Thursday, 12 March 2026

 



 Photo credits: courtesy ESPN and Alamy

One-eyed Test Cricketer: ‘Buster’ Nupen

There is a general view that Mansur Ali Khan (the erstwhile junior Nawab of Pataudi) played cricket with just one eye. This is not entirely the full picture. Tiger, as he was nicknamed, did have a loss of vision as a result of a car crash in 1961 while at Oxford University.

Later thankfully his vision, though severely impaired, returned through complex surgeries. In his autobiography Tiger admitted that initially he had double vision but gradually the sight improved to an extent. Certain problems remained but he overcame the great visual handicap in his own way. 

 Later through very determined practice, the immensely talented batter regained his fitness and consequently his form. He went on to play for India within a year of his injury.

Scored centuries including a double hundred. Fielded magnificently in the covers. Was certainly among the best in the world. Led the team with panache. Miraculous recovery of a very courageous gentleman.

As a real leader, he transformed the young Indian cricketing talents into a fighting unit at a very critical juncture in the 1960s. Communalism and provincialism never crossed his broad mind. An exemplary gentleman of the ‘old school’.

***

However, one Test player actually played international cricket with just one eye! A South African Test cricketer by the name of Eiulf Peter ‘Buster’ Nupen. Of Norweigian parentage, ‘Buster’ Nupen played in 17 Tests between 1921 and 1935, capturing 50 wickets. On matting wickets he was considered almost unplayable such was the ferocity of his off-cutters and pace.

As child of 4 while playing with hammer and nails, a wooden splinter got lodged in his eye. The most unfortunate accident led to complete loss of vision in his left eye. A similar permanent damage would have frustrated any person. But the Norweigian ‘Buster’ Nupen decided to meet the challenge face to face.

He took to cricket and decided to make himself into a pace bowler. For the right-handed bowler, the unaffected right-eye posed no problem in aiming at the batter’s wicket. Picture yourself as a right-handed rifle shooter. Through sheer intelligent application he developed his bowling style.

Playing on matting wickets in South Africa, Nupen found that he could bowl fastish off-cutter which would leap at the batter on the matting pitches. Actually he bowled more of cross-seam (fastish off-break) instead of off-the-seam cutters.

Another interesting issue happened to be that as stand-in skipper Buster Nupen led South Africa to a victory over England in the only Test he captained. Nupen was the highest wicket-taker with 5 and 6 wickets in that match. The selectors in their wisdom decided not to appoint him as captain again!

Eiulf Peter ‘Buster’ Nupen would go down in cricket history as a man who played Test cricket with just one eye. To be an international sport performer with such a serious, permanent handicap is almost unheard of. Height of courage and application indeed.

 

Thursday, 5 March 2026

 Arthur Conan Doyle & HG Wells

The literary character Sherlock Holmes enjoys world-wide popularity. Perhaps the detective is more easily identifiable than the author himself! The keen-eyed detective however had hardly any connection with the British passion. But his creator, the master story-teller Sir Arthur Isaac Conan Doyle, did.
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, born in Scotland, detected and deceived one person in his entire first-class career of 10 matches, all at Lord’s between 1907 and 1910, while bowling for Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC).
Conan Doyle’s trapped victim was no criminal, but happened to be none other than the legendary cricketer Dr WG Grace, the most famous face of Victorian Britain, perhaps more than the Queen herself!
Among his numerous references to cricket in his writings, Sir Arthur authored an exemplary fictional piece surrounding the game he admired so much. The Story of Spedegue’s Dropper reveals the author’s exceptional concept of the game. A must read for all cricket lovers.
Conan Doyle’s fictional hero delivers a ball that goes 50 feet high in the air and falls on top of the stumps! The doyen of commentators John Arlott mentioned that such ‘probable fantasy’ could only come from the pen of the master of detective stories.
***
Another literary persona the eminent novelist HG Wells wrote 79 novels before telling us of his love for cricket in his 80th. He reveals that his father was actually a professional cricketer for a period during which his family business sank beyond redemption, “…for him cricket was far more sacred than any religious sentiment or whatever…”Later the senior Wells – Joseph – made ends meet by coaching cricket in schools.
Despite a poverty-stricken childhood, HG (Herbert George) Wells was a visionary who authored books like The Invisible Man, The First Men in the Moon, The Time Machine, etc. Far, far beyond his generation, HG Wells conceived the ideas of time-travel, alien-invasion, biological-engineering, etc. Wife Seema points out that he is referred to as the Shakespeare of Science Fiction.
But HG Wells never tells us that his father Joseph Wells was the first-ever bowler in the world to get 4 wickets in 4 deliveries in a first-class match! Wisden Cricketer’ Almanack – attentive and articulate as always – highlighted the issue in its Book of Cricket Records. Joseph Wells achieved the exceptional feat way back in 1862 playing for Kent against Sussex.
Cricket and literature enjoy a deep and permanent companionship. No other sport can come anywhere near cricket in this respect…Tennyson, Byron, Shelly, Keats, PG Wodehouse, Noble laureate Samuel Beckett, Virginia Woolf, HG Wells, Arthur Conan Doyle… the list is endless.
Photos from left : courtesy Wikipedia (Doyle) & Britannica (Wells)
Like
Comment
Share