Wednesday, 1 April 2026

 

 

Photo: courtesy Wikipedia (Moti Nandi) & You Tube (Sukumar Ray)

Thursday Blog on RAJUMUKHERJIONCRICKET.BLOGSPOT.COM

Cricket & Literature

Shakespeare and Tagore never wrote on cricket. Surely they had other important subjects in mind. But that did not stop many other great literary figures of English and Bengali literature to contribute their views on this great cultural heritage of Britain.

We have discussed the associations and contributions to cricket of Conan Doyle, PG Wodehouse, HG Wells and Nobel laureate Samuel Beckett in this series. Recently JU (English) alumna Soma Mukherjee has further related that eminent authors of the distinction of Wordsworth, Tennyson, Shelly, Keats, Byron and George Orwell among others have also rendered superlative contributions to the British national pastime.

These world famous writers have raised cricket literature far beyond the writings on any other sport in the world. Both in terms of quality and diversity. The richness of cricket literature has generated a very high level of prose and poetry because of the august presence of these illustrious authors.

Cricket literature has a unique dimension of its own in the pantheon of the game. It is not restricted to international cricket scenario at all. More so is the coverage of village-green cricket, local school matches, college and university cricket. Even club and road-side cricket.

In India hardly any established novelist wrote on the game. Dom Moraes did make an effort with The Grass is Green but did not pursue. Eminent author RK Narayan too wrote a wonderful piece MCC on young, village boys trying to form a cricket club.

Fortunately in Bengal, eminent researcher Shankari Prasad Bosu left behind some splendid authorship on cricket before delving into his magnum opus on Swami Vivekananda. He delighted in relating the cricket stories of old, among which ‘Ball porey, bat norey’ (Ball drops, bat moves) was the most popular.

My wife Seema brought into my focus a most unusual illustration: sketch of a lady-in-saree square-cutting a pumpkin! My all-time favourite author of nonsense-verse, the famous writer Sukumar Ray – Satyajit Ray’s exceptionally brilliant father – drew an inimitable illustration to go with the absurdly, immortal line: kumro niye cricket khele keno rajar pishi?  (Why is the king’s aunt playing cricket with a pumpkin?)

Every Bengali-speaking person is aware of the genius of Sukumar Ray through the pages of ABOL TABOL. The quote appears in the widely acclaimed nonsense-verse ‘Bombagarer Raja’, which was written between 1921 and 1923.  As a close relative of Prof Saradaranjan Roy, the father of Bengal Cricket, to Sukumar Ray the game of cricket was not a mere sport but an emotional attachment. Was he the first to put cricket in print in Bengali literature?

But the man who brought cricket to the centre-stage of Bengali literature was none other than the eminent novelist / short-story writer Moti Nandy. Moti-da was a master story-teller with turns of phrase that had the connoisseurs yearning for more. His literary efforts traversed all sports, but his first love remained cricket. My mentor in more ways than one. Much more on him later.

Saturday, 28 March 2026

           




Tenzing Norgay

 

Darjeeling, 1955. Dr ‘Pahari’ Guha Mazumdar was at the time the civil surgeon of the Darjeeling district. A selfless man of charm and honour. The hill people were his family. He spoke their language, he wore their ‘sarong’, he ate their food and he took care of them. The Sherpas and the other hill tribes literally worshipped him.

 

Among the hardy Sherpas who came to visit the ‘Pahari daktar saab’ was a man who began life as a guide and coolie to foreign mountaineers who came to the foothills of the Himalayas with the intention to climb the various high peaks of the region. Within a few years he was not only the best guide available but also the most sought-after supervisor of the labourers, who carried heavy loads on their back to help the expedition teams.

 

Away from mountaineering expeditions this stocky, tough Sherpa was a social worker par excellence in his hometown bustee at Darjeeling. He would carry the old and the infirm to the good doctor and flash his heart-winning smile. He became Dr Guha Mazumdar’s younger brother in every respect imaginable.

 

When Sherpa Tenzing came down from the skies in 1953, the noble doctor complimented him on his ‘conquest’ of Mount Everest. The world renowned climber in all modesty replied, “Doctor saab, I was lucky to go on a pilgrimage to God’s abode.”

 

The doctor embraced him and began to weep uncontrollably. Years later Dr Guha Mazumdar told our family, “I realized there and then how small we were. The real people are these men who have the highest regard for the bounties of nature. Our knowledge is so very shallow, so very superfluous. These simple, innocent hill people have a far more profound understanding and respect for nature.”

 

 

In a country where genuine heroes are forgotten, erosion in values is the only option. A true champion of Tenzing Norgay’s stature has receded into the background. The spirit of adventure has ebbed. We have no inclination towards sports of high risks. Our whole ethos revolves around ‘heroes’ of doubtful potential.

 

The greatness of Tenzing lay in his simplicity. International renown and awards chased him. Presidents and kings followed his trail. Press and politicians pestered him. But he remained his smiling self with the barest minimum of needs.

 

The greatness of the man lay in his innocence. He just could not utter a lie, not even a white lie. When asked who stepped first on top of Mt. Everest, Tenzing replied that though they had the same rope around their waist, Edmund Hillary’s feet were the first on the summit and his own followed soon after. It takes great courage to say that.

 

 In mountaineering parlance, two climbers handling the same rope are considered to be together and not separate from each other. In a high-risk adventure sport like mountaineering, the issue of individualism does not arise. It is a total team effort. Tenzing could easily have avoided the issue with a vague answer, but then, Tenzing would not have been Tenzing.

 

This was the real Tenzing. Throughout his life he has been ‘used’ by others. On being appointed the Director of Himalayan Mountaineering Institute, he was assured by Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Chief Minister of West Bengal Dr Bidhan Chandra Roy that his appointment was for life and that he would accordingly draw remuneration throughout his tenure.

 

But after the death of those political leaders, he was asked to retire! No further remuneration, no pension followed. Moreover, throughout his period of directorship, not once did he get any increment on his salary!

 

When some little money came to him by way of book royalty and donations, numerous blood-relations appeared and came to stay in his humble home and lived off him. The kind-hearted man just could not turn them away. When India began sending expeditions to Mt.Everest, nobody thought him important enough to be invited at the flagging-off ceremonies. But not once did he ever express any grudge against any of his exploiters.

 

Born in Nepal of Sherpa stock, Tenzing lived in the British-built hill-station of Darjeeling in North Bengal. After the epic achievement of ‘summiting Everest’ in 1953 he was offered “nationality” by both Nepal and India. Both countries, which had done nothing for him or for his indomitable Sherpa people, wanted to claim him as one of their own for international publicity.

 

Pressure was piled on him from either side, but Tenzing, true to his honest belief, maintained that he was both a Nepali and an Indian! In his innocence he highlighted the international nature of his personality.

This is exactly the kind of pettiness and disregard we have shown a man who literally put India on top of the world.

 

On 29th May, 1953, he and the New Zealander, Edmund Hillary, reached the summit of Mt.Everest as part of the British expedition team under John Hunt. When the tri-colour flag fluttered on top of the world on that historic day, the brave man holding the pick-axe was none other than this self-made mountaineer from Darjeeling in Bengal.

 

When they realized they were on the summit, two toughest and bravest of men embraced each other and began to shed tears. They were mesmerized by the beauty and the grandeur of nature. Tenzing took out the sweet lozenge and the coloured-pencil-stub his daughter Nima had given him and offered it to the Almighty!

 

People who climb peaks are themselves at the summit of the human race. They have little interest in borders and barriers. Rarefied realms they traverse in isolation. They do not bother about nationality, race, colour of skin, levels of education, financial backgrounds. Edmund Hillary would not have opted for the ‘coloured’, poor Sherpa when he decided on the final launch, if he was a racist.

 

Tenzing did not blink an eye to say that Hillary was the first to step on the summit ahead of him. In mountaineering two climbers together on the same rope are like twins. The rope is the umbilical cord.  They are together, inseparable. They have the same identity. Both Hillary and Tenzing were very appropriately given the honour of being the first to climb the highest peak on earth. None would consider them first and second in order.

 

 If Tenzing was magnanimous, so too was Hillary. On top Hillary reciprocated by clicking Tenzing’s photo on Mt Everest and did not insist on having his own photo taken. These sacrifices are beyond the comprehension of most of us.

 

Why was just Tenzing’s photo on the summit taken? Why not Hillary’s as well? The reason being that they had just two exposures left. Hillary realized that Tenzing may not be able to handle the camera well enough. So to get the perfect frame, he took Tenzing’s picture and with the single remaining frame he clicked the final path they traversed for the benefit of future mountaineers. These acts of Tenzing and Hillary are at the summit of man’s selflessness.

 

Mountaineering is an amazing sport. Exclusively for the bravest and selfless of men and women. There are no spectators to cheer and applaud up on the mountain. No media support for instant glory. It is a complete team-effort. No individual can do it alone without the active, selfless support of his colleagues.

 

One small error and the climber invites his own death; sometimes even dragging down his partner with him. Very lonely, very slow, very difficult the progress is. Courage, strength, patience, team-work, leadership all combine to be successful in this most dangerous of all sports.

 

Mountaineering is man’s communion with nature. Not a sport between humans. It is a pursuit to overcome the almost insurmountable hazards of natural obstacles: climate, rain, blinding sun-light, gusty wind, snow, rocks, crevice, chasm, lack of oxygen, no shade or shadow, glacier, avalanche. Why would anybody want to volunteer to attempt to overcome such odds?

 

The mind of a genuine mountaineer is almost impossible to fathom. They are above the concept of self. These dare-devils care not about fame or fortune. Why would any sane person opt for a sport where there is no return in any form?  Why aim for a deserted summit? There are so many ‘whys?’ begging for answers.

 

To help us understand the reason for a mountaineer to climb a peak, a legendary climber by the name of Keith Mallory simply said, “Because it is there.”  Full stop. All questions vanish in a moment. One is astounded in the face of such selfless courage. Incidentally Mallory vanished in the Himalayas in the 1920s while attempting to climb the world’s highest peak. His body was never found.

 

Tenzing could not write yet he sent hundreds of letters to his fans worldwide. Tenzing could not read, yet he received thousands of articles and books written on him from his admirers all over the world. 

 

Tenzing Norgay’s admirers are legion. His exploits on the mountain are legendary. Generous, courageous, honest, self-less, the exemplary mountaineer remains to this day a legend and an inspiration to millions around the world. But in his own country, for which he earned so much of international respect and adulation, he is a forgotten man.

 

When ‘Pahari’ doctor took our family to meet him, the ever-smiling all-conquering Tenzing Norgay picked up the 5 year old child in his arms and related constantly to my parents, “It was a pilgrimage to the Almighty’s abode.”  I can still feel the blessed touch. He was my first hero. Never regretted the fact. With every passing day I can still smell the earthy odour of the most marvelous of human beings. For me, it was a pilgrimage to the best of creations.

 

 

Thursday, 26 March 2026

 




Above Sir Don!

Sir Donald George Bradman’s batting average in Test cricket stands at 99.94! Many great batters over the decades have tried their best to come near this astronomical figure. But all these legendary players have fallen far short. No prominent batter has come anywhere near to the one and only Sir Don.

It needed a short man however to show us the truth behind the cliché, ‘lies, damned lies and statistics’. The man was from the island of Trinidad. On his home ground at Port of Spain, the capital city of Trinidad, Andrew  Gordon Ganteaume was selected to represent West Indies against MCC (then England) in 1947 in the 2nd Test match of the series.

The deputy wicket-keeper was included at the last moment as the regular opener was unavailable and he played as an opening batsman. While batting, the debutant opener was his usual cautious self. Certainly more so because of the opportunity to play for the Federation of West Indies for the first time.

He was the highest scorer with 112 in the first innings and was not required to bat in the next innings. He was certainly very happy and looked forward to more opportunities. Little did he realize that selectors are men of varying intelligence and have unusual interests. They can be vindictive (SS Mitter’s and Amol Muzumder’s experience); they can be forgetful (Paras Dogra of J&K, a recent example); they can be…

Ganteaume was dropped from the West Indies team for the following Test as well as for the remainder of the series! And forever it seemed…

Ten years later someone suddenly remembered the diminutive, dogged opener. He went to England in 1957 but by then with the fantastic strength of the West Indies batting line-up – Weekes, Walcott, Worrell, Kanhai, Sobers and Collie Smith – no place could be found for him in the XI.

Thus ended the career of a man who played just one Test innings, scored 112 and finished his Test career ahead of Sir Don with a batting average of 112! Ganteaume achieved statistically what the legendary batters of cricket could not: beat Sir Don somehow!

Born in 1921 his first class career stretched from 1940 to 1963. Forlorn and anonymous he remained, except for that one day of glory.

 

Photo credits: Instagram (Sir Donald Bradman) & Facebook (Andy Ganteaume)

Interested readers may go through RAJUMUKHERJIONCRICKET.BLOGSPOT.COM for all earlier blog posts

Thursday, 19 March 2026

 

Handsome achiever turned hermit: A karma-yogi cricketer




A Calcutta-born Test cricketer achieved an enviable world record in cricket. No, no, not thinking of Pankaj Roy. Anyway, Roy was not born at Calcutta.

Yes, Roy and Vinoo Mankad’s 1st wicket world Test record of 413 against New Zealand in 1955-56 did last long enough for over 50 years. But ultimately it fell, as almost all records do.

But one man Robert James Crisp did justice to his surname by munching 4 crispy wickets in 4 consecutive deliveries! Then to add to his magical achievement he overcame his crusty surname, through a performance as solid as the pyramids. Again he bit into 4 more crisps in 4 successive deliveries.

He is the only bowler in the annals of cricket to have achieved this feat of 4 wickets in 4 deliveries twice. None else has as yet been able to replicate the unique achievement.

 Robert Crisp was born in Calcutta in 1911 to British parents who were in the flourishing jute industry of Bengal at the time. From St Xavier’s in Calcutta, he went to St Edward’s School in Salisbury in the then Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe). Academically bright, the brilliant sportsperson twice won the best all-round student award in school.

He seemed to acquire a habit of doing extraordinary achievements twice! Perhaps to show that the first one was no accident!

In the new environment of Western Province in South Africa the tall fast bowler displayed extraordinary performances with his fast rising deliveries. Against Griqualand West he had his first magical spell in 1931 and then repeated the feat against Natal in 1933.

Crisp represented South Africa in 9 Tests which included a tour to England in 1935 with the South Africa. On the tour he had 109 scalps at just above 19 plus. Extraordinary by any yardstick. Then enjoyed a ‘home’ series against Australia. Please note, again just two series of Test cricket!

But the restless soul grew tired of ‘dreary’ cricket. He returned to the continent of his life, Africa. And for good measure climbed Mt Kilimanjaro not once, but twice. 

During the 2nd World War he was at the forefront with the Allied Forces as a tank-commander at the Western Sahara. For his bravery he was awarded the DSO and MC honours. Again 2 distinctions in World War II! But to this amazing persona all these were merely diversions of life.

In between his two principal jobs were journalism for Daily Express, London, and establishing a magazine for Black Africans called ‘Drum’. A champion of anti-apartheid he was.

Later among his other books Bob Crisp sat down to write two memoirs of the War, both of which remain classics of warfare.

One day he suddenly vanished into an isolated Greek island and lived the life of a hermit. The exceptionally handsome man realized that both beauty and brains were only momentary diversions.

He lived life on his own terms. Down with cancer, he credited his recovery to “Plenty of red wine!” Born in Asia, he lived his life in Africa. Finally in Europe the soul went into eternal rest in 1994.

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)
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