
approached the issue in a roundabout way, probing for an opening to make
him change his mind. But there was a firmness to MS’s tone that stopped me
from pushing the matter any further. Looking back, I think his decision was
correct; also brave and selfless.
I had wondered then if he might have regrets after some time had passed,
but MS has been a revelation. He was still captain in the ODIs and T20s,
still a huge influence in Indian cricket, but never once let this impinge on
what the players did, or how they settled in with new Test captain Virat
Kohli. Giving up on the most powerful position in cricket in the world, in a
way, couldn’t have been easy.
There are always doubts about how a senior player, and a hugely
successful former captain at that, will fit in with youngsters and a new
captain. But MS’s conduct in the years that followed was exemplary, even
more so after he quit the ODI and T20 captaincies as well. He gelled
superbly – as a fellow player, advisor, mentor, bulwark – as the situation
demanded. This earned him even more respect from seniors and juniors
alike, and showed his mature understanding of player and dressing-room
dynamics.
MS’s impact on Indian cricket has been enormous. As a player, he is in
the same league as Sachin Tendulkar and Kapil Dev where multi-format
excellence is concerned. (Virat Kohli, if he sustains form for the next few
years, will be included in this club, but I can’t think of a fourth right now.)
Yet, this hardly looked likely when he first came on the international scene.
My earliest memories of him are from late 2004. There had been a buzz
about an exciting twenty-four-year-old stroke player from Ranchi, but this
was hardly in evidence when he made 0, 12 and 7 not out in his first three
matches. As it is, former players are generally wary – and sometimes cynical
– when they hear that so-and-so young player is the next big star. One can
understand the enthusiasm of people who support such players, but few make
it big.
After three flops in succession against Bangladesh, MS failed in his fourth
match too. This was against Pakistan, always an emotive issue with Indian
fans and sometimes selectors, so the question being asked among us
commentators as to whether he belonged at this level or not was not
misplaced. MS somehow retained the faith of the selectors for the next match
against Pakistan and smashed 148. Overnight, fan emotions and the opinion
of commentators had turned in his favour. By the time the year was through,
he had thrashed Sri Lanka for an unbeaten 183.
The Dhoni era had begun.
For almost a decade after, our paths crossed frequently, but MS and I
hardly got to know each other. Though we focused on the same sport and
were at the same matches, he had his job to do and I had mine. But I watched
his rapid growth with interest and admiration. His unflappable temperament
was something that bemused me at first, then amazed me as I realized it
wasn’t put on, but in fact his strength of character.
Nothing frazzled him. In the tightest of situations, in defeat or victory, he
would be as solidly steadfast and unemotional as a practicing monk. ‘Captain
Cool’ is something of a cliché now, but in many ways, still the most apt
description for MS. The only time I saw a flicker of disappointment on his
face was after we lost the semi-final of the 2019 World Cup to New Zealand.
I could almost see a tear in his eye, of self-admonishment, that he should
have been run out when so much depended on him.
As Team Director during 2014–16, and then as chief coach from mid-
2017, I got to know MS better. Being in the same dressing room gave me
greater insight into the player and the man, and, in both aspects, he is top-
class. He has respect for even the most junior player and is never demeaning
while offering criticism. His teammates respected him for that even after he
had given up the captaincy.
MS is an unorthodox cricketer. His technique, in front of and behind the
stumps, is not easily replicable. My suggestion to youngsters is don’t try
imitating him unless it comes naturally. What made him so successful were
his splendid hands. They were quicker than a pickpocket’s! No other
wicketkeeper, at least in the era MS has played, was that fast. He was the
best in the world for a long while, and in white-ball cricket by a long
distance.
MS was sharp in his observation of whatever was happening on the field,
and uncanny when it came to taking decisions based on ‘reading’ the trend of
play. This quality of his went unnoticed simply because he made such few
mistakes. His success with the Decision Review System shows not just fine
judgement, but also how well he would be positioned behind the stumps to
make the call.
As a batsman, his technique was distinct. In tough circumstances, he
would show steel and staying power, but otherwise had an aggressive
approach which put bowlers under pressure. The helicopter shot was unique
in its intent and execution. To scoop a yorker or even a half-volley over the
onside boundary demands a great eye, tremendous bat speed, and a lot of
power in the wrists and forearms. He made it look routine.
As an individual too, MS is an unusual man. He is reserved and keeps his
thoughts largely to himself. His ability to insulate himself from all the
brouhaha that surrounds cricket in India has been quite remarkable. Sharp
and astute, he can cut through the clutter – whether on cricketing matters or
otherwise – and reach decisions swiftly. (Sometimes, the decision can be
astounding, leaving people scratching their heads!)
From his humble beginnings in Ranchi, Mahendra Singh Dhoni became
cricket’s biggest drawcard for more than a decade, and a massive inspiration
for youngsters in India, especially from the hinterland. The legacy he leaves
behind is unmatched.
KANE IS ABLE
Kane Williamson
Steve Smith is the new millennial batting maestro. His ability to score runs
heavily anywhere in the world marks him as special. Once he’s got his eye
in, opponents have to pay a heavy price, for he’s almost impossible to
contain.
He’s got a technique all of his own. I’ve never seen a top-order batsman
move around so much in the crease. The closest I can think of is Javed
Miandad. But that had more to do with the way Miandad used the bat –
nudges, pushes, jabs and other stuff – rather than feet movement.
Smith’s footwork is unique. He can go from leg-stump guard to outside the
off stump and whip the ball to mid-wicket, leaving the bowler and fielders
bewildered. And while onlookers have their hearts in their mouths watching
him, he rarely misses a ball! This can be terribly disorienting for the
opposing team, as all bowling plans can go phut. Initially, there were some
snide observations about Smith’s unusual technique, but these were quashed
by the tall scores he kept quickly accumulating. Ultimately, what matters in
this game is how many runs a batsman makes.
Purity of technique, grace and style are extremely important in their own
way, yet secondary to the volume of runs. The truly great batsmen are
identified by their consistent high scoring, and this requires more than just
technical virtuosity. There are many batsmen of excellent ability whose
achievements have remained modest because their ambition did not match
their talent. On the other hand, some less-gifted players have been hugely
successful because of their tough-minded approach.
I first saw Smith in action when Australia came to India in 2013. I’d
heard of him a couple of years earlier, but as a leg spinner who could bat a
bit. Imagine my surprise when, in the third Test in Mohali, he walked out at
number five. His credentials as a batsman were still very limited then, but in
a daunting situation (Australia had already lost the first two Tests), after he
had gotten over the initial heebie-jeebies, Smith settled down to make a fine
92.
When I saw him again, in the 2014 series Down Under, I had moved from
the commentary box to the dressing room as Team Director. In this rubber,
two batsmen shifted gears in their careers, moving towards greatness: Virat
Kohli and Steve Smith. Before the first Test, Smith was a subject of
discussion in our team meetings, but not the central theme. By the time the
series ended, how to keep Smith quiet was the only issue we discussed.
In the series in India in 2017, Smith’s bat produced runs by the ton. On
turning pitches, this was a remarkable performance. India is not the only
country to have suffered at Smith’s hands. From 2014-15 he’s been a thorn in
the flesh for all teams, and at every level. In the 2019 Ashes series, he was
sensational. Coming back after a one-year ban for ball tampering, he showed
no sign of nerves. On the contrary, he displayed amazing strength of mind and
will to plunder, amassing more than 700 runs. His average of over 60 in
Tests inspires awe, but Smith is equally prolific in ODIs. His century in the
semi-final of the 2015 World Cup was instrumental in Australia winning the
title.
Bowlers around the world have tried to come up with different tactics to
thwart his run-scoring, but Smith always has an answer. Even when on the
move while batting, his eye–hand coordination is superb. He’s got great
hands, and an obsessive hunger to keep churning out runs.
In both informal and formal discussions, several past and current players,
particularly bowlers, have said that at some stage his unorthodox technique
will be his stumbling block. But so far, Smith is holding all the aces.
JADDU AND THE ASHTRONAUT
Ravichandran Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja
In the summer of 2019, Ben Stokes got wide recognition from peers and
former players as the world’s best contemporary player. His exploits in the
World Cup, as well as the Ashes series, where he played the lead role in
England’s amazing last-gasp victory at Headingley with an incredible
undefeated 135, left little scope for debate. What’s remarkable is that these
performances came on the heels of a major controversy the previous year,
when he and Alex Hales were charged with serious misdemeanour following
a bar brawl, which almost cost him his career.
If his performance in 2019 brought him to the doorstep of the pantheon of
cricket’s great all-rounders, by the time the summer of 2020 ended, Stokes
had entered the hallowed precinct that boasts outstanding all-rounders.
Players like Gary Sobers, Keith Miller, Richie Benaud, Imran Khan, Ian
Botham, Richard Hadlee, Kapil Dev, Andrew Flintoff, Jacques Kallis – that
special breed of cricketers who could turn a match on its head with bat or
ball in a short spell of time.
In current cricket, Stokes stands unique with his all-round abilities in
every format. There are some gifted all-rounders playing today –
Ravichandran Ashwin and Ravindra Jadeja from India to name just two – but
Stokes has the X-factor that nobody else does.
There are two qualities that separate Stokes from everyone else in his
generation. One is supreme fitness. He has a supple body, strong legs and
arms, incredible speed as well as lightning-quick reflexes. By themselves,
these qualities are enough to make for a fantastic cricketer. What elevates
Stokes to a higher category is his great mental strength and remarkable ability
to withstand acute pressure, as seen in the 2019 World Cup, the Ashes series
after that, and against West Indies and Pakistan in the 2020 home season.
He can play with the derring-do of a Botham and be as unflappable as an
M.S. Dhoni in a crisis.
The second facet is more important, and also the more extraordinary
considering how Stokes in his early years was chasing controversies with a
devil-may-care attitude. In this, he was not unlike a young Ricky Ponting, and
almost risked his career. Like Ponting, Stokes too reined himself in to
become a formidable talent. It took him longer than the Aussie to sort himself
out, and I suppose the T20 World Championship final in Kolkata in 2016,
when he was hit for 24 runs by the big Carlos Brathwaite, costing England
the title, had something to do with it.
Such an experience can be shattering for any cricketer, especially one
who is temperamentally fragile, which Stokes was then. That final took a toll
on his cricket, as well as what he did off the field, for which he paid a heavy
price. Hats off to the England and Wales Cricket Board for supporting him
when he was at his most vulnerable. Cricket Australia had similarly taken
care of Ponting. I do wish all cricket boards would treat their young players,
especially those with precocious talent, with similar concern and
understanding.
Stokes has since repaid the favour and trust shown in him with interest
compounded, and in dazzling style. He plays with rare panache, and
remarkably, seems to have an ace up his sleeve for all situations, much to the
despair of opposing teams.
How long will Stokes’s fine run continue, I am often asked. Given the
workload on modern cricketers, especially those who play all formats of the
game, there is always the threat of injury and burn out. Hopefully, Stokes will
be spared that. In which case, I see him scaling even greater heights, for he
has guts and determination, and so obviously enjoys success.
WATCH OUT FOR HITMAN
Rohit Sharma
When it comes to white-ball cricket, there is little doubt that Rohit Sharma
will go down as one of the greatest batsmen in the history of the sport. Just
past the halfway mark in his career, Rohit has already produced an
extraordinary body of work in ODIs and T20s, thanks to his fantastic skills.
He’s shown ravenous hunger for runs, hitting three double centuries so far
in ODIs, itself a mighty achievement. He dominated the 2019 World Cup,
reeling off five centuries – the most by any batsman in a single edition of the
tournament. It was unfortunate that despite his brilliance, we stumbled in the
semi-final.
True, being an opener is an advantage, since you get to play more overs,
but even so, scoring a double century requires more than just time in the
middle. It has to do with the batsman’s run-scoring capacity. Runs have to be
made at a rapid clip, which in turn requires talent, ambition and imagination,
a wide range of shots and the ability to improvise.
When in form, nobody in contemporary cricket makes batting look so easy
or so pleasing. And in different tenors. One moment he is a sweet, sublime
timer of the ball, and the next, he is belting the leather off the ball, sending it
over the boundary in different parts of the park.
What makes Rohit so attractive to watch is the way he swiftly adjusts to
delivery length, and yet he plays his strokes late, which gives him that split
second more to pick what shot to play. He does this unhurriedly, almost
effortlessly. Just when you think he is playing a gentle push on the offside, the
ball rockets to the boundary, finding the gap between helpless fielders. This
breathtaking dimension in his stroke play makes it almost impossible for
bowling sides to contain him.
I love watching Rohit bat when he is in top form. Though he is not
powerfully built, like a Viv Richards, Gordon Greenidge or Inzamam-ul-
Haq, he is a lusty hitter. His shots pack a lot of punch because he is such a
splendid timer and is unafraid to loft the ball into the air. When he hits the
ball high and long in the V, it’s like a golfer teeing off. Some batsmen make
run-scoring look an ordeal even when they are a long while in the middle.
Rohit makes it look so effortless that you wonder what ails other batsmen
who get enveloped in struggle and strife on the same pitch.
The difference is in natural ability: the use of hands, footwork, sense of
timing, choice of strokes. He’s got a 360-degree range which makes it
difficult for bowlers to stop him when he gets going. He is unsparing of pace
and slow bowlers, and his improvisations are made to look easy when
actually they are fairly complex in execution. Because Rohit is so good, the
problem shifts to the fielding side. Unable to stem the flow of runs, they are
made to look helpless.
The hallmark of Rohit’s batting, however, is technical efficiency. A study
of his batting will show that more often than not he is playing terrific
orthodox shots. It’s just that he plays them with immense control and
command. He is, after all, from the ‘Bombay School’ of batsmanship, but of a
modern mindset!
Of all the strokes at his disposal, Rohit’s hook excites me the most. This
is a high-risk stroke at all times, but he plays it brilliantly, using the depth of
the crease to get into a good position, meeting the ball with the sweet spot of
the bat, with a perfect swivel giving him the control which lesser batsmen
struggle to find.
Brilliant as his record is in white-ball cricket, Rohit wasn’t able to do
justice to his ability in Test cricket, despite getting off to a flying start. After
losing his place in the team, he was finding it difficult to make a comeback,
which was obviously playing on his mind. He is a phlegmatic, almost
laidback person, but he seemed to be getting restless and frustrated at not
making the cut consistently for the five-day format. When I became coach, I
sensed the waiting game for opportunities wasn’t for him. Moreover, we
were losing out on a superb player.
The gauntlet had to be thrown at him. Even in Tests, he could be used as
opener, though he had no experience of this in first-class cricket. After
discussing this for a while with him, our minds met, and Rohit came through
with a superb series as opener against the West Indies in 2019, scoring more
than 500 runs.
If he works hard on his fitness, conquers the injuries which crop up every
now and then, comes to terms with his own body, puts in the hard yards and
settles into a rhythm that allows him to play cricket continuously, Rohit can
notch up a Test record which, with his massive achievements in white-ball
cricket, would put him in the pantheon of greats.
He’s tasted blood as a Test opener, so watch out for the Hitman.
BLOOD, TOIL, TEARS, SWEAT
Virat Kohli
PHOTO 1
Indian batsman Gundappa Viswanath drives for runs during his century in the
third Test match against England on 26 December 1981 in New Delhi. (Photo
by Adrian Murrell/Allsport/Getty Images/Hulton Archive)
PHOTO 2
Farokh Engineer batting for Lancashire during their Gillette Cup third round
match against Hampshire at Old Trafford in Manchester on 8 July 1970.
Lancashire won by five wickets. (Photo by Bill Smith/Popperfoto via Getty
Images)
PHOTO 3
Imran Khan bowling during the second Test match between England and
Pakistan at Lord’s, London, in August 1982. (Photo by Adrian Murrell/Getty
Images)
PHOTO 4
Captain Allan Border celebrates after leading his team to victory in the
Reliance World Cup final between Australia and England at Eden Gardens,
Calcutta, on 8 November 1987. Australia won the match by seven runs.
(Photo by Patrick Eagar/Popperfoto via Getty Images)
PHOTO 5
Pakistan’s Wasim Akram appeals for the wicket of Derek Pringle during the
final of the 1992 Cricket World Cup against England at the Melbourne
Cricket Ground. (Photo by Ben Radford/Getty Images)
PHOTO 6
Indian bowler Anil Kumble being feted by teammates after a perfect ten-
wicket haul against Pakistan at the Feroz Shah Kotla ground on 7 February
1999 in New Delhi. (Photo by H.C. Tiwari/Hindustan Times)
PHOTO 7
Martin Crowe of New Zealand sweeps for four during the tour match against
the Duchess of Norfolk’s XI played at Arundel, Sussex on 6 May 1990. New
Zealand won the match by seven wickets. (Photo by Adrian Murrell
/Allsport)
PHOTO 8
Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson at Lord’s during the 1975 Cricket World
Cup. (Photo by Patrick Eagar/Patrick Eagar via Getty Images)
PHOTO 9
Viv Richards during the India versus West Indies Prudential World Cup final
match at Lord’s in 1983. (Photo by S&G/PA Images via Getty Images)
PHOTO 10
Indian team manager and Kapil Dev having tea during the third India versus
Australia Test match at Sydney Cricket Ground on 2 January 1985. (Photo by
Paul Matthews/Fairfax Media via Getty Images)
PHOTO 11
Dilip Vengsarkar of India reacts in the field during the second Test match
against England at Feroz Shah Kotla, New Delhi, on 15 December 1984.
(Photo by Patrick Eagar/Popperfoto via Getty Images)
PHOTO 12
Sunil Gavaskar batting for India during his 88-run innings in the tour match
against Worcestershire at New Road, Worcester, on 29 April 1974. (Photo by
Ken Kelly/Popperfoto via Getty Images)
PHOTO 13
Greg Chappell chats with Sourav Ganguly during a practice session at M.A.
Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai on 30 November 2005. (Photo by Manan
Vatsyayana/AFP via Getty Images)
PHOTO 14
Malcolm Marshall of the West Indies in action during the third Test match
against Australia at Queen’s Park Oval in Port of Spain on 10 April 1991.
The match ended in a draw. (Photo by Ben Radford/Allsport via Getty
Images)
PHOTO 15
Sachin Tendulkar in action during a match against Pakistan in Lahore in
1989. (Photo by Ben Radford/Allsport via Getty Images)
PHOTO 16
Surrey batsman Kumar Sangakkara cover drives on day two of the
Specsavers County Championship Division One match against
Nottinghamshire at Trent Bridge, Nottingham, on 11 April 2016. (Photo by
Stu Forster/Getty Images)
PHOTO 17
South Africa’s Jonty Rhodes dives during a 1992 Cricket World Cup match
against India at Adelaide. (Photo by Patrick Eagar/Patrick Eagar via Getty
Images)
PHOTO 18
England’s Graham Gooch salutes the crowds as he reaches 300 runs on his
way to score 333 runs against India in the First Cornhill Test match at Lord’s
in July 1990. (Photo by Bob Thomas Sports Photography via Getty Images)
PHOTO 19
Shane Warne of Australia bowls during day three of the fifth Ashes Test
match between Australia and England at the Sydney Cricket Ground on 4
January 2007. (Photo by Tom Shaw/Getty Images)
PHOTO 20
India’s Rahul Dravid rejoices after hitting the winning runs on the fifth day of
the second Test against Australia at the Adelaide Oval, Adelaide, on 16
December 2003. (Photo by Hamish Blair/Getty Images)
PHOTO 21
A joyful M.S. Dhoni after scoring a century during the second One Day
International match between India and Pakistan in Visakhapatnam, 5 April
2005. (Photo by Emmanuel Dunand/AFP via Getty Images)
PHOTO 22
Indian bowlers Ravindra Jadeja (L) and Ravichandran Ashwin (R) share a
light moment during the fourth Test against England at Wankhede stadium,
Mumbai, on 11 December 2016. (Photo by Pratham Gokhale/Hindustan
Times)
PHOTO 23
Indian batsman Virat Kohli plays a shot during day one of the third cricket
Test match between Australia and India in Melbourne on 26 December 2018.
(Photo by William West/AFP via Getty Images)
PHOTO 24
India’s Ravi Shastri holds the Man of the Series trophy aloft after the India
versus Pakistan, Benson & Hedges World Championship of Cricket final, in
Melbourne on 10 March 1985. (Photo by Adrian Murrell/Allsport)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Playing sport is about self-belief and wanting to win, and no one knows that
better than Ravishankar Jayaditha Shastri.
As a student at Matunga’s Don Bosco High School, it was under Shastri’s
captaincy that the school won the Inter-School Giles Shield in 1977 for the
first time. In his final year of junior college at R.A. Podar College, he was
selected to represent Bombay in the Ranji Trophy in 1980. Just shy of
eighteen, he was then the youngest cricketer to play for Bombay till Sachin
Tendulkar arrived.
A year later in 1981, flown in to replace an injured Dilip Doshi, Shastri
made his Test debut for India against New Zealand in Wellington. He wasn’t
even properly kitted and had to borrow manager Polly Umrigar’s sweater to
fight the bitter cold. He picked up an impressive 6 wickets in two innings,
but India went on to lose the match by 62 runs
Just about eighteen months later, Shastri had moved up from number ten in
the batting order to opening batsman when India toured England and Sunil
Gavaskar was injured. Some months later, he scored his first Test century for
India: 128 against Pakistan at Karachi. The same year, he was part of the
team that won the ICC World Cup.
The year 1985 was a milestone for Shastri. He made the fastest first-class
double century in India playing for Bombay in the Ranji Trophy when scoring
runs against Baroda in just under two hours. During the same match, he
became the second player in history, after Gary Sobers, to hit six sixes in an
over.
The high point of his career came the same year, when he played a major
role in leading India to victory in the Benson & Hedges World Championship
of Cricket in Australia. For his 182 runs and 8 wickets, Shastri was declared
‘The Champion of Champions’ and gifted an Audi 100 car. The victory lap
with the entire team sitting on the Audi is an abiding memory of India’s
cricketing excellence.
An opening (or middle-order) batsman and left-arm spinner for the better
part of his career, Shastri was an impressive all-rounder, playing 80 Tests
and 150 ODIs between 1981 and 1992. The 1988 final Test at Madras
against the West Indies marks his only outing as captain. India, trailing 1–0 in
the series, beat West Indies by 255 runs to square the series.
Towards the end of the India tour of South Africa in 1992, Shastri found
himself grappling with a knee injury. He underwent surgery, which was
unsuccessful. In 1994, at thirty-one, he retired from Test and ODI cricket.
His second innings, as commentator, began at the World Masters
Tournament in Mumbai in 1995. Sharp observations, punctuated with wit and
humour, ensured he quickly became a favourite in the commentary box.
In 2014, Shastri was appointed India’s Team Director and, over the next
two years, coached the team to Test series wins against Sri Lanka and South
Africa. In 2016, India won the Asia Cup T20. In 2017, he was appointed
head coach of India.
Credited for building a team with ‘a will to win’, his term as coach was
extended in 2019. Back-to-back wins in Australia – including India’s 2–1
series win under the captainship of Virat Kohli in the 2018–19 Border–
Gavaskar Trophy and India’s historic victory in 2021 – added more feathers
to his cap, making him the country’s most successful Test cricket coach.
ABOUT THE CO-AUTHOR
Mumbai resident Shiva Rao is a self-taught artist with a passion for drawing
pencil portraits since childhood. Over the years, he has sketched and made
caricatures of several film, sports and political personalities.
He is ever grateful to his nephew Ravi Shastri for recognizing his talent
and offering him the opportunity to sketch the cricketers featured in this book.
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First published in India by
HarperCollins Publishers 2021
A-75, Sector 57, Noida, Uttar Pradesh 201301, India
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P-ISBN: 978-93-5422-723-3
Epub Edition © August 2021 E-ISBN: 978-93-5422-454-6
The views and opinions expressed in this book are the author’s own and the facts are as reported by
him, and the publishers are not in any way liable for the same.
Ravi Shastri asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
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