Sir Gary at Eden Gardens
Just two names will appear in every
cricket follower’s world XI: Donald George Bradman and Garfield St Aubrun
Sobers. Forever they will be enshrined in the ultimate XI of Test cricketers.
Till 31st December, 1958,
we in Calcutta had not seen Gary Sobers. Had only known that he was the world
record holder with 365 runs. And in the previous two Tests on this tour of
India with Gerry Alexander’s West Indies team, he scored two hundreds, 142 not
out at Bombay and 198 run out at Kanpur.
At Eden Gardens West Indies won the
toss and batted. Openers Hunte and Holt
left early. At no. 3 handsome Rohan Kanhai walked in. As the 2nd
wicket fell, the crowd stood up in expectation of the man they had come to watch.
In the NCC enclosure where I was, the spectators began to cheer “Sobers”,
“Sobers”. The huge NCC score-board too put the name of Sobers on the
appropriate space.
However as an eight-year old cricket-crazy
youngster, I told my mom beside me that the player was not Gary Sobers but
Collie Smith! The gentleman beside gave me a condescending smile and furrowed
his eyebrows. As Smith took guard as a right-hander, the score-board changed
the name and the gentleman gave me a warm pat on the back.
Kanhai scored a blistering 256,
followed by Basil Butcher’s 103. In the meantime one left-handed artist –this
time batting at number six – remained unbeaten on 106. The style of his languid
walk, the grace of his movements captivated the Eden Gardens connoisseurs and
the common man. Never seemed to hit the ball, merely caressed it.
On reaching the landmark hundred, he raised
his bat but lowered his head in a gesture of utmost modesty. What a lesson to
learn. The West Indies with their free flowing mannerisms and smiling faces
transformed Eden Gardens forever. Cricket at Eden was never the same again. The
mad rush for Test match tickets at Calcutta began with Sobers and Kanhai, Hall
and Gilchrist.
Next Sobers arrived with Jim
Swanton’s XI followed by Mohun Bagan AC’s platinum jubilee match in 1964. On
either occasion sheer artistry flowed till the customary century was recorded.
Wherever he went around the cricketing world, his phenomenal performance was
invariably overwhelmed by his lazy elegance and graceful gait.
Next time at Eden he was in 1966-67.
Before the start of the 1st day’s play Sobers, now the captain, was
having a bat-ball ‘warm-up’ knock-about on the practice pitch without nets in
front of the NCC enclosure. I was close to the scene holding onto the low
fencing, gaping at him. What I saw was amazing to say the least.
One of the reserves, Rex Collymore, a left-arm
spinner was bowling to my cricketing God. He was softly pushing the ball back
to the bowler. I was thunderstruck when I noticed he was using the narrow width
of the bat! He was not using the broad blade of the bat but batting with the
edge! Batting with the edge without being beaten even once! In all my
experience never have I seen anybody else do this with such ease and elegance.
On the 2nd day of the
match, the CAB organizers sold more tickets than the accommodation available!
The crowd went berserk. They climbed the low iron fencing around the ground and
chased the police and the administrators. The day’s game had to be abandoned.
The West Indies players quite rightly
were unwilling to continue the Test because they felt insecure. The local
manager of the West Indies team was Dilip Ghosh, an erudite man and superlative
administrator. He rushed to Sir Frank Worrell, who was on a lecture tour at
Jadavpur University.
Worrell impressed upon his protégé
Sobers that the representatives of West Indies Federation had to be impeccable
guests. The match continued. Within months, Sir Frank was no more.
The greatness of two cricketing
knights – one earlier in 1964 and one later in 1975 – showed the world what
cricket and international relations were all about. They were the two pioneer
personalities whose selfless sportsmanship made the West Indies men the most
respected and the best cricketers in the world.
Met Sir Gary just once, at
Nottinghamshire CCC in 1977. I was in the 2nd XI while the genius
had finished his superlative career with the county club in 1974. His prime
message was, “Enjoy the game and give enjoyment to others.” Wherever he went he
was the foremost ambassador of cricket. His generosity, his genius and his
sportsmanship are beyond words and ages.
Sobers needed no appellation or awards. But generations
bowed their heads to him and hailed him as “The Greatest”. The One and Only.