Thread:
Salim Durani born #onthisday 1934
Another of the handful of Indian cricketing icons of the 1960s who promised to be way better than what his end numbers proved; yet another whose legend is linked as much to his cricket as to his debonair image & smouldering good looks
Yes, Durani was handsome enough to play the hero in a Bollywood movie. In fact, he did so, pairing with Parveen Babi in BR Ishara’s Charitra.
Durani had the ability to turn the match with bat or ball, and occasionally did so. He captured 8 wickets at Calcutta and 10 at Madras to help India defeat England in 1961-62. He took 6 for 73 to dismiss Bobby Simpson’s Australians for 174 in 1964-65.
Hence his famous question to Rohit Brijnath on the eve of the West Indies tour, “Tell me, has India ever won a Test without me?”
Well, they had won a few, but Durani did play the pivotal role in those iconic wins of the early sixties. Being dropped for nearly half a decade hurt.
Not that he had always blazed the turf from 1960 to 1966, averaging in the mid-20s with the bat and mid-30s with the ball, but he always looked on the verge of producing something special. There were many who saw sparks of genius. Perhaps he could have been persisted with.
His figures remained unimpressive on return, while the back-to-back dismissals of Lloyd and Sobers at Port-of-Spain during India’s historic win entered folklore. As did the sixes he hit against Tony Lewis's men.
However, in between there were plenty of days of mediocrity.
As a batsman he was a dasher who could apparently hit sixes at will. He was indeed a big hitter — and could also be a fighter if his solitary Test hundred, against West Indies at Trinidad, is anything to go by.
However, his final figures of 1,202 runs at 25.04 are disappointing when measured against his talent. As are his 75 wickets at 35.42 apiece.
In First-Class cricket his numbers (8,545 runs at 33, 484 wickets at 26) were reasonably better.
The 'Kabuliwalla', born in Afghanistan, he played for Rajasthan in the 1960s and became a mainstay—during the decade when they played the perennial bridesmaid to Bombay in Ranji Trophy.
As a left-arm spinning all-rounder, Nadkarni, whose career overlapped Durani’s for quite a while, ended with marginally better figures with bat & far better ones with ball. Strange, because Durani always promised to be a top-order bat, something Nadkarni had no such pretensions.
One also wonders if the legend of his ‘hitting sixes on demand’ is not a bit far-fetched. He hit 15 sixes in 29 Tests, and 7 of them came in the final 3 appearances.
Perhaps the final three Tests, played at the big centres of Calcutta, Bombay and Madras, with sudden spate of international success having plunged the country into cricket craziness, left a lasting impression and blessed this story with immortality.
Nevertheless, the ‘No Durani No Test’ protests at Kanpur in 1973 underlined the immense popularity of the man.
Salim Durani was born on 11 Dec 1934.
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That incredible double of 22.Rxe6 fxe6 23.Be7+ against Bologan …
Or 26. … Rxc4 against Radjabov that left his Queen unprotected in front of the white rook, and left his opponent susceptible to a devious 8-move combination.
And my favourite, that 16.Rxf7 till 23.Rxf6 .. a double rook sacrifice during a spectacular 10-move sequence against Sokolov that would see him win the game with two bishops and a knight against two rooks and a bishop
Thread:
Cricket loving PM Robert Menzies kept a photograph of a perfect Miller square drive on his office desk. Ian Wooldridge called Miller “the golden boy” of cricket, leading to the nickname “Nugget”. Cardus referred to him as Australian in excelsis.
Miller ended with 2958 runs at 36.97 and 170 wickets at 22.97 from 55 Tests. The figures put him at the top of the list of all-rounders when he retired, and has been matched by only the likes of Garry Sobers, Imran Khan and Jacques Kallis since then.
With Ray Lindwall, he formed one of the scariest new ball partnerships. And he is one of the very few in history to bat high in the order while also bowling with the new ball.
West Indian captain John Goddard exclaimed, “Give us Keith Miller and we’ll beat the world.”
There was that eternal child in him. The innocent delight that sparked every time he touched a ball.
Without that child the Hand of God goal would've been impossible. And the second goal of the match, the run from his own half-line, perhaps the best goal of all time #RIPMaradona
That child lived in him notwithstanding the truckloads of cocaine, the links with the mafia, the sex workers in his room, the fake penis to dodge drug tests, the hideously bloated self after years of substance abuse #RIPMaradona
When as manager of Argentina he stood beyond the sidelines, desperately trying to fit in his charcoal-black suit … and when in that avatar he trapped the errant match ball effortlessly with his formal shoe … that eternal child sparked again. #RIPMaradona
4522 runs as an opening batsman at 61.10. Ahead of the rest of the field across the history of Test cricket by more than five runs per innings.
Len Hutton followed them a decade later. Together the triumvirate of Hobbs, Sutcliffe and Hutton stand head and shoulders above any other opening batsman … ever.
Yet, Sutcliffe is seldom spoken of when great, and often not so great, opening batsmen are recalled. Precious little is documented in terms of eulogies to his craft of batting.