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Approaching milestones ahead of the WTC Final between India and New Zealand

Approaching milestones ahead of the WTC Final between India and New Zealand

CA Pujara and V Kolhi have played nine tests against New Zealand prior to this test. They would become the 16th and 17th Indian cricketers to play ten or more tests against New Zealand.

This ensuing test would be the first neutral test for India. New Zealand has played six tests at the neutral venue and the ensuing test would be its seventh test at a neutral venue

V Kohli would become the first captain to lead India in a test at neutral venue, while New Zealand has two captains – BB McCullum and KS Williamson – who have led New Zealand in tests at neutral venue. Both have led New Zealand in three tests.

With KS Williamson set to lead New Zealand in the ensuing test, he would become the most capped captain to lead New Zealand in neutral tests.

V Kohli would become the 29th captain in the annals of test cricket to lead a team in a neutral test.

KS Williamson has an aggregate of 386 runs in neutral tests and requires 14 more runs for his 400 runs. If he gets them, then he would become the fifth captain to aggregate 500 plus runs in neutral tests. Others are – Misbah-hul-Huq of Pakistan {2167}, AN Cook of England {450}, GC Smith {425} AD Matthews of Sri Lanka {412}.

V Kohli of India has an aggregate of 7490 runs as a batsman in his test career. Ten {10} more runs would fetch him 7500 runs and he would then become the sixth Indian batsman to total 7500 plus runs in tests. Others are SR Tendulkar [15921}, R Dravid {13265}, SM Gavaskar {10122}, VVS Laxman {8781} and V Sehwag {8503}.

V Kohli of India has an aggregate of 7490 runs as a batsman in his test career. Ten {10} more runs would fetch him 7500 runs and he would then become the 41st batsman to total 7500 plus runs in the annals of test cricket.

V Kohli of India has an aggregate of 5392 runs as a captain in his test career. 108 more runs would fetch him 5500 runs and he would then become the fourth captain to total 5500 plus runs in the annals of test cricket. Others are – GC Smith {8659}, AR Border {6623} and RT Ponting {6542}

R Ashwin has an aggregate of 48 wickets against New Zealand prior to the start of the test and two more wickets would fetch him 50 wickets. If he gets them, then he would become the fourth Indian bowler to capture 50 plus wickets against New Zealand. Others are – BS Bedi {57}, EAS Prasanna {55} and A Kumble {50}.

R Ashwin has an aggregate of 48 wickets against New Zealand prior to the start of the test and two more wickets would fetch him 50 wickets. If he gets them, then he would become the 16th bowler in the annals of test cricket to capture 50 plus wickets against New Zealand.

TG Southee and TA Boult have captured 39 and 36 wickets respectively against India. They need one and four wickets for their forty wickets. If they get them, then they would become the third and fourth New Zealand bowlers to capture 40 plus wickets against India. Others are – RJ Hadlee {65} and DL Vettori {40}.

TG Southee and TA Boult have captured 39 and 36 wickets respectively against India. They need one and four wickets for their forty wickets. If they get them, then they would become the 41st and 42nd bowlers to capture 40 plus wickets against India.

India and New Zealand have played 59 tests so far and the ensuing test will be the 60th test between the two teams. Of the 59 tests, India has won 21 tests, New Zealand has won 12 tests and 26 tests are drawn.

V Kohli and CA Pujara have scored 773 and 749 runs respectively against New Zealand prior to the start of this test. They required 27 and 51 runs respectively for their 800 runs. If they get these runs, then they would become the fifth and sixth batsman to aggregate 800 plus runs against New Zealand. Others are – R Dravid {1659}, SR Tendulkar {1595}, V Sehwag {883} and VVS Laxman {818}

KS Williamson has an aggregate of 728 runs against India prior to the start of this test. He required 72 more runs for his 800 runs. If he gets them, then he would become the sixth New Zealand batsman to score 800 plus runs against India. Others are – BB McCullum {1224}, GT Dowling {964}, B Sutcliffe {885}, LRPL Taylor {812} and JG Wright {804}

LRPL Taylor has an aggregate of 812 runs against India prior to the start of this test. He required 88 more runs for his 900 runs. If he gets them, then he would become the third New Zealand batsman to score 900 plus runs against India. Others are – BB McCullum {1224} and GT Dowling {964}

England Vs New Zealand -First Test at Lord’s – Second day’s play

England Vs New Zealand -First Test at Lord’s – Second day’s play

DP Conway-H Nicholls added 174 runs for the fourth wicket to provide the 354th occasion of New Zealand batsmen posting a three figure partnership in a test innings. It also provides the 72nd occasion of New Zealand batsmen posting a three figure partnership in a test innings against England.

It also provides the 55th occasion of New Zealand batsmen posting a three figure partnership in a test innings for the fourth wicket. It also provides the eighth occasion of New Zealand batsmen posting a three figure partnership in a test innings against England for the fourth wicket.

It also represents the record partnership by New Zealand batsmen against England for the fourth wicket. The previous best was the 155 runs partnership between MD Crowe and MJ Greatbatch at Wellington in March 1988.

DP Conway-H Nicholls added 174 runs for the fourth wicket to provide the 20th occasion of New Zealand batsmen posting a three figure partnership in a test innings against England at Lord’s. It also provides the fifth occasion of New Zealand batsmen posting a three figure partnership in a test innings against England at Lord’s for the fourth wicket.

It also represents the record partnership by New Zealand batsmen against England for the fourth wicket against England at Lord’s. The previous best was the 142 runs partnership between RC Blunt and ML Page in Jun 1931. Thus DP Conway-H Nicholls rewrote the 90 year old record.

DP Conway was dismissed run out for 200 runs in New Zealand’s first innings to provide the eleventh occasion of a batsman dismissed run out after scoring 200 plus runs in a test innings. All such occasions are tabulated below

NoPlayerRunsITeamOppnGroundStart Date
1AD Nourse2081SAFEngNottingham07 Jun 1951
2CC Hunte2602WinPakKingston26 Feb 1958
3DM Jones2161AusWinAdelaide03 Feb 1989
4SV Manjrekar2181IndPakLahore01 Dec 1989
5BC Lara2772WinAusSydney02 Jan 1993
6R Dravid2172IndEngThe Oval05 Sep 2002
7L Vincent2242NZlSrlWellington11 Apr 2005
8TT Samaraweera2141SrlPakLahore01 Mar 2009
9Taufeeq Umar2362PakSrlA Dhabi18 Oct 2011
10BA Stokes2581EngSAFCape Town02 Jan 2016
11DP Conway2001NZlEngLord’s02 Jun 2021

DP Conway is the second New Zealand batsman to be dismissed run out after scoring 200 plus runs. The other was L Vincent who was dismissed run out for  214 at Wellington in Apr 2005

NoPlayerRunsITeamOppnGroundStart Date
1L Vincent2242NZlSrlWellington11 Apr 2005
2DP Conway2001NZlEngLord’s02 Jun 2021

DP Conway is the third batsman to be dismissed run out after scoring 200 plus runs against England. Others are – AD Nourse and R Dravid. The following table list all these three batsmen.

NoPlayerRunsITeamOppnGroundStart Date
1AD Nourse2081SAFEngNottingham07 Jun 1951
2R Dravid2172IndEngThe Oval05 Sep 2002
3DP Conway2001NZlEngLord’s02 Jun 2021

DP Conway became the first batsman to be dismissed after scoring 200 in a test innings at Lord’s

DP Conway became the seventh batsman to score 200 plus runs in an innings on test debut. All such occasions are tabulated below.

He also became the first batsman in the annals of test cricket to score 200 plus runs on test debut against England. Previous best was 176 by GA Headley of West Indiesat Bridgetown in Jan 1930. Thus DP Conway rewrote the 91 year old record.

NoPlayerRunsITeamOppnGroundStart Date
1RE Foster2872EngAusSydney11 Dec 1903
2LG Rowe2141WinNZlKingston16 Feb 1972
3DSBP Kuruppu201*1SrlNZlCol-CCC16 Apr 1987
4MS Sinclair2141NZlWinWellington26 Dec 1999
5JA Rudolph222*2SAFBanChattogram24 Apr 2003
6KR Mayers210*4WinBanChattogram03 Feb 2021
7DP Conway2001NZlEngLord’s02 Jun 2021

He also became the second New Zealand batsman 200 plus runs on test debut after MS Sinclair. MS Sinclair had scored 214 runs on his test debut against West Indies at Wellington in Dec 1999.

NoPlayerRunsITeamOppnGroundStart Date
1MS Sinclair2141NZlWinWellington26 Dec 1999
2DP Conway2001NZlEngLord’s02 Jun 2021

He also became the first left hand batsman in the annals of test cricket to score 200 plus runs on test debut against England. Previous best was 171 by HD Rutherford of New Zealand at Dunedin in Mar 2013.

IF VISHY COULD COME TRUE ONCE AGAIN by Tom Alter

IF VISHY COULD COME TRUE ONCE AGAIN by Tom Alter

Balvinder Singh Sandhu recollects GR Viswanath on face book

Tom Alter’s 3rd Colomn written Long time back on my Idol, GR Vishwanath.

It’s been 31 years since he made a century on Test debut against Australia.  It’s been 20 years since he captained India and called back an opposing batsman after the batsman had been given out.  It’s been 17 years since he played for his country for the last time.

And it’s been 24 years since the bullet-like crack of his square-cut came to us over the radio in the middle of the night from the West Indies, setting a tone of eloquent defiance which led India to the most improbable of victories.

I won’t look up his career statistics (which are not bad at all!), because they can never, ever tell anything near the true story of how he played cricket.  That square-cut conjured up with wrists of steel and style, that flick off the pads like a crisp swat at an irritating fly, those first few quick steps down the pitch when taking off for a single, that fidgeting with both pads when settling into his stance, those innocent and laughing eyes which looked out on the world as if sharing a silent joke with life itself, that slight pot-belly which told its own story of a love for the good and relaxing things of life – G.R. Vishwanath was a sportsman and a cricketer, and I miss him today more than ever before.

I met him in Bangalore around ’77, when his career was at its peak, and mine was just beginning.  I can’t explain how excited I was.  And then he tells me how happy he was to meet me!  That was Vishy.

Another very fond memory was of a Test in Bombay against the Windies, which some of my very good friends from Mussoorie had come down to watch – it was just after lunch, and Vishy strolled (or almost rolled!) out onto the ground, having obviously enjoyed the repast in the pavilion.  He did his customary run up and down the length of the pitch – at no great speed! – and then settled down comfortably in the slips.  Very soon afterwards Bedi found the edge of a Windies’ bat, and the ball curled high and easy in the direction of Vishy.

My friend immediately said, “Vishy is going to drop it!”  Which Vishy did, hands cupped over stomach.

I asked my friend how he knew.  He said, “Vishy enjoys his lunch too much!”

Of course, Vishy took many, many catches – over 50 in Tests, if I am not mistaken – but the gentility with which he put down that one in Bombay left even Bedi chuckling

Vishy saved his best for the fast bowlers, especially the West Indian variety, and his battles with Andy Roberts in India are legendary.  I would love to have seen him take on McGrath.  He would have eventually got out in the slips or at point, but before that would have laced the boundary with a flurry of fours.

One last memory, from the MCC tour of ’72 – ’73.  The Delhi Test, and Barry Wood at point, put there especially for Vishy’s square-cut.  Geoff Arnold is bowling, or possibly Bob Cottam.  Vishy cuts, and the ball goes straight to the acrobat Wood.  The next ball is also cut, two yards to Wood’s left.  He dives and stops it.  But the next cut is two further yards left, and racing away to the boundary, leaving Wood sprawling on the turf.  Vishy doesn’t even look up, but moves down the pitch to pat an errant spot with his bat.

We need Vishy today in our team.  Not only to score runs, but to remind us all once again that cricket, and life, are to be both won and enjoyed.

Those fine men of Hyderabad

Those fine men of Hyderabad

V Ramanaryan says that “Playing alongside the likes of Pataudi, Abid Ali, Jaisimha and Abbas Ali Baig was an experience to be cherished”

To read the recent tributes to former India captain Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi who died four years ago was to briefly relive Hyderabad cricket of the 1970s, some of the happiest memories of my cricket life. To share the Hyderabad dressing room with the likes of our captain ML Jaisimha, Abbas Ali Baig, Syed Abid Ali and Tiger Pataudi was a special experience. Each was a stalwart in his field and collectively brought a hundred years of playing experience.

While Abbas and Abid are happily with us, Jai was the first to go, in 1999, leaving the cricket community of the day bereft. My association with each of them was brief at the Ranji Trophy level, though I played a good deal of local cricket with them.

None from this Fab Four was given to complimenting you to your face; their appreciation of a good performance was always quietly behind the scenes, putting in a word or two where it mattered, so that your reputation preceded you wherever you went to play. And God save you if you gave the slightest hint of complacency or smug self-satisfaction. I remember a conversation I had with Pataudi in December 1992, long after my playing days. He was generally appreciative of the dignified way southerners tended to treat sportsmen and other public personalities. When I warmed to the theme and said that many old cricket lovers remembered how well I bowled in my day, he shot back with, “Yes, people have such short memories!”

It took a long time to win the confidence of the captain. Jaisimha was not exactly aloof in the dressing room but he did exude an air of authority. I know that S Venkataraghavan’s chair in the Chepauk dressing room was a legendary abode of detached grandeur, and though Jai did not have a reserved corner in ours, where he sat was an island of calm amidst the general chaos of blaring radio-cassette players and strewn gear. We all knew to stay off limits whenever he seemed lost in thought.

The mood changed when one of the boys, like Narasimha Rao or P Jyothiprasad, played a prank that caught his eye. He would then unwind enough to roar an appropriate Hyderabadi shout, such as “Ud bola!” In my case, the first suggestion that I had arrived in the eyes of the captain was when he said to the team at the end of a hard day at the KSCA stadium that the two old men in the side (he and I) hadn’t done too badly. “Bowling bhi achha kare aur dyvaan mare” (Bowled well and did some diving around). I didn’t know whether to feel happy at this, because Jai was eight years older than me, but it was a compliment all right!

Off the field, Abbas was the stylist among the four, though at the time all of them, with the possible exception of Tiger, were quite dapper. Appearing to look at the world around him with amused tolerance, he spoke both English and Hyderabadi with a beautiful but natural accent, and was politeness personified even while ticking you off for a poor effort. I played under his captaincy for quite a few years in local cricket, and discovered he was a different animal on the field. It needed nerves of steel to handle his nagging ways between overs during a long bowling spell, but all was well at the end of the day.

Abbas Ali Baig spoke both English and Hyderabadi with a beautiful but natural accent, and was politeness personified even while ticking you off for a poor effort

Abid was perhaps the most popular senior player in the side. If Jai favoured Frank Sinatra and Louis Armstrong in his musical outbursts (strictly after playing hours), Abid enlivened the atmosphere with his favourite calypso, which contained the line “Great India bowler Abid Ali”. He was an enthusiastic participant in silly card games on train journeys and once ran the length of a train platform in khaki shorts to win a wager. He was a role model for effort, enthusiasm and physical fitness, no matter what the status of the match, but off the field, he was the life and soul of the party – in a strictly teetotal way.

Hyderabad had many other talented players. Kenia Jayantilal was a solid opening batsman who scored tons of runs in domestic cricket. He was a more-than-handy bowler with the new ball as well, though in the time I played for Hyderabad, he was not often called up to bowl. His was an ever-smiling presence in the team. His long stint with Mafatlal made him a Mumbai professional, and he became a valued assistant to Frank Tyson in his coaching programme for fast bowlers.

Mumtaz Hussain was a magical left-arm spinner in his university days, with several mysterious variations in his armoury, but equally mysterious was his transformation into an orthodox bowler in the Ranji Trophy. His was perhaps the sharpest cricket brain in the team, quick to analyse a situation and offer solutions.

Medium-pacer D Govindraj had a beautiful action and a natural outswinger that promised an international career, but he had to be content with domestic cricket.

Wicketkeeper P Krishnamurthy’s talent was spoken of highly, and he could bat a bit too. His great moment in cricket was the 1971 Indian triumph in the West Indies. He played all five Tests in that series, though he faded away when Farokh Engineer came back for the England tour the same year, and later Syed Kirmani stepped into his boots. Murthy was a bowler’s delight with his encouragement and insights from behind the wicket. As a team-mate he took under his wing, I owed him a huge debt of gratitude, as I did my other mentor, Abid, as well.

Narasimha Rao and Jyotiprasad were the bright sparks of the team, very talented and mischievous. Rao was perhaps the first young Hyderabad batsman of my time to be selected for India, but he was also a brilliant legspinner and fielder. His Test career was all too brief. Today’s selectors would have probably seen more value in his unorthodox bowling gifts than those in the past. Vijaya Paul was a correct, compact batsman, who too did not progress much beyond the Ranji Trophy.

Despite an abundance of talent, Hyderabad did not win the Ranji Trophy under the leadership of Jaisimha. Brijesh Patel once joked that Tamil Nadu’s failure to repeat its 1987-88 Ranji Trophy triumph could be traced to the state’s water. It would perhaps need the disputed water from the river Kaveri with its origin in neighbouring Karnataka to bring the trophy home! It was difficult to pinpoint the reasons for Hyderabad’s inability to translate ability into results, despite Jaisimha’s widely held reputation as the shrewdest captain in the country. He and his senior colleagues rarely spoke about it, but it must have hurt them greatly.

V Ramnarayan bowled offspin for Hyderabad and South Zone in the 1970s. His latest book is Third Man, Recollections from a Life in Cricket

Article Courtesy – espncricinfo.com

Two left arm bowlers sharing the wickets equally in a test innings

Two left arm bowlers sharing the wickets equally in a test innings

Shaheen Shah Afridi and Nauman Ali shared the wickets equally in the third innings of Zimbabwe in the just concluded test at Harare conceding 52 and 86 runs respectively to provide the second occasion of two left arm bowlers performing the feat of sharing the wickets equally in an innings in the annals of test cricket. Both such occasions are tabulated below

NoTeamIOppVenueStart Date5s
1Eng3AusBirmingham27 May 19092
2Pak3ZimHarare07 May 20212
All round performance of a fifty coupled with five plus wickets in a test by Pakistan cricketers

All round performance of a fifty coupled with five plus wickets in a test by Pakistan cricketers

auman Ali of Pakistan scored 97 and captured five for 86 against Zimbabwe in the ongoing test at Harare to provide the 13th occasion of a Pakistan cricketer scoring a fifty and capturing five plus wickets in a test in the annals of test cricket. All such occasions are tabulated below

No PlayerScoreW-ROppGroundDate
1Asif Iqbal52*05-048NZlWellington22.01.65
2Mushtaq Mohd20105-049NZlDunedin07.02.73
3Mushtaq Mohd121,5605-028WinTrinidad01.04.77
4Imran Khan6507-052EngBirmingham29.07.82
5Imran Khan67*05-049EngLeeds26.08.82
6Imran Khan11711-180IndFaisalabad03.01.83
7Wasim Akram6606-091WinFaisalabad24.10.86
8Abdul Qadir6110-186EngKarachi16.12.87
9Wasim Akram52,12305-100AusAdelaide19.01.90
10S Mushtaq5805-089SrlCol-RPS19.04.97
11Wasim Akram7805-045SrlCol-SSC14.06.00
12Saeed Ajmal5005-082EngBirmingham06.08.10
13Nauman Ali9705-086ZimHarare07.04.21
The science of deception

The science of deception

Aerodynamics, biomechanics, psychology, and pitching on a length: Erapalli Prasanna and Ian Chappell on the thrill and skill of spin bowling

INTERVIEW BY V RAMNARAYAN  |  OCTOBER 2014

Ian Chappell regards Erapalli Prasanna as the best slow bowler he faced, and Prasanna retains healthy respect for Chappelli’s proficiency against spin. Foxed by Prasanna in the first Test in Adelaide in 1967, Chappelli held on to his spot with 151 in the following Test, in Melbourne.Prasanna was happiest when batsmen attacked him, when they left the safety of the crease to reach for the ball; Chappelli knew that decisive footwork was the key to playing spin. Prasanna, who was successful on vastly different pitches in Australia and New Zealand, says a spinner must bowl length in all conditions; Chappelli, who starred in Australia’s series win in India in 1969-70, says batsmen should always stay positive.Their undiminished confidence, vast knowledge and delightful anecdotes led to a fascinating conversation nearly 45 years after they last played against each other.

V Ramnarayan: You’ve often said Prasanna is the best spinner you faced. Would you expand on that?

Ian Chappell: The thing that intrigued me was, I felt like he was trying to get me out every ball. So that made it an interesting challenge. Here in India in ’69, the difference between Pras and Bishan [Bedi] was, Pras was trying to get me out every ball whereas Bish was trying to tire me down and wait for me to get myself out. So it was enjoyable to bat against Pras.The other thing was his ability to flight the ball. We were having a beer after play one day and I said, “You little bastard, you’ve got a string tied to that ball. Every time it leaves your hand I say, I’m going to get to this one, and I get down there, and suddenly you pull on that string and drop the ball.”A lot of people talk about the blind spot for a batsman. Tiger O’Reilly, the great legspinner, said if he can curl it into middle and leg, that’s the blind spot for a right-handed batsman. At the Brabourne Stadium in the first Test in 1969, Pras threw this one up and I came charging down the track and I thought I had it covered and I went for this big drive. And I don’t know where it went. It just disappeared and the next thing I know I heard a clunk behind me and I was on my way.Throughout that tour in ’69, Doug Walters and I used to have this ongoing discussion/argument, “Who was the best spin bowler?” And he would say Bedi and I would say Prasanna. I saw Dougie only a few weeks ago and the argument started again. Who’s the best spinner? Prasanna or Bedi? I don’t think we’re ever going to resolve that argument.

IC: Mainly he says because the ball was spinning away. Also, Doug is the best player of offspin I’ve ever seen. He didn’t just survive against the really good offspinners. On his day, he scored quickly against them. And every time I hear a commentator say you shouldn’t cut offspin because you’re cutting against the spin, I feel like saying, “Go talk to Doug Walters, because he could cut offspin and he could cut it like nobody else.”

VR: You said your flighted ball was like a juicy half-volley but it was an appointment it never kept. How do you explain that?

Erapalli Prasanna: I wanted a batsman to come at me. You had one Sastry, Tamil Nadu opening batsman…

VR: Yeah, Harihara Sastry.

EP: Yes. He never used to play any strokes. He used to squat. His stance was like a frog’s. So the only way to get batsmen like him out was to get them to reach out.When you are bowling into the breeze, or even if the breeze is coming at 45 degrees, there is what is known as a fish effect, which is normally applied in aerodynamics. When you throw a Frisbee, it has got two-three elevations. When you try and catch it, it comes to you and then eludes you and then goes up. And once the revolutions are dying, that is the time it drops.So you apply that principle while bowling into the wind with a lot of spin. The ball climbs up. That is the time the batsman feels he can reach out and he comes out, commits himself, but the ball drops and that is the instant when the batsman invariably and inadvertently reaches out. That’s when it looks like someone is flying a kite – controlling the string.

VR: How can you do that when you’re bowling with the wind?

EP: That’s when you hold the ball back. You need to allow the ball to float in the air so that it can carry to the batsman. But again, the ball has to drop. So the spin on the ball, the RPMs, has to be more.

“I can’t think of anything more embarrassing than to be mesmerised and taunted by a spinner”

VR: How important is your arm speed when you’re doing that?

EP: The arm is always high. You’ve got to leave the ball at the highest point. The term “timing”, by and large these days, is used only for a batsman – when he transfers his weight from the back leg to the front leg. At the moment of striking the ball, he transfers his whole body weight through the bat to the ball.Bowlers also need timing. You transfer the weight at the release of the ball, at the highest point. Your weight has to go into the ball so that the ball traverses that distance.You should also have some intuition of where to bowl. If I want to bowl at the off stump, that intent has to be there. Like a batsman has to have the intent to middle the ball. The moment he feels he is middling the ball, he feels far more confident, he thinks he’s in business. As a bowler, the basic objective is to see that no batsman middles the ball.

VR: So you would be unhappy if a batsman middled you all the time?

EP: Yes. I always felt, on any good wicket, I might not be turning every delivery but I wanted one ball to turn immediately when I came on to bowl, so that I could get that psychological advantage. That’s when I was in business. After that, I may have only bowled straight ones – topspinners and what not – but the moment you turn one ball, you’re not allowing the batsman to play you comfortably.There is a lot of psychology involved. Once [in 1970-71] we played a tour game in Jamaica and Lawrence Rowe was one of the players everyone was talking about. He got off to a good start and even though I was bowling well, he was playing me comfortably. As he played each ball, he was also whistling (makes whistling sound). I was thinking, “What the hell, man?” The ball was hanging in the air and dipping but he was smothering the spin quite comfortably. So I went to the umpire and said, “Look, Lawrence is whistling and it is distracting my fieldsmen.” I think you will know – the Chinese…

IC: Oh, Douglas Sang Hue.

EP: Yeah. So he went up and said, “Lawrence, will you kindly stop whistling?” And Lawrence just looked at him and said, “Yeah okay.” Now when he faced the next ball, Lawrence wanted to whistle. His mind was on the whistling. And he was caught at forward short leg. So these are things you sometimes have to do. (laughs)Anyway, the fundamental point is – a spinner has to bowl length. Even if I didn’t turn the ball, it was okay. But I could set a field if I bowled length. You can’t set a field for a short ball.

EP: When a ball is in the air, it induces the batsman to come out. Now remember that a batsman can take maximum two steps to drive a ball. First hop, second hop. If he takes a third hop, I don’t think he can reach the ball – the ball would have gone past him. So once the batsman sees the ball in the air, it drags him out. He goes forward. When the ball dips and he reaches out, that is the best spot to bowl.And second, most importantly, every bowler must bowl to take a wicket. If he is not attempting to take a wicket, then no one will give him a wicket. There are three stumps in front of you, right? What are those for? They’re not for the batsman to find out where his off stump or leg stump is. No. They are the targets the bowler has been given. His objective has to be to bowl to the stumps.So when a batsman attempts to protect the ball from going to the stumps, there are many odds. You have the leg-before, caught behind, caught in the slips, caught and bowled… and various other types of taking a wicket. But the primary wicket-taking ball is the clean- bowled. That’s the intent with which you have to bowl.

VR: So what was your intention when facing a bowler of Prasanna’s ability?

IC: Well, in the end it was a battle of your brains and your wills. You knew there was so much thought going into what he was doing. The objective was to try and dictate terms. If you get to the point where you’re dictating the spin bowler’s field placings then he’s in trouble. And let me assure you, it never got to that point with Pras.I’ve always said if you’re facing a spin bowler and you can late-cut and square-cut successfully, then not only does the bowler have a problem but the captain has got a problem. Because what’s he going to do? Is he going to put one fielder behind point and one in front of point? If you’ve got a spin bowler who’s got two guys close in, plus a slip, he’s got three guys there. There’s a hell of a lot of playing area now for only six more guys. So you have to try and dictate terms to the point where you’re manipulating the field.

VR: Playing in the gaps…

IC: Yeah. using your feet properly. That doesn’t mean always coming way out of your crease. You’ve got to be quick forward and you’ve got to be quick back. One of the best examples of that is VVS Laxman in his 281 against Shane Warne. I mean, he was coming three metres out of his crease and the part that I found incredible was that he was not [hitting] on the full but from the half-volley. On a pitch that was turning a bit he was hitting Warne wide of mid-on. I mean, I just looked at that and thought, “How can you do that?”But he would do that and then Warne would go a little bit higher, a little bit shorter, hoping he would come out. And Laxman would be quickly onto his back foot, playing a pull shot. Now that makes life pretty difficult for a spin bowler, even one as good as Warne. To me that was the challenge of batting against good spinners. It was your brain against his brain, plus throw in the willpower.A lot of people think it can be embarrassing if you’re in trouble against a fast bowler. But I think it’s much more embarrassing if you’re in trouble against a spin bowler. You can mess around there for five-ten minutes and look really bad and everybody sitting in the crowd is saying, “Weird, why is he having trouble against a slow bowler?”

“As a bowler, the basic objective is to see that no batsman middles the ball”

Whereas if it’s whizzing past your nose at 95 miles per hour, the guys are saying, “Well, okay, I can understand why he’s got a problem.”So luckily, I was taught properly from a very young age to use my feet. But I would have hated to not be a good player of spin because I can’t think of anything more embarrassing than to be mesmerised and taunted by a spinner.

VR: The first time you played Prasanna was 1967-68?

IC: Adelaide, I reckon. He got me caught ten or 12 yards from mid-on. I don’t know what I was doing. I was on the back foot and just hit it straight to the guy. I remember talking to my father afterwards and he said, “What the hell were you doing?” And I said, “Martin, I’m not really sure what I was doing.”I wasn’t really sure of myself as a Test player. I made a lot of runs in Shield cricket and I made a lot of runs against Test match bowlers. But I hadn’t convinced myself at that point that I was good enough for Test cricket. I then got 151 in the next game in Melbourne – with a little help from the Indian fielders. That sort of helped a bit, getting that hundred. But it wasn’t until against England in ’68 that I started to feel I was good enough to play at this level. So the guy Pras bowled to in ’67-68 was quite a different player to the one who came here in ’69.

VR: Would you rather face a fast bowler from one end and a spinner from the other? Or would that be more of a challenge than two spinners at the same time?

IC: I suppose it would depend where you’re playing. Two spinners like Pras and Bish on that pitch in Delhi in ’69… that was a handful because it spun right from the first ball. But let’s say a pitch in Australia – if you’ve got a good quickie at one end and a good spinner at the other – as a captain I quite liked to do that after a break because even if a batsman is 50 or 60 and playing well, he’s got to start again, and what you’re doing is testing out his footwork. He’s got to use different footwork against a quickie to the spinner. So you’re sending him a pretty tough examination straight after a break.

VR: Was it a challenge to bowl on Australian wickets?

EP: Yes, it was not like Indian wickets, where you can turn the ball. One encouraging factor on Australian wickets was bounce. So you had to utilise that bounce. Australian cricket is a challenge because of their positive approach. They attack you. On their bouncy wickets, the basic thing was to get batsmen to drive.

VR: You bowled a fuller length in Australia?

EP: No, you have to bowl length everywhere. There is nothing like fuller length, shorter length and whatnot. As Ian explained already, if you are going to allow the batsman to cut or pull, whether the ball is keeping low or there is bounce, there is no value at all. So bottom line is, you have to bowl length. The Australian wickets encourage you to do that.If you bowl length, there is always purchase. There is purchase because the batsmen are also counter-attacking. They are not prodding. They want runs. I bowled against Ian and Ian Redpath and Walters. They were always decisive, smothering and manoeuvring your bowling. They were always looking for runs. So it was an interesting contest between your approach to taking wickets and their approach to preventing that and getting runs.

IC: You’ve always been a great one for the higher you hit up the bat the higher it goes into the air, yeah?

EP: If you allow a batsman to hit the ball from the meat of the bat…

IC: It’s going into the stands?

EP: Yeah, it could go anywhere. So either you hit the top of the bat or the bottom of the bat. That’s why you need to control the bounce.When a batsman attempts to drive on the rise, he can only loft the ball if there is nothing happening off the wicket. If the ball comes straight to you, you can loft it just like a golfer. If the ball deviates even a little, then it is difficult.

VR: On that tour to Australia in 1967-68 you took 25 wickets, and you took another 24 in New Zealand where the conditions were different.

EP: In Australia the wickets and the approach of their batsmen also helped, because they were trying to dominate. And I liked to dominate. So the equation was either you win or I win. Eventually they got runs and I got wickets too. But in New Zealand it was almost like English conditions. The ball was softish but turning viciously. And they were big sweepers. So anything that was pitched slightly away from the off stump, they latched on to. So it helped me because I had that ball drifting away and many people got the outside edge.

VR: Today even mistimed shots go for six. How would you tackle that?

EP: Mistimed shots are part of the game. As a bowler, you have to accept that fours and sixes will be scored. Whether you attempt to bowl tight or not, runs will be scored. In many present-day matches, it looks as if bowlers are keeping it tight. But eventually after ten overs you’ll see they have conceded 60 runs without taking a wicket. Whereas if I were to bowl ten overs I would be very happy to concede 50-odd runs if I can take three wickets. If I take three wickets, it won’t be for 60 because one way of controlling runs is to take wickets.So one can’t worry about the mishit. What I worry about these days are bowlers who have a negative approach because they don’t want to give runs. That is next to impossible because without conceding runs you can’t get wickets. When you concede runs, you’re making a batsman attempt a stroke, correct? Only when he attempts a stroke will you have a good chance of taking a wicket. So allow a batsman to make strokes but don’t allow him to get easy runs. Let him use his intelligence.

IC: It was interesting in the first World Cup in England, in ’75, at every press conference the English press would say to me: “Australia don’t know how to play one-day cricket.” They’d say because it’s a containing game and you guys attack too much. And I’d say, “Mate, have you found a better way to contain than getting a batsman out? I’ve never seen anybody sitting in the pavilion and scoring runs. You send him back there, you’re containing him.”That’s why I like Pras’ attitude. Particularly in one-day cricket in those middle overs, if you got a spinner who can get you wickets… I mean Peter Taylor was a very average offspinner in Test cricket but he was smart enough to realise that in one-day cricket these guys are coming after him and he would always take a couple of wickets in those middle overs, and that slowed the scoring. So all this bollocks that it’s a game of containment… the best way you contain is to get fellows out.

VR: While we say modern bats are heavier, your career lasted about 20 years – so you too adapted to different conditions. The bats got better even while you were playing…

EP: Yes, bats got better. You had a batsman like Clive Lloyd – the first man to tour India with a bat with an extra-long handle. It weighed 3.8 pounds or something. But when I bowled at him I never thought of his bat with an extra-long handle or the 3.8 pounds or the fact that he was Clive Lloyd. No, my objective was to get him out. That’s it. The moment you think you are bowling to XYZ, your body freezes and you can’t even complete your action.Another important thing I must mention. I was able to succeed in Australia and New Zealand and many other places because I had a wonderful captain [Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi]. These days I feel sorry for spinners who have the talent but unfortunately are being used as stop bowlers. It is imperative that you have an understanding captain.

“As a bowler, you have to accept that fours and sixes will be scored. Only when a batsman attempts a stroke will you have a good chance of taking a wicket”

VR: What happens if you’re playing under a captain who doesn’t have that understanding?

EP: Let me give you an example. One time Ajit Wadekar was the captain and Wadekar comes from Bombay. Bombay cricket has always believed in the defensive approach. If they bat first, they want to score 500 runs and let that 500 work on the opponents.So we were playing against Tony Lewis’ side in Madras [in 1972-73] and Wadekar gives me the ball and he says, “Bowl tight.”Now there were still one and a half days of cricket left and England had wiped out the lead. So if I had bowled tight, the game may have gone to the next day but we would have lost. So I refused. Then he got wild. I said, “Don’t worry, leave it to me, don’t tell me what I should bowl.” He said, “Fair enough.”In the next seven overs, I took four wickets for six runs. They were bowled out. We won by four wickets.

IC: You bowled tight…

EP: (Laughs) Yes, just six runs in seven overs with four wickets!

VR: Given your style of captaincy, Prasanna would have been a spinner’s dream.

IC: Any bowler who could get me wickets. I mean, any captain who doesn’t think that way is a dope. If you’re not playing to win the game, I don’t understand what you are doing.You know, there are many great things about Dennis Lillee but one of the most important things I’d say is that Dennis Lillee never asked me for a defensive fielder. It was always an extra slip or a bat-pad, it was always a fielder to try to get a wicket. Dennis Lillee didn’t worry about his average or anything. It was, “How can I get a wicket?” As a captain you are happy as hell to have those folks.

VR: Who was the best spinner in your team?

IC: Ashley Mallett, by a mile. I’ll never forget: Greg [Chappell] had just moved from South Australia to Queensland [in 1973-74]. So it was the first time we were playing against each other. And obviously Mallett and I, we had played with Greg a lot in South Australia. That year in Adelaide they thought they were running out of black soil, and they mixed this red clay dust with the black soil. Of course it didn’t bind, so Ashley was happy as hell it was spinning.Greg came in at No. 3 and Rowdy [Mallett] was bowling. And Greg went whack! bang! and he hit Rowdy over the top and took about 18 off the over. Then I thought, “Hang on, what’s going on here? Greg doesn’t play like this.” And I thought to myself, he wants me to take Mallett off.Anyway, the next three overs Ashley bowled to him was just magnificent bowling: three maidens in a row to Greg. And Greg had to fight like hell to stay in, forget about hitting him over the top. That night we were having a beer after play. I went up to Greg and I said, “Mate, you didn’t expect me to do something stupid out there, did you?” And he said, “I was hoping you would [take Mallett off].” And I said, “Mate, no chance.”Mallett had the same attitude as Pras. He wasn’t put off by someone attacking him. That made him bowl better.

VR: You were a legspinner yourself…

IC: Part-time.

VR: Did you bowl with a bowler’s mind?

IC: Imran Khan wrote in one of his books that to be a good captain you had to understand bowling. It definitely helped that I had done a bit of bowling.I thought Bill Lawry was a very good captain. I learnt a lot about captaincy from Bill, not just playing under him for Australia but batting against Victoria when he was captain. But I think the only spinner Bill had faith in was Johnny Gleeson. He didn’t have a lot of faith in Ashley Mallett. Bill didn’t understand you can bowl a bad ball without intending to.I mean, Mallett’s first delivery in Test cricket – in the fifth Test at The Oval in 1968 – he’s bowling to Colin Cowdrey. He runs up, obviously he’s a bit nervous, and he bowls. It wasn’t a waist-high full toss, it was a low one, sort of down ankle height, and Cowdrey puts him away through midwicket for four. And Bill walks over to Ashley and says, “You bowl another ball like that and I’ll kick you up the arse.” I mean, the bloke’s playing his first Test!I think Bill’s attitude was – no one gives me easy runs when I’m batting, so we’re not going to give them any. He certainly didn’t get the best out of Mallett, although to be fair to Bill he used him very well in India when he got 28 wickets in the series. So he certainly had faith in him at that point.It did help that I bowled a bit. Also in the South Australia side, I had not only Mallett but I had Terry Jenner. And they took a hell of a lot of wickets. I had played under Les Favell and I had seen the way Les used David Sincock, Mallett, Jenner. If David Sincock had played Test cricket under Favell or Richie Benaud, he would have been a lot better off. Bob Simpson did not understand his type of bowling.

VR: You were talking about the shoulder being the main thing in bowling. But offspin bowling these days is more about the arm.

EP: That’s because everyone’s intention is to restrict the rate of scoring. Everyone thinks that by bowling fast, they are curtailing the run rate. Adding insult to injury, the ICC have changed the rule, accommodating that 15 degrees [of flex]. So the utilisation of the shoulder has lost its bearing. If the shoulder points one way, the ball will go that way. You can’t bowl with the arm. Basically cricket is a side-on game. You can’t throw a ball from the boundary with an open chest. It won’t even go half the distance. It has to be side-on. Everything has to be side-on. The shoulder is the guiding force.

VR: So a lot of bowlers are not using their body fully?

EP: No, because they don’t realise this is a side-on game. Some bowlers have succeeded with an open chest. But you’ve got to see the batsman over the left shoulder. Only then will the left shoulder drop and the right shoulder go up.

IC: Didn’t you have a big swivel?

EP: Yeah. It’s like putting out a cigarette butt. You step on it and then pivot your body. When you pivot you use a little bit of your waist and also your shoulder.

VR: Having watched you a lot, Pras, I think you also gained from a nice bounding run-up.

EP: The run-up is where you gather pace. You cannot land with your left foot parallel to the popping crease. Then you can’t move. If you see Glenn McGrath, he used his left leading foot for direction.For a spinner, when you pivot on your left toe… that force is the one that drags you into the follow-through. The amount of twist that you give at that point is the dragging force for your body to move forward. That is when your body is ready to take a caught and bowled.If you observe Warne, he walked to the crease. But if you take the last segment of his bowling action, you’ll see how the full effort was there. That helped him follow through.

VR: There’s a traditional thinking that an offspinner cannot survive today without the doosra.

EP: The doosra is also another form of deception, isn’t it? Whatever you do, you need deception. Either you hit the bottom or the top of the bat.

IC: Admittedly I didn’t face a bowler who bowled the one that went the other way, but if you ask me if I would prefer to face a good, traditional offspinner like a Prasanna, Mallett or a Swann, who bowled the one that turned and the one that went straight on, I would say I’d much rather face the guy who bowls the doosra. Now I can’t pick Pras or Mallett or Swann when they bowl an offbreak and then they virtually bowl with the same action and it goes straight on.But if you’re making one spin the other way, you’ve got to do something different. And if I’m earning my living as a batsman and I can’t see what the guy is doing to make it go the other way then I shouldn’t be earning my living as a batsman.The other thing about the one that goes the other way is, you’ve got to change your line. Because if an offspinner is bowling to a right-hander, however far he’s spinning the ball, he’s pitching the ball outside off so it’s going to come back and hit the top of off. If he bowls the one that goes the other way in the same spot, I have no problem. So he has got to change his line, and even if you’re a dope and you’re not seeing something different [in his action], if he suddenly changes his line, a few alarm bells are going to ring, aren’t they?See Saqlain [Mushtaq] was a terrific offspinner for a while and then he just fell in love with the other one, and I reckon that ruined his bowling. I thought he was a terrific offspinner.

EP: Too good. He was probably the best at that time. When he was bowling offspin, he was bowling good length all the time. The moment he started bowling the doosra, he was slightly shorter. So then, whenever he wanted to bowl the offbreak, he couldn’t bowl that shorter length. That’s where he lost his basic confidence. But he was a terrific bowler.

“A sweep is a desperate shot. A good batsman will never sweep. He’ll smother the spin and play in the gaps for twos and ones”

VR: You had a ball that swung out?

EP: An offspinner must aim to bowl to the fourth stump. You want the batsman to come forward and to reach out. You make the ball drift away to create doubt in the batsman’s mind.

IC: What Pras is saying about deception is interesting because I’ve heard Richie Benaud say it thousands of times: “It’s the subtle variations that are most important.” When the ball doesn’t quite arrive at the same time or in the same length as you’re expecting – that comes through the subtle variations. The subtle variations are not easy to pick – if they’re pickable at all.

VR: Who were the batsmen who were a real challenge for you?

EP: Ian challenged me all the time. Doug Walters is another. I always felt there was a good chance of getting Doug out within 20 runs because he was studying you all the time. After 20 runs, god help you, because as Ian said, he could cut and pull any time.There was Ian Redpath. Players like Garry Sobers, Vivian Richards. There was no way you could back out. You attack, they attack, you win or they win.In my first Test against West Indies [1962] as a second-year engineering student, I was the youngest player in the team. I was asked to play in Jamaica because quite a few players had injuries, and looking at the wicket, quite a few didn’t want to play.I had to bowl against Frank Worrell, Easton McMorris, Rohan Kanhai, Sobers, Joe Solomon, Conrad Hunte… My captain, Nari Contractor, gave me the ball and said, “You think you can bowl?” I said, “Why not?” I bowled and I took three wickets. My intention, even at that time, was to get batsmen out. So the bottom line is, you’ve got to have a big heart. If I were to be 35-40 years younger, with these heavy bats, I would have still bowled the same way. Somebody asked me how I would have bowled to Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag. I said, if I were to play against them – and I am not trying to boast – I think I would have done okay.

IC: Who was the better player of spin bowling? Tendulkar or [Brian] Lara?

EP: I think Lara.

IC: Seriously, I felt the same. I loved watching the way he played spin bowling.

EP: Tendulkar was a little impetuous; he wanted to kill you right away. Lara allowed you to bowl and also he could get runs.

IC: Lara’s first Test century, 277 in Sydney – 38 fours, no sixes. He just hit the ball along the ground into the gaps. Lovely footwork.V

VR: What’s the most critical thing while playing spin?

IC: I think to be able to use your feet is critical. I hate to think I have to play a spinner pinned to the crease. But it’s no good saying to some 25-year-old who’s come into Test cricket, when he’s about to face Shane Warne or Graeme Swann, that you’ve got to use your feet. If he hasn’t learnt how to use his feet properly, they’re going to knock him over.You’ve got to be decisive. You’ve got to use your brain. I remember the first time I faced Intikhab Alam, a pretty decent legspinner, and it was ’71-72 when he was playing for the Rest of the World. He bowled about ten overs to me, went through his whole repertoire. He started working me over around off stump, then moved to middle and then went to leg and then he went back again to all three. I was aware of the fact that he was changing his line, and I got through ten overs.He never got me out again in my career. And I faced Intikhab quite a lot. I think those ten overs were the reason why he never got me out, because he tested everything I had and he didn’t get through. And I think I won the psychological battle.As a batsman, particularly against spin, you’ve got to have a pretty fair idea of how the guy is trying to get you out. I saw Kevin Pietersen batting against Shane Warne and Warne got him with the one that went straight on – I think he played with a gap in the middle and it went through and bowled him. And I saw Pietersen in the second innings and I thought, “Mate, you haven’t worked out how he’s trying to get you because he’s trying to get you out the same way again. And I don’t like your chances.” So, batting against spin it’s important to think along with the spinner and hopefully be one step ahead of him.See, the Englishmen, if they’re up against a wristspinner, they’re trying to pick him off the pitch. Well, good luck! You might survive but you’re not in position to deal with the slightly loose ball, and even the good ball. I’d hate to be making my decisions once the ball is pitched, because I’m not sure if it’s going this way or that. As the ball leaves the wristspinner’s hand, you’ve got to know what it is.You see, if I was playing against Warne, I would try and score on the on side because Shane left gaps there. He was trying to invite you to score there. Now I remember Gooch was playing his legbreaks – just playing them without scoring – and as soon as he bowled a wrong ‘un he went bang and hit it for a six.And one of the Englishmen in the press box said to me, “Well, Gooch is playing Warne well”, and I said, “Yeah, good for Gooch but no good for the team.” He said, “What do you mean?” I said, “Well, he’s hitting Warne for six, you think that’s going to bother Warne? And more importantly, who’s he bowling to next ball? He’s bowling to Gooch.” But if you can get singles… Ask Pras. If I’m facing Pras this ball, and the next ball he’s bowling to Ian Redpath, and the next ball he’s bowling to me, it’s much harder for him.I’ve got to find a way to score, and off the really good bowlers that may mean I’m just trying to score singles. And the thing about scoring singles off Warne – sooner or later, he’s going to get frustrated. That’s when he’s going to try a few extra things, and that’s when you will get some fours.

VR: You always set your own fields…

EP: Yes, 99% of the time. I’ll give you one example from the Test we won against West Indies in Chennai [in 1974-75]. I had taken four wickets already and the right-handed Bernard Julien came in at No. 8. He looked very tense. I was about to bowl over the stumps but I stopped. I didn’t even look at Tiger Pataudi, our captain, and asked Eknath Solkar at forward short leg to go five yards away from the on-side umpire – because if Julien lapped the ball, it would go there.”What are you doing?” Tiger said when he saw there was no close-in fieldsman on the on side. I expected this because he was a staunch believer in not wasting time when it came to tailenders. I said, no, I’ll go around the stumps. He ran up and swore at me. For the first time in my career he gave me the dirty Tiger look.Anyway, I bowled round the wicket. I knew Julien was trying to get off strike, so I bowled a beautifully flighted ball and went towards short mid-on. He tried to hit me through there and I took the caught and bowled. Tiger came all the way to me and said, “Genius, what did you do?” I said, “This is what I do.”You’ve got to be authoritative. If you know your bowling, you will know how to set a field.

VR: You liked bowling to batsmen who swept you?

EP: A sweep is a desperate shot. A good batsman will never sweep. He’ll smother the spin and play in the gaps for twos and ones. Someone who sweeps is not sure what he wants to do.I never had a deep fine leg. I had a squarish one because I was bowling on the fourth stump at a good length. From there if a batsman wants to lap, it won’t go fine, it will go square.

VR: Ian, what do you think of batsmen who sweep?

IC: I didn’t sweep much early in my career, but as you get older and your legs don’t work quite as well, I swept a bit more. I also swept [Derek] Underwood a lot because he was too quick to come down the track to and he was damn hard to score off for right-handed batsmen.

EP: You heard him? He said, “It was difficult to score off his bowling.” And he swept him in desperation – that is the word, basically. He wanted to change the rhythm of his bowling.

IC: And Underwood hated being swept. That was the other reason. Also Phil Edmonds – I only faced him once or twice but he was quite easy to sweep. He bowled outside the off stump and when I swept from there, it went in front of square leg. And for some reason he always had a guy behind square.As a batsman you’ve got to have an understanding of why a spin bowler has blokes in certain positions. I remember as a young guy facing Tony Lock. I was only 18 or 19, and Locky was a pretty accurate bowler and I worked out that I am not going to be able to hit a lot of fours off this guy. So I’ve got to work him around and get singles. And I noticed he always had a guy at deep-backward square leg for me. And I felt that’s interesting because I didn’t sweep, not at that stage. And I felt that’s a bonus for me because that’s one totally wasted fielder.So I was wondering whether he had that field placing for me or if that was just a standard field placing. We were playing New South Wales a couple of games later and Doug Walters was about the same age as me, and so I went and sat next to Doug and started talking to him. I said, “When you’re playing against Locky, does he have a guy out for the sweep?” Because I knew Doug didn’t sweep, not even later in his career. He said, “Yeah, he does.” So immediately I knew that it was a standard field placing for Locky. It tells you a little bit about the bowler.And another thing. Lance Gibbs came to play in South Australia in ’69-70. And I played one club game with Gibbsy for Glenelg. I was the captain of the side, and Ashley Woodcock, a South Australian opener who was a very good player of pace bowling but not so good against spin, was batting. So I said to Gibbsy, mate we’re going to have a silly mid-off, we’re going to have a bat-pad, and Gibbsy said, no, no, we’ll have a guy at 45. I said, no mate, if this bloke is not confident against spin, we’ve got to have those fielders close in. But he said no.So that told me Gibbsy wasn’t keen to have guys around the bat, which was very handy when I played him a few years later at the Queen’s Park Oval [in 1973]. The ball was turning and there was just one guy around the bat, and I was thinking, he’s got no chance.

VR: What was your favourite mode of dismissal?

EP: The bowled. The rest is a batsman’s mistake. My credit is only the bowled.

IC: So the one that curves away and spins back, that’s the one?

EP: Yes, when people are committed already and the natural reflex is for the bat to go towards the ball. That’s enough.

VR: What about the batsman trying to drive you on the off side and getting caught at short leg?

EP: Same thing. When you’re inviting a batsman, you’ve got to get him to drive. Whether it’s a cover drive or an on-drive, he has to reach for it. The greatest ball is the one when you invite the batsman to cover-drive, when he’s halfway through the stroke and realises it’s not there yet.

VR: And that’s a dreadful feeling…

IC: It’s not a very good sound – the sound I heard at the Brabourne Stadium in 1969.

V Ramnarayan is an author, translator and teacher. He bowled offspin for Hyderabad and South Zone in the 1970s

Article courtesy – espncricinfo.com

DA Warner completes 10000 runs in the history of Twenty20 games

DA Warner completes 10000 runs in the history of Twenty20 games

DA Warner completed 10000 runs in T20 games when he was on 40 during the course of his knock of 57 in the game between Sunrisers and Chennai Super Kings at Delhi on 28 Apr 2021. At the end of the game his  run aggregate read 10017. He has represented the following teams in Twenty20 games. Australia, Australia A, Delhi Daredevils, Durham, Middlesex, New South Wales, Northern Districts, St Lucia Stars, Sunrisers Hyderabad, Sydney Sixers, Sydney Thunder, Sylhet Sixers

DA Warner became the fourth batsman in the history of Twenty20 games to score 10000 plus runs. The others are – CH Gayle, KA Pollard and Shoaib Malik. The following table lists the performance of these four batsmen as of 29.04.21

PlayerMatInnsNORunsHSCHC
CH Gayle42241404913839175*2286
KA Pollard540480140107101040152
Shoaib Malik4173891061048895*0064
DA Warner30430303810017135*0882

DA Warner’s 57 in the game between Sunrisers and Chennai Super Kings at Delhi on 28 Apr 2021 provides his 90th fifty – 08 Centuries and 82 half centuries in Twenty20 games. He became the second batsman to score 90 fifties in the history of Twenty20 games after CH Gayle. CH Gayle has scored  108 fifties – 22 Centuries and 86 half centuries

It’s unfortunate that the media and TV Commentators failed to pick up this important stats of one of the most exciting batsman in the history of T20 games

All round feat of scoring a fifty and capturing three or more wickets in Indian Premier League

All round feat of scoring a fifty and capturing three or more wickets in Indian Premier League

Chennai Super Kings’ RA Jadeja’s scored  62 not out and capturing 3 for 13 against Royal Challengers Bangalore at Mumbai on 25.04.21. His feat provides the 13th occasion of a cricketer performing the all round feat of scoring a fifty and capturing three plus wickets in the same match in the history of Indian Premier League. All such occasions are tabulated below

NoPlayerTeamRunsWktsOppVenueDate
1Pathan YKRaj563/22Che  Mumbai01.06.08
2Watson SRRaj523/10DelhiMumbai30.05.08
3Yuvraj SinghPun503/22BanDurban01.05.09
4Valthaty PCPun754/29DecHyd-RGS16.04.11
5Yuvraj SinghPune664/29DelhiMumbai17.04.11
6Watson SRRaj893/19MumMumbai20.05.11
7Gayle CHBan1073/21PunBangalore06.05.11
8Pollard KAMum644/44RajMumbai11.04.12
9Yuvraj SinghBan834/35RajBangalore11.05.14
10Duminy J-PDelhi544/17SunVizag18.04.15
11Stoinis MPPun523/40DelhiMohali07.05.16
12Pandya HHMum503/28BanBangalore01.05.18
13Jadeja RChe62*3/13BanMumbai25.04.21

Yuvraj Singh is the only cricketer  to perform such a feat on three occasions. All such feats are tabulated below. He has performed the feat representing three teams – Punjab, Pune and Bangalore

NoPlayerTeamRunsWktsOppVenueDate
1Yuvraj SinghPun503/22BanDurban01.05.09
2Yuvraj SinghPune664/29DelhiMumbai17.04.11
3Yuvraj SinghBan834/35RajBangalore11.05.14

Wankede Stadium, Mumbai  has witnessed the  feat on six occasions. All such occasions are tabulated below

NoPlayerTeamRunsWktsOppVenueDate
1Pathan YKRaj563/22Che  Mumbai01.06.08
2Watson SRRaj523/10DelhiMumbai30.05.08
3Yuvraj SinghPune664/29DelhiMumbai17.04.11
4Watson SRRaj893/19MumMumbai20.05.11
5Pollard KAMum644/44RajMumbai11.04.12
6Jadeja RChe62*3/13CheMumbai25.04.21