One just had to close one’s eyes & the graceful, lithe run up could be seen, leap before delivery, head tilted to the left, right hand close to the chest left raised in front of the face, and then the left arm extended outwards as the right came around to send down the delivery
All through the 1980s with more cricket being telecast one found almost every cricket pitch, from coaching centres to school games, full of bowling actions that were almost exact replicas of the great man’s. Yes, Indians could bowl pace, successfully, and Kapil had shown the way
Anyone with more than a few paces in his run up seemed to follow in his excellent steps, at least as far as running up to the wicket was concerned. Almost every young lad in the country aspiring to bowl pace at any level of the game emulated the action.
From the early eighties, some occasionally tried to model their run up on Malcolm Marshall, although few managed the pace. One or two made a decent caricature of Imran Khan. But by and large, the template remained uniformly Kapil.
Kapil’s magic continued when India batted. The fall of the fifth wicket was always much awaited, greeted with rousing cheers. The enormously popular hero would walk in, look back at the sun, and then stride to the wicket.
Unlike his bowling, his batting was seldom imitated. The array of strokes was strictly his own, from the scorching square cut to the searing cover drive to the agricultural pull stroke, in the manner of Lord Nataraj performing the cosmic Tandav
Kapil at the crease was the height of adrenaline pumping excitement. He was not just admired, he was adored. However brief his forays to the wicket, his game never failed to electrify the crowds.
And then there were the movements as he prowled in the field.
After his seasons for Northamptonshire, he preferred spending more time in the slips, but I used to wait for him to move to cover or mid-on.
The anticipation and athleticism while cutting off a stroke, and then the whooshing arrow-like return to the wicketkeeper, often after a full turn — there was an incredible animal grace about those actions.
India had fielders like Mohammad Azharuddin and Maninder Singh. For a few blessed seasons, they had Laxman Sivaramakrishnan as well. But, Kapil was special in a different way. Every act of brilliance on the field spoke of a raw, natural genius.
Kapil Dev - greatest all-round athlete of Indian cricket ...
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5 Jan 1971. Garth McKenzie bowled to Geoff Boycott.
The general feeling among the players was it was a part of a joke.
However became part of epoch-making history.
The first ever ODI had kicked off.. .
It was a weather-driven accident. The first 2 Tests had been drab draws, both captains unwilling to take risks. When the Ashes moved to Melbourne, elements ensured two days had to be called off before play. Even adding a day to the Test match did not help as it kept pouring.
With the Melbourne authorities facing losses of up to £80,000, both boards agreed to arrange an extra Test - the seventh!! The England cricketers were not as delighted as in this pic. They demaded more money. Good old days of Test cricket.
The display covers Ranji, Duleep, Pataudi, Imran and Mushtaq.
Each of the five legends are covered with one main painting and two large biographical frames of sketch and text.
Here is the first biographical frame of Tiger.
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Danie Craven (died 4 Jan 1993).
An extraordinary career cut short by the WW2 when just 28, Springbok captain, world’s best scrum-half
Springbok #rugby supremo, who said in 1969 “There will be a black Springbok over my dead body” #onthisday#blm#blacklivesmatter
Craven was also a stellar scholar.
phd in Ethnology at Stellenbosch (dissertation Ethnological classification of the South African Bantu, 3rd doctorate for work on Evolution of Modern Games)
Appointed Stellenbosch's first professor of Physical Education in 1949, till 1975
As far as rugby was concerned, Craven became a selector after the War, and then took over as coach in 1949. The Springboks started to win everything in sight, 10 matches in a row, including the famous whitewash of the All Blacks.
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Dilip Doshi was well into his thirties when he finally got the opportunity to play for India. 114 Test wickets at 30.71 - quite an achievement given the late start.
The years of experience bowling for Nottinghamshire and Bengal came in handy. #cricket#onthisday
Bishan Bedi’s magnificent career stuttered against the quick-footed Pakistani batsmen of 1978-79, stumbled against Alvin Kallicharran’s men immediately after that and came to a grinding halt after India’s tour of England the next summer.
The bespectacled 32-year-old took over when the Packer-hit Australians arrived. 6 for 103 in his first innings. In the final Test of the series he took 8, bowling India to an innings win and taking his tally to 27 in the six Tests.
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January 1958
West Indies 579 Pakistan 106.
6-day Test. 3.5 of those days remained.
No one gave Pakistan a chance of saving the Test against Gilchrist, Atkinson, Valentine, Sobers, Smith.
And then 23-year-old Hanif Mohammad took guard
Perhaps moved by the boyish looks of the diminutive batsman, the veteran Walcott had passed on some valuable advice ahead of the innings: “Never try to hook Gilchrist.”
Hanif started swaying away as the terrifying fast man bowled a barrage of bouncers.
It paid off.
Pakistan ended Day 3 on 162/1, Hanif 61*
3 days left. No one gave them a chance
Even that exemplary leader, Pakistan’s captain, Abdul Hafeez Kardar, spared himself the trouble of a pep talk.
All Hanif got from Kardar was a note beside his bed that said, “You are our only hope.”
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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.