Saturday, 28 May 2022

 



SALIM DURANI: the genius

 

Most Indians feel that the turning point of Indian cricket was in 1983. Yes, India won the ODI world cup in UK. India’s first-ever silver-ware in international cricket. And ‘big money’ began to flow into cricket. With it came bribery, betting, match fixing, dacoits masquerading as officials, sponsors and agents. Yes, it was the turning point in Indian cricket off-the-field.

 

But if the genuine cricket follower cares to put his hand on his heart, his conscience will reveal the truth: the most significant year of Indian cricket on-the-field was 1971. India defeated West Indies and England in successive Test series within months on their own backyards.

 

Never again would India repeat such major victories abroad within such a short span. As England had just registered a victory over Australia in 1970-71, India was justifiably the number one cricketing nation at a time when ‘rankings’ were unheard of.

 

The man who took India to the top of the cricketing world way back in 1971 happened to be a man born in Afghanistan. The ‘Kabuliwala’ who was christened ‘Prince Salim’ by his innumerable fans around the country was the chief architect of that splendid victory in West Indies and laid the foundation for Chandrasekhar’s inspired spell at the Oval within months. Let all genuine cricket lovers have the courage to admit this essential truth.

 

Salim Durani was a free soul without a care for the morrow. Had no inhibition; had no ego. He borrowed money and bought beer and coke to share with the ‘creditor’! Next day in the most subtle manner possible, he left the exact amount into the man’s shirt pocket! I can vouch for the incident because the person happened to be me. At Hyderabad during the Moin-ud-Dowla Trophy way back in 1976.

 

In a career that spanned nearly 15 years, the magnificent all-rounder played in only 29 Tests. He went on only two tours abroad – both to the Caribbean ten years apart – where he showed the world his true greatness.

 

The national selectors, in all their wisdom, realized that Durani would be a ‘passenger’ on tours to England, Australia and New Zealand between 1959 and 1974! The man who was helping India to win series after series at home, was omitted from tours abroad!

 

Once I asked him the reason for being was omitted from the Indian team to England in 1967. The disarming smile softly uttered with all the sweetness of a Urdu couplet, “The selectors thought England would be too cold for me.” Why not to Australia and New Zealand the following year? A charming, subtle wink elaborated, “May be too hot for me.”

 

Handsome is as the handsome does, so goes the cliché. Absolutely true in Durani’s case. The greenish-blue eyes looked at the world from a tall, handsome frame. He was all elegance and style.

 

Even the glamorous world of Bollywood had to relent by offering him a hero’s role opposite Parveen Babi in BR Ishara’s Charitra. This also happens to be another ‘first’ of his among Indian Test cricketers.

 

In 1962 when no one quite wanted to face the fiery Wesley Hall and Chester Watson on those lightning fast, hard West Indies pitches of the time, it was this man who volunteered to bat at number 3! So very typical of this man. For good measure, the left-handed all-rounder scored a magnificent century against a world-class attack comprising Sobers, Gibbs and Hall.

 

Surely he did not mean to offend anyone, but the graceful century-innings did embarrass the prima donna batters no end. Not that it mattered to him. He was just doing something that came naturally to him.

 

Salim Durani was born on a train heading towards Kabul in 1934 at a time when his father, Abdul Aziz, was keeping wickets for the Nawanagar State team in pre-independent India. After India’s independence in 1947, Aziz and his family settled down in the newly formed State of Gujarat.

 

Destiny had decreed that Durani would be Afghan by birth but Indian by nationality, as was the case with millions of others affected by the partition of the sub-continent.

 

He was as much the people’s man as he was of the connoisseurs. A hero to millions. At Calcutta people still – now nearly 50 years since he last played for India – go crazy when they see him. When my book on the 150th year of Eden Gardens in 2014 was in print, a cricket addict said, “I shall buy the book only if Durani’s photo is on the cover. No one ever was more popular than he at Eden.” Absolutely correct the gentleman was.

 

He always seemed to keep his best for the Eden Gardens crowd. In 1965 in one over of magic weave he had three Aussies in hypnosis. Unfortunately his wonderful spell did not get the acknowledgement as the match was curtailed owing to unseasonal rain.

 

“Yes, I enjoyed the support of the crowd at Eden. To be honest, I enjoy only if the spectators enjoy wherever that be. Otherwise what is the purpose of sports?” How true. Only a genuine artist like Prince Salim can say so – exactly like Mushtaq Ali of yesteryear – in such an easy, relaxed manner.

 

His charm was captivating. Once in a Duleep Trophy tie, the bowler Durani actually applauded a cover-driven boundary of mine! I was too stunned to react. It took me moments to realize the fathomless magnanimity of the man.

 

His simplicity, his modesty, his love for life and his love for companionship are lessons to learn from. At Eden during my book inaugural session he told a packed audience, “…I always wanted to be a railway engine driver…Never thought I had any talent for cricket…Life has been good to me…No regrets at all…”

 

Only a man of Salim Aziz Durani’s class can say so despite all the injustices that he had to bear over the decades. So casual and unconcerned was the man about his own well-being that he even would not go to collect the honorarium one benefactor in Bombay had decided to give him on a monthly basis!

 

Never once has anyone heard him criticize another person. Not even a harsh word passed through his lips. That was quite beyond him.

 

He believed in enjoyment. He enjoyed his life, his cricket. And in return he gave far more enjoyment to others, whether they were spectators or friends. Doubt if he ever had a foe. A man of few words, when he spoke his soft, chaste voice was all music. He was the Prince Charming of Indian cricket.

 

Great cricketers would be born again and again. But there will never be another to match this nonchalant, selfless genius.

 

 

Genius is a cliched term. Misunderstood and misused, misquoted and misconstrued. Only a handful can lay claim to the combination of originality, creativity, natural skills that are inherent in the nature of a real genius.

 

Salim Durani combined extraordinary innovativeness with extreme ease of execution to walk into this exclusive elite group of cricketers. In the post-war scenario apart from Keith Miller and Gary Sobers, Salim Durani was probably the only one who could transform the tide of a tie in a matter of moments.

 

Lissome and handsome, the elegant left-hander left an imprint on every ground he trod on. The languid gait was enough to draw attention. The effortless approach of gay abandon drew spontaneous applause. His skills were varied and of pristine pure quality. People adored him for they knew that he was far far beyond the accepted patterns of orthodoxy. His unpredictability gave him an aura of vulnerability and for that reason his adventurous ways made him so very appealing.

 

 No respecter of icons or ideologies, he took delight in puncturing reputations on the field. But there would be no violence, no mockery, no sadism. Made it appear the simplest of activities: nonchalance in the extreme.

 

And like all geniuses he also had his powerful detractors. Former Test cricketers masquerading as national selectors never could fathom the nugget of gold cast before them. They knew not his worth to the game or his value to the team. Consequently India suffered.

 

In the 1960s Indian cricket was studded with excellent performers, but without the presence of the one and only genius the team hardly ever played to its real potential. If Durani was unpredictable, the selectors were no less. To be honest, the man was at a wrong place at a wrong time.

 

His first-class career began as a batsman at 18 with Saurashtra in 1953 for whom he scored a century on debut. Then after spending two years with Gujarat, he finally transferred loyalties to Rajasthan, where under the care of Raj Singh Dungarpur his latent talent flowered.

 

Consistent batting performances earned him his Test debut at Bombay against Benaud's team in 1959. But an injured finger relegated him to no. 10, where an innings of 18 relegated him to oblivion.

 

 With Vinoo Mankad and Chandu Joshi around, Durani was hardly required to bowl for Rajasthan but then the young man was so involved with all the facets of the game that he began to pick up the tricks of the bowling art just by watching the mastery of Mankad. Such was the versatility of Salim Durani that in 1958-59 he even kept wickets for Rajasthan regularly!

 

After the inauspicious Test debut he kept himself involved

in the most unusual way imaginable. Instead of just concentrating on batting, as almost every batsman would have done, Salim concentrated on batting, wicket-keeping and, when opportunities offered, on bowling. Prodigious turn of his strong fingers and supple wrists made the ball spin appreciably on all wickets and its best results came when he had 8 for 99 against Bombay in the Ranji final of 1960-61.

 

Next year he was recalled against Dexter's team. Now the neglected batsman was regarded as the principal bowler! In conjunction with Chandu Borde, with whom he was to climb many a peak together, Salim (71) added 142 runs for the 5th wicket and each of them claimed 3 wickets to cement their positions in the side.

 

The following two Tests were drawn and then at Calcutta the magnificent pair brought about a stunning victory through their prolific contributions. Durani with 63 and 5 and 3 wickets and his mate Borde with 68 and 61 and 3 wickets were the toast of the crowd.  The duo continued their act in the next Test at Madras. Borde with 5 wickets and Durani with 10 wickets brought about India's first ever series victory over England.

 

To West Indies Durani went in 1962 as our premier all-rounder. On hard, pacy wickets where no spinner on either side made any dent, his guile and genius accounted for 17 wickets in just 7 innings against men of the calibre of Frank Worrel, Rohan Kanhai , Garfield Sobers, Conrad Hunte and company.

 

However what marked him out as special was the courage and class that he displayed in his batting. By the 4th Test the Indians were battered and bruised by the fury of Wes Hall, Charlie Stayers and Chester Watson. It was at this hour that his Pathan blood boiled. No longer could he restrain himself to be on the receiving end.

 

Volunteering to go at No. 3 he proceeded to take the attack to the enemy camp. His bat was a rapier as he lunged into the fearsome attack without a care for the morrow. Gutsy Vijay Mehra gave him solid support as he raced to his century and later the grand old man Polly Umrigar came up with a heroic unbeaten 172. In the Caribbean Salim Durani was not only the major bowler but also took upon himself the role of the saviour. When the top batsmen 'back-pedalled’, he emerged to offer sanctuary and security to his supposed superiors.

 

This saviour's role he was to play time and again for the cause of his mates and country. One moment he was expected to grit his teeth in attrition and at the very next to plunge the dagger in. To play just one role is beyond most, but to be outstanding in both called for something special. It was this rare quality that marked him out as a genius.

 

 He loved adversity; relished challenges. Against weaker teams and under easy conditions he was invariably below his best, but when the going got tough, he would get hold of the rudder and inspire others through personal example. Simpson's Australians on the way back after their triumphs in England shuddered to 174 all out at Eden as Durani taunted them with 6 for 73 off 28 but then had the mortification to see the late Calcutta monsoon ruin the last two days' play.

 

 Again against Sobers’ men when the Indians were feeling the heat of battle and succumbed at Wankhade, the only semblance of resistance came from Prince Salim's aggressive half century where he countered Hall and Griffith thrust for thrust, glare for glare. But sure enough he was omitted for the rest of the series!

 

It appears that the mediocrity around him in the form of officials, team managers and selectors did not want his genius to be exhibited. Of course we have to thank the sagacity of our Test selectors – mostly former Test cricketers – who decided that Salim, then India's premier all-rounder, was not good enough to tour England in 1967, 1971 and 1974 as well as to Australia and New Zealand in 1968.

 

He was done in by vindictive comments of mediocre contemporaries and also by cliquish, narrow-minded selectors. Durani even during his playing days had little time for nodding at powers-that-be. One can only wonder to what heights his penetrative left-arm spin bowling would have reached on the softish English conditions and what his flashing stroke-play would have achieved on the hard Australian wickets.

 

Nine years after his first visit to West Indies, he went back again. This time under Wadekar, a tour memorable for India winning her first-ever series overseas against West Indies. Very deservingly the Indian batters got their due praise, but the man who made the reality possible was a forgotten man within days! Yes, he was Salim Durani, who else?

 

It was his golden arm that first deceived Lloyd and rattled Sobers’ stumps first ball at Sabina Park. So rattled were the West Indies that they collapsed and could not regain their posture throughout the series. Durani with the two most important wickets for just 21 runs off 17 overs was the chief architect of India's first Test and series victory in West Indies. However, true to expectations, he was dropped from the playing XI just after one further Test!

 

However, this was not the end of his Test career. By now he had become a phoenix, perpetually rising from the ashes, as it were. After the euphoria of victories over West Indies and England abroad, India returned to promptly lose to Tony Lewis’ England side in the first Test.

 

 Immediately the panic buttons requisitioned for Durani. Now at the fag end of his career, Durani was to serve the country as a batsman! Durani began as a batter, then a spinner, later an all-rounder and finally back to square one as a batter! Amazing are the ways of our national selectors.

 

What an exhibition he had laid in store for his fans. To a thunderous ovation he walked in at the Gardens and into familiar surroundings: underprepared wicket, India in trouble, opposition literally baying for blood. Just the occasion he relished to have his adrenaline flowing.

 

He swatted a fly and it ricocheted back from the fence to his toe nails in the form of a cricket ball. Sheer magic it was. Edens erupted. We knew we were in the presence of an extraordinary individual, a genius. A man, a real man. A man of adventure and heroic proportions. A genius at the top of the world.

 

As he unusually calmly met a few deliveries without even moving his feet, we knew not the strain in the thigh. A runner was allowed later when the pain was too obvious and he was not even able to use his feet for basic foot-work, far less to run singles.

 

With his favourite Gavaskar to scurry about, the genius played an innings of rare gem. No cavalier was he this time; No frills, nothing fancy. Now he had his head down, chin up, elbow straight, body behind the ball. He steeled himself as he proceeded to play an innings of character that would bring victory to his country and draw parity in the series. He scored 55 out of 157 and helped his captain and mates to go on a victory lap.

 

In the following Test at Madras, once again he was in the thick of action at a time when India was wilting under pressure. And once again he was the main contributor to India's victory in the Test and consequently, as it transpired, in the series as well.

 

And once again he was dropped from the next Test at Kanpur. It was said he was omitted on grounds of fitness. I can only ask, is it not better to take such unfit men who can win matches for the country rather than fitter men who are of no benefit to the team?

 

The insult to injury had the Bombay crowd up in arms in unison. They made placards proclaiming 'No Durani, no Test' and demanded his return. The Board and the selectors remembered Calcutta in 1945 when national selector Duleepsinghji was heckled with similar posters for excluding Mushtaq Ali and so wasted no time in recalling Salim to the playing XI.

 

The genial genius responded to the spontaneous ovation by playing two superlative knocks of 73 and 37 and signed off his magnificent deeds in Test cricket for good.

 

In the history of Test cricket never before or since has a man been omitted immediately after he had directly contributed to national victories. He won 3 Tests out of his last 5 for India, and altogether 6 out of 29 Tests and saved as many.

 

There are numerous Test cricketers — with statistics far superior to Durani’s — who have neither won nor saved a single match for their country. The very same people over the years are earning in crores for passing a whole lot of inane comments on television.

 

They tortured you, Salim bhai, but they could not take away your achievements. They may crucify you to death, Salim bhai, but none can take away the genius that God has blessed you with. You will remain my idol till I die and beyond.

 

Sunday, 22 May 2022



Bobby Talyarkhan: Commentator extraordinary

Talyarkhan was the man who spread the news about Indian cricket like no one ever did. His voice carried cricket to even the most distant parts of the land, thanks to All India Radio. Just as he worshipped fire, he had the fire in his heart to be a cricket crusader.

He had no qualms in taking on the figureheads of Indian cricket to task. He pilloried the influential and the powerful. CK Nayudu, Vijay Merchant, Duleepsinhji, Vizzy, Anthony D’Mello and whoever was becoming too dictatorial in Indian cricket faced his wrath in no uncertain manner. His was the Voice of the 1940s Generation.

Unlike the general trend among media personnel in India today who fall backwards to please the mighty and the wealthy, Talyarkhan had absolutely no time for flattery or for favours. He was his own man. He feared and favoured none.

By the age of 40, his was a reassuring face and voice of Indian cricket. A man who would be forthright, honest and have nothing to do with the high and the mighty. The young man had a mind of his own and did not depend on ‘inside stories’ and ‘quotes’ from various sources. He remained so till the very end.

With the microphone in hand, Ardeshir Furdonji Sohrabji Talyarkhan was an institution by himself. The handsome man had clear-cut features and more importantly a clean conscience. He became in many ways the conscience of Indian cricket.

 As a freelance commentator with All India Radio, his voice was the first to reach millions in obscure corners. People around the country were thrilled to hear of the exploits of Nayudu, Nissar, Amarnath and Mushtaq. AFST brought a new dimension to the character of cricket followers in India.

If Talyarkhan helped to spread the news of cricket to youngsters in distant corners, almost 50 years later another freelance journalist from Andheri in Bombay helped these far-flung young talents  to find their feet in Indian cricket through his brilliant concept of talent-scouting.

Rare talents like Dhoni, Raina and Irfan Pathan from uninfluential places surfaced as BCCI adopted the talent-spotting system. These media-men are the genuine servants of Indian cricket who have purposely kept themselves out of the spotlight. May their tribe increase for the benefit of sports in India.

To Talyarkhan should go to a great extent the credit for creating the mass appeal for cricket in India. Beginning from the late 1930s for a full decade and a half he held the radio listeners spellbound with his distinct and unaffected accent, impeccable command over the English language, knowledge of the intricacies of the game and his wide array of anecdotes.

At the time people in non-major cities and towns had little scope to watch Mankad, Merchant, Amar Singh and Hazare in action. They relied entirely on the All India Radio cricket broadcasts. AIR on its part thankfully discovered a man who was a ‘natural’ communicator in speech, a predecessor to another legend with the mike in hand, John Arlott of BBC.

AFST or Bobby, as he was fondly called, captivated a whole generation by creating personalities out of cricketers, as Neville Cardus and Robertson-Glasgow (Crusoe) would do with their pen. Talyarkhan knew the art of holding the audience’s attention. He had all those sterling qualities to make radio-listeners want him more and more.

But he was no egoist. Not a man who would threaten players or ask for favours from influential officials. He would not go and sit at the feet of cricket legends and have meals with them. No, no, he did not believe in seeking publicity for self. Nor would he accept fat cheques from influential quarters to flatter the undeserving.

On the contrary, AFST enjoyed his own company especially when he was at work. He just could not tolerate fools nor could he accept silly inanities from even established cricketing personalities. It was said that if in discussions AFST found anyone saying anything prejudicial or irrelevant, he would just ignore the man and walk out. He wasted no time in unnecessary verbal duels.

AFST at 37 spoke over the AIR for the first time in 1934 when he covered the Quadrangular match between the Parsees and the Muslims at the Esplanade maidan in Mumbai. From the very first day he captured the attention of the listeners with his well-modulated voice, his rendition of anecdotes and events and his easy relaxed manner. Since that day he was his own boss.

He knew the art of radio commentary. Fluent and accurate in description, he knew how to punctuate with pauses and voice modulation. His comments were invariably precise and pointed.

When AFST commentated over AIR, he would do so alone. He never needed or wanted anyone around him. For hour after hour people would be engrossed listening to his cultured and well-informed comments. He hated having co-commentators beside him! Like the umpires, he did not miss a single ball at a match!

Even while commentating on football and hockey, which he would do at times, he would do so all alone. Out of the broadcast box, hours he would spend reading and researching; contemplating and analyzing. He knew his sport, whether it was cricket, hockey or football. He knew the background and the psyche of sportspeople. He himself had played almost all games that were available to him at school.

Suddenly in the 1950s AFST stopped commentating. AIR quite rightly desired other commentators to join him inside the commentators’ box. AFST flatly refused to have company! He found it ‘insulting’ to share the microphone with commentators who were way beneath him in ability.

AIR probably had made the mistake of having so-called ‘big cricket names’ to give him company. Most of the former players were extremely disappointing in their verbal skills and at times, quite surprisingly, even in the knowledge of the history and the laws of cricket! They seemed highly biased generally.

It is true that no one else quite measured up to the extempore skills of the one and only AFST. But others too had their strong points: Vizzy with his wide range of cricket anecdotes; non-emotional Berry Sarbadhikari with his impeccable description of scenario; later VM Chakrapani, Anant Setalvad and Sydney Friskin with their fluent diction and easy manner; and Pearson Surita despite his heavy accent were attractive enough.

Undoubtedly Chakrapani, Setalvad and Friskin were a credit to their profession. But none of them came close to the magnetic all-round appeal of Talyarkhan. Later from Pakistan arrived Omar Qureshi to remind listeners of the brilliance of our very own AFST.

One man much later who was as brilliant, as prolific and as knowledgeable as AFST was the ubiquitous Rajan Bala. Bala seemed to be all over the media. Writing erudite match-reports; producing top-quality prose in his regular offerings and then commentating over the radio with all his usual gusto. Bala, like AFTST before him, had all the exemplary skills one associates with commentators.

Gregarious and out-spoken, Rajan Bala too had problems with the mediocrity around him at AIR and gladly opted for greener pastures with BBC. He was certainly a valuable jewel to the BBC panel of summarizers as he was with other foreign media houses. He possessed the clipped, classical Oxbridge accent and was a delight to listen to. Rajan Bala and AFST together would have been the ultimate dream.

First heard about Bobby Talyarkhan from my father. Dad had an open mind and was a very well-informed judge. He had heard both AFST and Rajan Bala and rated both of them very highly.

Despite terminating his commentary contract, AIR had the broad-mindedness to realize the wide appeal of AFST, both among the connoisseurs as well as among the general enthusiasts. Talyarkhan was invited with all due honour to continue doing radio programmes till almost his death at 93. He wrote extensively for Times of India and for Mid-Day.

English author Christopher Martin Jenkins remarked very succinctly, “…It was perhaps symbolic of his commitment to his profession that the day his last column appeared was also the day the paper carried the news of his death in 1990…”

The mass appeal for cricket in our non-metropolitan cities and towns began with the advent and the fluent renditions of the one and only Bobby Talyarkhan over All India Radio since the 1930s.

Our sports culture is such that name of Bobby Talyarkhan does not register in the minds of our sports administrators. Whereas abroad broadcasters like Arlott, McGilvray, Cozier and Qureshi, among others were honoured by their respective nations, here in India an exceptional commentator like AFST has been totally ignored and forgotten.

Ignorance or indifference you decide, my readers.

Saturday, 14 May 2022

              




           SUBHASH GUPTE

 

Subhash Gupte was a product of independent India. A product of Shivaji Park, the bastion of  Maharashtrian culture in the heart of Mumbai. With his emergence as the premier leg-spinner of the world, people who thought that without British influence Indian cricket would not prosper received their answer.

 

Gupte was also not a product of princely patronage as most of the pre-war greats of Indian cricket were. Nor did he receive any coaching from foreigners. He honed his undoubted skills on the Mumbai maidans which produced and gifted innumerable cricketers to Indian cricket.

 

Subhash Gupte literally mesmerized his opponents with his twirling wrists and twisting fingers. Established international batters had little clue to tackle the mysteries posed by the diminutive leggie. They spent sleepless nights trying to fathom his wizardry. He wove magic with a cricket ball in his right palm.

 

Every time he turned his fingers at the release, the ball would make a whizzing sound. Even the non-striker would hear it! The buzz of a dangerous bee, ready to sting. Wonder how many spinners have ever been able to give that kind of innumerable rotation to the ball. Those who are connoisseurs of the game would surely realize the import of the eerie sound.

 

India colleague Pankaj Roy, who had successfully faced all the world-class spinners of the 1950s, always maintained that Gupte was by far the best spinner he had seen or faced. All-rounder and left-arm spinner Vinoo Mankad, off-spinner Ghulam Ahmed and leg-spinner Subhas Gupte were the chief architects who helped to build the great tradition of Indian spinners on the foundation laid by the magnificent pioneer Palvankar Baloo in the early 20th century.

 

At a time when Abdul Qadir and Shane Warne captured our minds, we hardly realized that an Indian had similarly cast his spell in international cricket for 10 long years beginning from 1951. Gupte had every weapon of the orthodox leg-spinner  and a few more tricks up his sleeve. Prodigious spin and an immaculate control were the weapons of his armoury.

 

He had not one kind of googly but two! One that would be palpable to put the batsman at ease and then the deceptive one to cast the pall of gloom. Similarly with leg-spin and top-spin. He would purposely reveal his trick to lull the batters into a false sense of security. Then when the opportunity arose, he would become a pied-piper making the batsman dance to his tunes.

 

No wonder he was the most eminent leg-spinner in the world in the 1950s at a time when Doug Wright, George Tribe, Bruce Dooland, Colin McCool and more particularly Sonny Ramadhin and Richie Benaud were on the world stage. Gupte also displayed his phenomenal skills in the Central Lancashire Leagues in the 1950s beside his India team peers Mankad, Phadkar, Manjrekar and Umrigar, among others.

 

Very appropriately has erudite cricket writer Partab Ramchand pointed out that although many Indian cricketers would walk into the dream World XIs, not many would stay on for as long as Gupte would. Indeed, Subhash Gupte would most certainly have been a shining jewel in any glittering array of world stars during his peak which stretched from 1953 to 1957.

 

Such was the calibre of his spinning finger that on any surface he was a world beater. On his first tour abroad he was an outstanding success. This was the tour to West Indies in 1953 when none had much hope on the Indians.

 

West Indies had just defeated England in England with spinners Sonny Ramadhin and Alf Valentine proving to be of the top drawer. In batting, the nucleus consisted of Everton Weekes, Clyde Walcott and Frank Worrell, all three to be knighted later for contribution to cricket. Surely as formidable an array as one would hope to find in any era of world cricket.

 

But Vijay Hazare's men matched them in every department. The Indian batsmen were splendid in their consistency and the out-fielding was just splendid with men like Polly Umrigar, Chandu Gadkari, Dattajirao Gaekwad, Madhav Apte and Jayasinghrao Ghorpade outstanding.

 

 But the man who really made the West Indies wake up was none other than the 22-year old Maharashtrian leggie, Subhashchandra Pandharinath Gupte. He surprised everyone, except his closest peers on the Mumbai maidans who knew of his undoubted potential.

 

On their own backyard the indomitable ‘3 Ws’ were kept in thrall by Gupte’s spin and bounce, by his accuracy and control. The master spinner took 27 wickets in just 8 innings. A phenomenal strike rate by any measure of opinion or figure. The tour heralded the arrival of a rare gem in the Indian cricketing firmament.

 

His next tour was to Pakistan in the winter of 1954-55. Now he was face to face against quality batsmen on matting wickets. Here too the venom of his spin earned rich dividends. A haul of 22 wickets at just 22.66 yet again underlined the wonderful qualities of penetration that he possessed.

 

Gupte's last tour was to England in the summer of 1959. By his lofty standards he was not successful enough, but nevertheless he showed his capability by capturing 95 wickets including 17 in the 5-Test series. On the cricket circuit, he was universally popular as ‘Fergie’.

 

It is indeed unfortunate that India did not tour Australia when Gupte was donning the India cap. On those hard pitches he would surely have extracted appreciable bounce to trouble the best of Aussies batters. It would have been an exhilarating duel because Gupte loved challenges as much as the Australians did.

 

In between the three tours he played 7 Test series at home against all the international oppositions of the time. Against New Zealand in 1955-56 he cast his voodoo spell around them to such an extent that no less than 34 victims surrendered at the unbelievable cost of 19.67 per wicket.

 

A notion has gained ground that Gupte wilted when subjected to attack. To be honest, which bowler in Test history has not? For that matter, do we know of any bowler who has thrived on being at the receiving end? No, certainly not. For no bowler quite enjoys being bullied around. We know how world-beaters like Jim Laker and Shane Warne were mauled. So it was with Subhash Gupte.

 

 At Kanpur against West Indies in 1958-59, Gupte took 9 wickets in an innings. But unnecessarily made a few uncomplimentary remarks. This prompted Rohan Kanhai and Garfield Sobers to plan to destroy the bogey of Subhash Gupte. By audacious stroke-play they had him rattled at Eden in the following Test. Kanhai’s double century and Sobers’ century were the answers.

 

Nevertheless by the end of the series, the honours were fairly even with Gupte having no less than 22 scalps. But this time the average of 42.13 runs per wicket revealed that Gupte's magic was no longer the threat that it was.

         

Gupte's Test career graph began at Eden Gardens in 1951 against England. For him it was an uneventful occasion. Not a single wicket he claimed despite bowling 13 overs for 43 and 5 overs for 14. Truly discouraging figures, especially for a youngster with tons of talent. Consequently he missed the 1952 tour of England.

 

But then class, like cream, has to come on top. Consistent performance in the Ranji Trophy gave him back the India place that he so richly deserved. Actually the omission seems to have done him a world of good. He practised hard and with intelligence. He realized that in the tough international arena he needed accuracy, control, variation and guile to be consistently successful. In addition, he had the natural advantage of prodigious turn.

 

He was no pretender to the art of spin bowling. He was a spinner who could turn the ball on any wicket and under any condition. No namby-pamby up and down stuff he ever dished out. That would have been an affront to the self-respect of this man who considered himself a spinner. As Gupte often remarked, "If a spinner cannot turn the ball, why call him a spinner at all". How very true!

 

Subhash Gupte began his first class career in 1948-49 for Bombay and called it a day in 1964-65 after representing Trinidad for one season. In between he played quite a few seasons for Bengal and Rajasthan. In all first-class matches he scalped 530 victims at just 23.71. Without doubt an excellent career record, especially considering the fact that he was a leg-spinner, a tribe which would normally ‘buy’ their wickets.

 

Subhash Gupte's career graph was not too similar in comparison with other orthodox leg-spinners. While leggies are generally expensive, Gupte was certainly not so. He could be painstakingly accurate, hence highly economical.

 

While normally orthodox leggies matured late, reaching their peak in their late 20s, Gupte reached his peak in his early 20s. While leggies have a habit of buying wickets by enticing batters to go for big hits, Gupte was quite the opposite. He would hate to give away easy runs. Even late in his cricket career his economy rate was astounding, especially for an orthodox leg-spinner.

 

But Gupte had a pronounced drawback. He could be quite vocal at times. Perhaps a little too over-confident in speech. Quiet self assurance would have done him a world of good, but unfortunately that was not to be.

 

His last Test was against Dexter’s England team at Delhi where despite giving just 78 runs in 36 overs, his penetrative powers showed a remarkable decline. In the following two Tests at Calcutta and Madras, the Borde-Durani duo came into limelight with magnificent victories and thereby sealed Gupte’s fate forever.

 

In his 36 Tests Gupte took 149 wickets at 29.55 with 9 for 102 against West Indies as his best. He was the first of the great post-war spinners that India has produced (Vinoo Mankad being considered an all-rounder and not only a specialist spinner). Gupte was most certainly among the greatest of leg-spinners in the annals of world cricket.

 

He was invited by the maharaja of Coochbehar, Jaggadipendra Narayan to play in Calcutta for Kalighat Club, then a renowned cricket club which patronized out-station talents. In the company of Test wicket-keeper Prabir Khokon Sen, the magnificent spinner enjoyed a few seasons when he assisted Bengal in the Ranji Trophy. Although highly successful, he however never quite relished the grassy pitches at Calcutta.

 

Former Bengal captain, the Cambridge ‘Blue’  PB (Badal) Dutt  – Gupte’s Bengal and Kalighat Club colleague – always maintained that for sheer confidence and variation of his art, Gupte had no equal.

 

Gupte gave his fans the ultimate googly when he married a lady from the Caribbean, Carolyn by name. He set sail for the distant continent

and settled down in Trinidad. Out of sight, out of mind, the man remained forever.

 

Ironically India’s greatest leg-spinner spent the last leg of his earthly journey away in the Caribbean. Almost unlamented, he passed away in 2002 at 73 in a far-away land comfortably lodged among his closest family members.

 

According to the greatest all-round cricketer – by any standard of reckoning – Sir Garfield Sobers the best spinner he had faced was none other than the Indian leg-spin wizard Subhash Gupte. Such compliments come only to a special few.

 

Subhash Gupte was most certainly among those special few. His name will always remain among the best of leg-spinners in the history of international cricket.