On this day, 2002, Ashish Nehra became part of the most James Bondesque scorecard entry in international cricket.

We remember the Hamilton Test.

The Nehra dismissal took place on the eventful day when some part of all four innings was played.
+
India, 92/8 overnight, reached 99.

Then they bowled out New Zealand for 94 and themselves folded for 154.

New Zealand finished the day on 24/0. They won next day.

Tinu Yohannan bowled and batted in each innings.

The dismissal happened early in the day.
+
Nehra (yet to become Nehraji) was batting on 1.

At 93/9, Shane Bond charged in to bowl at him on a pitch clearly designed to suit him.

He had already claimed 3/33 including Sehwag and Laxman.

Surely this was a mismatch?

Of course it was.
+
Nehra casually tonked Bond into the stands over square-leg, just like that.

He was now on 7. From 3 balls.

The next ball was (obviously) fast.

To his credit, Nehra connected, but the ball flew to Stephen Fleming at first slip.

It was a good catch.
+
Fans of both universes have probably tracked caught Fleming bowled Bond dismissals when both were active cricketers.

Caught Fleming bowled Bond has happened 17 times across formats in international cricket. But what happened here was unique.

NEHRA c FLEMING b BOND 007
+
Trivia:
Ian Fleming's nephew Matthew played 11 ODIs. Matthew's great-grandfather Charles Leslie played 4 Tests.
>> Tinu Yohannan bowled and batted in each innings.

As did Nehra. Thanks @amal_sachinism

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21 Dec
Cricket Australia has discussed switching broadcast rights back to Channel 9.

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And I have a feeling that a lot of 1980s cricket fans will agree.

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On this day, 1969, Australian wicketkeeper Ray Jordon cheated during a match in Bangalore.

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20 Dec
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20 Dec
On this day, 1997 at Cuttack (photo), Hemulal Yadav became the first batsman to be given timed out in a First-Class match.

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Here is what happened.
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The conversation must have been intriguing, for he did not bother to come out even when play resumed.

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20 Dec
#36AllOut reminded me of a phase in Test cricket when India lost 25 wickets for 224.

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But India actually scored 280/19 at Adelaide, so what we had witnessed was worse.
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I suppose a lot of us are still upset, so let me share something amusing.

This concerns this book, one that I had been unaware of until I came across a report by Andrew Lang in The Times.

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.@sumitganguly14 got a scan of the cover for me from an acquaintance in Lucknow.

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Calcutta Cricket Club Scores 1844-54, the first known book of scores outside the British Isles, was published in 1854.

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Read 25 tweets

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