Friday, March 19, 2010

Forgotten Cricketers: Part Three

In this part we shall look closely at Indian cricket's two biggest banes - Wicket Keeping and the dearth of the Indian All Rounder.

Wicket Keepers -

There is something assuring about the presence of M.S Dhoni and Dinesh Karthik behind the stumps these days. The assurement that these guys can compete as one of the better batsmen in the line up but at the same time they are solid behind the stumps both to quick bowlers and more importantly those tricky leg & off spinners in the Indian sub continent. And to think that for the longest time after the departure of Nayan Mongia, these two qualities almost seemed mutually exclusive for our Indian keepers.

Lets take a look -

Saba Karim

A succesor to Mongia. Decent bat in Indian conditions, but a better keeper. Suffered an eye injury which prematurely ended in his cricketing career

Vijay Yadav

Afer Kiran More but before Mongia, Yadav for a short stint served as India's wicketkeeper /batsmen and will be remembered as an aggressive batter on the Indian tour of SA circa 92. Mongia's emergence as a reliable keeper and batter soon left Yadav fading back into the domestic circuit.

MSK Prasad

Showed glimpses of batting talent at the domestic level and was soon thrust onto the India's tour of Australia 99. Enough said. Never recovered. Not many did.

Deep Dasgupta

After Mongia had been the primary keeper for years and when it finally dawned upon the the selectors that he couldn’t keep or bat outside of the subcontinent, Deep Dasgupta was one of those who were thrown into the ring on India's controversial tour of SA 2001. Played well in patches including a dashing century in SA but overall struggled against quality pace bowling. His keeping wasn't upto par either and so was then asked to focus on his technique in domestic cricket and has since never made it back.

Sameer Dighe

A fighter, Dighe who for years bore the burden of Bombay's wicket keeping duties, briefly seemed to answer India's need for a wicketkeeper batsmen. And he proved his worth in that decisive game in Chennai against Aus in 01. But he was 31 that time and selectors were looking towards the future

Parthiv Patel

..and tThe future for a while seemed to be Patel. The youngest cricket to make test debut, he promised much after a satisfying tour of England in 2002 both in front and behind the stumps. However as time progressed his keeping standards deterioated and he was pushed to back of the line. These days he is content opening the batting alongside Matty Hayden for the Chennai SuperKings.

Ajay Ratra

Briefly played the part in between Dasgupta and Patel. Scrappy cricketer who could stick around, but was a typical keeper hitter. Remember all Wkeepers at this point were judged by their batting skill..a high benchmark set by Adam Gilchrist.

Vijay Dahiya

Same as above

Pankaj dharmani

Played 2 games in the 90's when Mongia's form seemed be dipping. But Mongia's comeback sealed dharmani's fate.

Ambati Rayudu

Probably the best wkeeper never to have played for India.


All Rounders

During the final years of Kapil Dev's playing days, I heard an Indian commentator on air state -

"Cricketers like Kapil only come once every 20-30 years"

I remembered smirking at the above comment. If only I knew, at that time, how prophetic that statement would turn out to be. Kapil Dev retired around 1993-94 and today almost 15 years later we are yet to find another who could shoulder the bowling attack and at the same time, could easily tear apart the opposition attack with his batting.

And every succesful team had atleast 1 great all rounder which brought the balance to their squad -

South Africa blessed with the likes of Brian McMillian, Shaun Pollock, Jacques Kallis, Lance Klusener

England's Freddie Flintoff really took off in Ashes 2005 and when Freddie was at his best, England seemed to be a different squad.

Pakistan - In the late 90's Pakistan had discovered a whole bunch of young all round cricketers - Abdul Razzaq, Azhar Mahmood alongside the great Wasim Akram who moulded these youngsters like the great Imran Khan before him.

New Zealand - For many years, all rounders Chris Cairns, Chris Harris, Nathan Astle and later Daniel Vettori carried the NZ squad and some times single handedly won test matches and championships (remember Cairns in 01 Champions Trophy)

Sri Lanka - Sanath Jayasuriya & Aravinda DeSilva led the way with their more than handy bowling alongside their explosive batting to add new dimensions to Sri Lanka cricket in the 90's.

West Indies - Carl Hooper stood out as an all rounder. But he too was in and out of the squad for most part of the 90's.Probably the cause for WI decline since the mid 90's.

Australia - Waugh brothers were quality all rounders, especially Steve Waugh who regularly took up the old ball and contained opposition with his cutters and slower ones. Bevan and Lehmann could also turn their arms over but Australia had such quality players at every position that they could afford not to have a true all rounder. Plus the presence of Adam Gilchrist allowed the team to carry an extra bowler as needed.

Lets took at some of the potential successors to our own Kapil Dev.

JP Yadav

A medium pacer who could hit the ball hard too. Unfortuantely his debut was against Australia in 2001 and his bowling didn’t quite hit the mark expected.

Sanjay Bangar

In his second stint with the Indian team, Bangar was the consumate team man, who could bowl steady medium pace and even offered to open the batting with decent success. However with Sehwag taking off as opener in One-day and test cricket and with no room in the middle order, selectors decided they could do away with Bangar.

Noel David

Noel who? Sachin Tendulkar apparently uttered the same words. very brief stint with the Indian team. Good fielder.

Dinesh Mongia

Wouldn't qualify as an all rounder in truest definition of the word. For me, a batter who wants to qualify as an allrounder should be able to bowl his share of 10 overs if needed. I dont recall Mongia ever completing 10 overs.But over time he proved to be a decent left arm spinner who could turn over a quick 5-6 overs and more than useful left arm middle/lower order batter. While Dravid donned the wicket keeping gloves, John wright's strategy of employing 7 batsmen allowed Mongia to time share with Hemang Badani. However with the end of the WC 03, Dravid turned in the wk gloves and the 7 batsmen experiment was abandoned. Mongia and badani were out of a job.

Hemang Badani

Similar to Mongia, Badani was once the mainstay of Indian ODI team. A good fielder and excellent lower middle order batsmen who specialized in run chases and building competive totals a la Michael Bevan. Just one of those players who the selectors swapped out for somebody newer.

Ajit Agarkar

Wiry fast bowler and free flowing batsmen when on fire, Agarkar is probably one of the bigger disappointments of Indian cricket. From an early age he was expected to do big things and displayed all the makings of a great all rounder -- century in under 19 cricket against Pakistan, fastest indian bowler to reach 50 wickets in ODI, 6/72 against Aus in 2004 which led to historic Indian victory in Australia, a flamboyant 66 versus Zimbabwe are some of the glimpses of what could've been. Soon after his debut his batting skills quickly deterioated. He will be remembered for getting 7 consecutive ducks against Australia. And a little after 2000 his bowling seemed to dip. Inconsistency led to his eventual downfall.

Reetinder Singh Sodhi

Once hyped as the answer to India's all round needs, Sodhi was part of the initial group of Ganguly's Gang circa 00 -02. But for all his support and the energy he brought onto the field this youngster simply didn’t have the talent to compete at the highest level and was soon playing full time for Punjab.

Laxmi Ratan Shukla

Compared as the next Kapil Dev, it took only 3 ODI's to show the world the true nature of shukla's talent. Not seen at the international level since

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