Rabindranath Tagore's birthday will be celebrated twice this year, on May 7 (today) and Baishakh 25 (tomorrow).

Yes, he had tried to play cricket.

No, he was not quite successful at it. He did not like it either.
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On January 3, 1962, Jagadish Chandra Roy wrote a first-person account to Anandabazar Patrika. Here is a crude translation.

This was reproduced by Sankari Prasad Basu in his book.

(By the way, Satyendranath, elder brother of Rabindranath, was the first Indian to join the ICS.)
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"Satyendranath Tagore used to reside in 19, Store Road. He used to spend every paisa of his pension for the country. One of his missions was to hire bodybuilders to help train little children. Rabindranath used to participate thrice a week."
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"The Military Grounds were next to 19 Store Road. There used to be a famous cricket club for the British. Indians were not allowed inside."

"Rabindranath saw them play once and informed his brother. Satyendranath sent his manager and me to buy bats, balls, nets, etc."
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"He insisted on buying these from Indian shops. These were acquired from a shop to the north of Esplanade. Practice began the day after. Satyendranath hired two Anglo-Indians as coaches. Rabindranath travelled from Jorasanko almost everyday, to both watch and play."
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"But he never enjoyed cricket. He could not focus hard enough."

"A ball once hit him on the leg. The injury kept him out of cricket for three months, then forever. He persisted with the lathi, his favourite sport."

But that is about playing. Did he follow cricket?
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In Baisakh 1312 (April or May 1905), he delivered a speech for in a university, where he dropped a bombshell.

"দিনের পড়া তো শেষ হইল, তার পরে ক্রিকেট খেলাতেও নাহয় রণজিৎ হইয়া উঠিলাম। তার পরে?"
"We shall be done with studies, then become Ranjit at cricket. Then?"
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Now, while Ranjit might have meant Ranjitsinhji, it could also have been a common noun (victorious at war).

But one cannot rule out Ranji.

This was 1905. In the six previous seasons, he had averaged
1899 63.18
1900 87.57
1901 70.51
1902 46.08
1903 56.58
1904 74.17
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In 1904, just the previous year, Ranji had a phase when he scored eight hundreds and five fifties in ten weeks.

Tagore had definitely heard of Ranji. But to what extent?

While digging more into this, I came across a piece called from Chaitra 1308 (March or April 1902).
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"রামমোহন রায় আজ যদি ইংলণ্ডে যাইতেন তবে তাঁহার গৌরব ক্রিকেট-খেলোয়াড় রঞ্জিতসিংহের গৌরবের কাছে খর্ব হইয়া থাকিত।"
"Had Rammohan Roy been in England today, even his achievements would have been eclipsed by Ranjitsinhji".

Now check Ranji's numbers in 1900 and 1901 above.
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This cleared all doubts.

Then there were his prose and poetry, where he mentions cricket *and* something called bat-ball.

These were different.

In one of his autobiographies, Chhelebela, he mentions bat-ball as "ক্রিকেটের অত্যন্ত দূর কুটুম্ব" (a distant relative of cricket).
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It was not ডাংগুলি/danda-gilli either.

In Chirakumar Sabha, Sreesh mentions gilli-danda and bat-ball as separate sports.

In Jogajog, Bipradas' school had a store that used to stock books, copies, pens, knives, bat-ball, spinning tops, and packaged peanuts.
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I wonder whether these were cricket bats or bat-ball bats.

If it were the latter, bat-ball, whatever it was, was not an expensive sport, then.
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More from @ovshake42

27 Apr
Should the IPL continue?

Its existence seems ugly, unwanted, irrelevant, greedy amidst this fear, this gloom, this despair.

It seems unbelievable that high-profile cricket can continue in the country when you are scared to receive a call from a number you know.

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The incident took place in Pune, during the 1996 World Cup.

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This tweet may sound confusing. I apologise if it does. :(
Edit:
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Read 4 tweets
23 Mar
Michael Tissera turns 82.

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+
Before going into that, a bit about Tissera, a stylish batsman, an efficient leg-spinner, and a superb fielder.

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+
If one considers all 76 recorded matches the numbers read 2,930 runs at 32 and 66 wickets at 24.

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22 Mar
This happened on this day, 1992.

We all know the story of South Africa being robbed of a place in the final by a ridiculous rule.

But there were two ridiculous rules in the tournament.

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+
We know the story.

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It rained when they were 231/6 after 42.5 overs. They needed 22 in 13 balls.

As a result, two overs were deducted, but no run. The target now read 22 in 1 ball.
+
Before getting into the other rule I mentioned, let us consider the DLS Method.

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South Africa's target would have read 12 in 1 ball. Mathematically better but that is about it.
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Read 8 tweets
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On this day, 1974, Chinnaswamy Stadium witnessed one of the most significant moments in the history of Indian cricket.

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Bombay had won the Ranji Trophy for 15 consecutive seasons.

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Karnataka (previously Mysore) had their stars.

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