As memorable a picture as it is, Sourav Ganguly waving his shirt at Lord’s in 2002 was actually the final shot in a fairly long montage of India-England acrimony that had brewed in the 10 months before that evening in Lord’s. Here's a longish THREAD on what all led to it. 👇
People who know a bit more about the incident would know of it as a reply to similar actions by English all-rounder Andrew Flintoff after England won the final ODI at Wankhede in February earlier that year to level the series 3-3.
But Flintoff’s actions themselves were a culmination of an acrimonious tour of India for the Englishmen. In fact, had it not been for the 2001 series against Australia which overshadows much of cricketing action from that year, that series would be talked about a lot more.
And probably not too fondly.
The incident that is believed to have sparked the bitterness was the dismissal of Michael Vaughan in the Bangalore Test. The opener was adjudged out Handled the ball when Indians appealed after he had thoughtlessly took the red cherry in his
hands off the bowling of Sarandeep Singh. The Englishmen felt the appeal wasn’t in spirit of the game. And the rumblings began.
In India’s innings, Nasser Hussain resorted to tactics that many in the press box called Jardine-sque and many straightaway gasped ‘Bodyline 2.0’.
Negative tactics and the negative field placements resulted in seven straight maiden overs. At one point, Sachin complained to the umpires of the tactic but it resulted in the English captain giving the Indian batsman an earful and even led to
some ungainly scenes of finger pointing. Later in the day, for the first time in his Test career, Sachin was out stumped in the match while advancing down the track to hit Ashley Giles for a biggie.
The ODI series continued in similar vein and tempers flared more over poor umpiring and trivial issues. SK Sharma gave no balls when the English bowlers hadn't overstepped, gave sixes without consulting the third umpire when the ball had dropped inside the rope and then gave
Marcus Trescothick out when he hadn't nicked, all in an ODI which began with Hussain complaining about practice facilities. One of the many uglier incidents saw Nasser Hussain himself appealing for obstructing the field against his counterpart Ganguly in the Kanpur ODI.
And when India gave up its 3-1 lead in the ODI series to allow England to go home with a 3-3 draw, the media came down heavily on the team, labelling them chokers. The Indian Express' headline for the 6th ODI was "Final act, choking scene: India's storyline remains unchanged".
The contrasting expressions on Ganguly's and Hussain's face with the trophy at the end of the ODI series tell a tale. Ganguly had himself played two brilliant knocks in the last 2 ODIs but failed to take his team over the line and saw Flintoff who was once his not so favorite
teammate at Lancashire (Flintoff would go on to write some not so nice things about Ganguly in his book later) having the last laugh when he dismissed Javagal Srinath. Flintoff and Co. took a victory lap after the match, further incensing the Indian captain who had to return to
Kolkata with heavy security at the end of the series as England enjoyed their 'moral victory' over the hosts. All of this had made the tour to England later that year very important for the young Indian team and they began a glorious period with the Natwest win that culminated
with their ascent to World Cup Final in March 2003. So, this is all that had happened when England had toured India and led to a rather over the top but now iconic celebration from the Indian captain. There is another thread on a match from a series that took place between
these two where Yuvraj and Kaif gave early glimpses of what they were capable of. Check out this thread if you want to know about the series-winning partnership between Yuvi and Kaif that foreshadowed their Lord's heroics on 13th July 2002.
Also present at Lord's on that day was @gbhimani and he picked this photo as one of his favorites on the podcast that I do around favorite photos of guests. It gave me an opportunity to ask him whether this match would be so big had Dada not celebrated that way? Hear his answer
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A small thread on some of the most famous MSD photos (that are all over the internet) with the names of photographers who took those stunning pictures. Why this thread? Well, because these photos add so much to Dhoni's aura and these men deserve a lot of love
Sachin and the 90s is something that I do here on Twitter where I pick matches where Sachin waged a lone battle as the rest of the batting line-up showed little resistance in the 90s.
Here is a thread on the first instance of that happening after Sachin's debut. Let's go
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After the tour of Pakistan and New Zealand, Sachin toured England for his third series at the age of 17. There were only two ODIs to be played on that tour and only a single limited over practice fixture which came right before the two ODIs. India had to take on Derbyshire in a+
55 over match. Derbyshire batted first and reached 137 for zero before losing their next six wickets for the addition of only 98 more runs. They ended with a score of 235 which India had to chase down. Also playing in the match was @irbishi who had made his West Indies debut+
What happens when it’s Shaun Tait x Justin Langer? This story that I am going to tell. But before that a bit on the protagonists of the story.
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Maybe it had to do with his fondness for Martial Arts (he obtained the rank of Shodan-H- 1st degree black belt in Zen Do Kai, a kind of kickboxing) or just plain bad luck, but somehow Justin Langer attracted the most vicious of deliveries from the most ferocious pacers.
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It began right from his Test debut against West Indies when Ian Bishop welcomed him to the highest level with a blow on the helmet with the first ball the 22-year-old faced. It continued till the end of his career where his appearance in his 100th Test was reduced to only one +
Much of my childhood was shaped by what I watched on DD and one of my best memories of DD remains watching this reality show called Cricket Star that aired from Dec 2006 to Mar 2007. By that point, reality shows were ruling the roost on TV but a reality+
show on cricket was quite unheard of for the 13-year-old cricket obsessed me and to watch it on DD which by then had become a dumping ground of poor and retro content was amazing. The show was produced by Emerging Media and it was later we came to know that it was broadcasted+
simultaneously on Zee and DD and was the first major reality show to simulcast on Zee and DD.
The format of the show was the same that was used by all reality shows back then. 25,000 participants gave a trial and a few talented individuals got the chance to be a part of Cricket+
Had fun on Spaces today with @allaboutcric_ where we discussed cricket photographs. The conversation moved from pace bowling to run outs to crowd banners before the Spaces crashed. Thanks to all who joined. Here's a thread on some of the photos that I talked about
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Since we discussed the pace trio of Akhtar, Lee and Tait, I talked about this particular photo that I find really iconic when it comes to Akhtar. This is from Pakistan vs Sri Lanka match in the 2011 World Cup. And he was still rocking the speedometer.
The conversation then moved to run-outs courtesy my old tweet on Mayank Agarwal's strange run out from a 2015 match b/w India A and Australia A which led us to talk about Misbah's runout from 2007 Delhi Test and then we landed here - Inzi's run out from 1999 World Cup
THREAD ON A CLASSIC IRANI TROPHY CONTEST B/W SOURAV & SACHIN'S MEN
It was 2003 and the Indian team hadn't played much cricket post the high of the World Cup final. As the team was to play New Zealand at home and Australia in Australia in the coming months, BCCI decided that the
players need to play against each other to get back into rhythm. So, after the Challenger Series, a full-fledged Indian side took on the Ranji Trophy winners Mumbai led by Sachin Tendulkar for the Irani Trophy fixture played at Chennai. The Rest of India team was led by Sourav
Ganguly, the then Indian captain. Zaheer Khan, who was at the peak of his prowess back in 2003 brought the Mumbai batting lineup on its knees on the first morning itself as they found themselves knee-deep in trouble at 98-5. Sachin, who watched wickets tumble at the other end