Saurabh Kumar's eight-for crushes East Zone; North trounce North East

Central will face defending champions West Zone in the semi-final; North will be up against South

Himanshu Agrawal01-Jul-2023Saurabh Kumar’s career-best figures of 8 for 64 helped Central Zone romp to a 170-run win over East Zone in Alur to secure a place in the semi-final of the Duleep Trophy. The left-arm spinner finished with 11 wickets in the match, having taken 3 for 46 in the first innings.Central will next face West Zone, the defending champions who had direct entry into the semi-final. That game, starting on July 5, will also be played in Alur.East had started the final day at 69 for 6, and it took Central only 12 overs on the final morning to get the remaining four wickets, all going to Saurabh.Saurabh first trapped Riyan Parag lbw in the 34th over, before cleaning up Shahbaz Nadeem in the 38th. Four overs later, he removed Akash Deep and Ishan Porel off successive deliveries to seal the win. East’s top scorer in the second innings was No. 10 Akash Deep, who entertained with a 14-ball 24, which included three sixes off Saurabh.Saurabh’s eight wickets meant East folded for 129, their second batting failure in the game after they had managed only 122 in the first attempt. The other two wickets in East’s second innings went to Shivam Mavi and Avesh Khan on the third evening.North Zone completed a massive win over North East•PTI Narang, Sindhu complete the formalitiesNorth Zone decimated North East Zone by 511 runs on the fourth morning in Bengaluru to complete the formalities towards their march to the semi-final. North will now be facing South Zone from July 5 onwards at the same venue to try to make the final.Having started the day on 58 for 3, North East lost 7 for 53 in a middle-order collapse fashioned by Pulkit Narang. He got four of those wickets with his offspin.The only bright spot for North East was the 57-run fourth-wicket partnership between Palzor Tamang and Nilesh Lamichaney. It was allrounder Nishant Sindhu who broke the stand with Lamichaney’s wicket, which began North East’s slide from 101 for 3. Tamang, who top-scored with 40, was next to fall, as Narang got his first wicket in the second outing.While Narang finished the game with seven wickets and 46 runs, it was also a memorable game for North’s young players, such as Sindhu, who had hit 150 before picking up two wickets on Saturday, and Harshit Rana, who scored an unbeaten 122 and also took two wickets in the match.

Cristiano Ronaldo gets his help! Joao Felix on verge of ending Chelsea nightmare as Al-Nassr hijack Benfica homecoming

Al-Nassr are on the verge of hijacking Benfica's move for Joao Felix as they are in advanced talks to sign the Portuguese forward from Chelsea. The Saudi Pro League giants are in touch with Felix's representatives and could reach an agreement in the next 24 to 48 hours. Cristiano Ronaldo, who had urged Al-Nassr to sign a quality forward, will finally get his help.

Felix set to play alongside RonaldoAl-Nassr on verge of hijacking Benfica moveIn advanced talks with ChelseaFollow GOAL on WhatsApp! 🟢📱WHAT HAPPENED?

Felix was poised for a homecoming as he was closely linked with a move back to boyhood club Benfica. The forward has wanted to end his nightmare at Chelsea after just one season and head out of Stamford Bridge this summer having already spent the second half of 2024-25 on loan at AC Milan. The Blues placed a €54 million (£46m/$62m) valuation on the Portugal international, exactly what they paid Atletico Madrid last year.

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As Benfica were preparing to negotiate terms with the Premier League side, Al-Nassr joined the race and are now on the verge of hijacking the move, according to . The Saudi giants are in advanced talks with Chelsea and Ronaldo's club are also in touch with Felix's representatives. Al-Nassr remain hopeful that they will reach an agreement in the next 24 to 48 hours.

DID YOU KNOW?

Benfica president Rui Costa was reportedly eager to sign Felix in time for the Eusebio Cup clash against Jose Mourinho’s Fenerbahce on Saturday, which the Portuguese side ended up winning 3-2. He was personally involved in talks alongside agent Jorge Mendes and hoped to give fans a symbolic reunion with the forward.

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AFPWHAT NEXT FOR FELIX?

If a move is completed on time, Felix could join Ronaldo and the rest of the Al-Nassr squad for a friendly against Toulouse on Wednesday at the Untersberg-Arena in Grodig.

Mark Wood returns in place of Shoaib Bashir for third Test at Rajkot

One change to side that lost in Visakhapatnam, with Rehan visa issue resolved

ESPNcricinfo staff14-Feb-2024Mark Wood has been recalled to England’s attack at the expense of the offspinner Shoaib Bashir, as England confirmed their team for the third Test against India, which gets underway in Rajkot on Thursday.Wood played as a lone seamer in England’s victory in the first Test at Hyderabad but went wicketless on a surface that did not suit his express pace. However, he has been recalled to partner James Anderson, who impressed with five wickets at Visakhapatnam last week, on a surface that had been more green-tinged in the lead-up to the match.He is the only change to the starting XI, with Bashir sitting out after claiming four wickets on debut in the second Test. It means that England will be playing two seamers for the first time in the series, after fielding a spin-dominant attack in each of the last two matches.Related

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England wait on Rehan availability for third Test

Rehan Ahmed’s participation in this match had been in some doubt after he encountered visa issues on his return to India, following the team’s mid-series break in Abu Dhabi. However, that issue has been resolved.Stokes confirmed England were under no doubt that Rehan’s paperwork would be authorised in time for the third Test, and has backed the 19-year-old legspinner to pick up where he left off from the first two.Rehan Ahmed’s visa issue has been resolved•Associated Press”It’s always an anxious period but thankfully we’ve got it through this morning. First of all, the guys at the airport did a great job at giving him his visa initially to get through and then everyone at the BCCI and the government to get the visa through quickly. We don’t have to worry about any more of those issues.”We were very confident we would get the visa for Rehan before the game started. There was no thoughts around not playing him this week. The great thing about youth is they just take everything in their stride and I thought he handled a situation that could have affected quite a lot of people in a different way very, very well for such a young kid.”The Test matches he’s played so far, he’s done very, very well and everything we’ve asked of him he’s gone out and tried to deliver. I’m looking forward to him getting another game this week.”Having gone into Wednesday with 12 names, Stokes and head coach Brendon McCullum decided on the extra seamer in Wood after one last look at the pitch. They were swayed by cracks in the pitch which they believe will lead to uneven bounce as the Test goes on.Otherwise, they anticipate a surface not too dissimilar to the one that resulted in a high-scoring draw in the 2016 series.”I know it was a very long time ago when we played here, but it looks a good wicket,” Stokes said. “Yesterday it actually looked quite English. It’s a little bit different today. We weren’t quite sure what we were going to do with the team but today made us realise that we are definitely going to go with two seamers.”It just looks a good wicket. It’s a bit platey. Over the five days, those plates might become a little but uneven. There might be some reverse swing which brings Woody into the game – and Jimmy as well.”England: 1 Zak Crawley, 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Ollie Pope, 4 Joe Root, 5 Jonny Bairstow, 6 Ben Stokes (capt), 7 Ben Foakes (wk), 8 Rehan Ahmed, 9 Tom Hartley, 10 Mark Wood, 11 James Anderson

Travis Head joins Steven Smith at Washington Freedom for Major League Cricket 2024

Australia batter signs to play with new Freedom coach Ricky Ponting despite a heavy workload in 2024

Alex Malcolm15-Apr-2024Travis Head has elected not to rest following the T20 World Cup and will instead join Steven Smith to play in Major League Cricket’s second season after signing with Washington Freedom.Head, who is currently playing in the IPL with Sunrisers Hyderabad, was clearly fatigued at the end of the Australian summer having required a rest during the home white-ball series against West Indies in February before another four months of non-stop cricket which included the tour of New Zealand, the IPL and the T20 World Cup.Related

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Head has chosen to continue his 2024 playing odyssey by signing with Freedom, just a week after Smith joined the franchise. Australia does not have any international commitments after the T20 World Cup until a white-ball tour of England in September.Head and Smith will play under Freedom’s new coach, former Australia captain Ricky Ponting after he recently replaced Greg Shipperd.Freedom recently announced the signing of New Zealand allrounder Rachin Ravindra. They retained two overseas players from the 2023 season in Marco Jansen and Akeal Hosein.Head joins Smith, Adam Zampa (Los Angeles Knight Riders), Spencer Johnson (Knight Riders), Tim David (MI New York), Matt Short (San Franciso Unicorns) and Jake Fraser-McGurk (San Franciso Unicorns) as confirmed Australian signings for the second season of MLC, with more expected to join for the tournament which starts immediately after the T20 World Cup in the USA and West Indies ends on June 29.

'He felt something' – Inter Miami’s Javier Mascherano says Lionel Messi felt hamstring discomfort before early exit, with tests still to come

Mascherano and Segovia said Messi wasn't in pain after coming off, but the team won't know the extent of the injury until further tests

Messi left game after just 11 minutesMiami pull off dramatic winMascherano said team will have more information SundayGet the MLS Season Pass today!Stream games nowGetty Images SportWHAT HAPPENED?

Inter Miami edged Necaxa in a dramatic Leagues Cup penalty shootout win to keep their knockout stage hopes alive – but all eyes were on Lionel Messi, who exited after just 11 minutes with an apparent injury. Manager Javier Mascherano confirmed the issue was related to Messi’s hamstring.

“We won’t know anything until tomorrow. Maybe it’s not something serious because he wasn’t in pain, but he felt something,” Mascherano said in a postmatch press conference.

Despite the victory – a 5-4 penalty shootout win following a 2-2 draw, capped by a late Jordi Alba equalizer – Mascherano expressed frustration with how the match unraveled.

“The feeling after the game is totally bitter. It was a match we had under control,” he said. “We were playing the first 15 minutes just as we had planned, we took the lead despite Leo’s injury, and then from a foul that wasn’t a foul, they end up screwing you in a game that could also screw your qualification – and you’re left looking like an idiot. That’s the reality.”

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Concerns are heightened at Inter Miami after the Argentine superstar had to leave the field accompanied by medical staff during Matchday 2 of the Leagues Cup.

Only 10 minutes into the game, the Argentine forward carried the ball up to the edge of the Necaxa box, but under defensive pressure from the visitors, he collided with Alexis Peña and subsequently fell to the pitch, where he immediately asked for medical assistance.

After being examined on the field, it was determined that he had to come off – being replaced by Federico Redondo and heading straight to the locker room – setting off alarm bells at the club.

Getty Images SportWHAT TELASCO SEGOVIA SAID

Telasco Segovia, who scored the opening goal of the match, revealed he spoke with Messi about the injury he suffered against Necaxa.

"He told me he was fine but hasn’t had any tests done," he said. 

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WHAT NEXT FOR INTER MIAMI?

The Herons face Pumas on Wednesday. The match will take place at Chase Stadium.

Constitutional breakdown

A constitution provides cricket with stability and protection; in selection processes, in development of domestic cricket, in nurturing of regional associations

Osman Samiuddin26-Mar-2006

Will Shaharyar Khan’s plan of implementing a new constitution finally come through? © Getty Images
Constitutions are not big in Pakistan. The country didn’t have one until 1956 and the one that governs the nation now only arrived in 1973. And this one can argue that toilet paper is accorded greater respect in some countries around the world, such is the fiddling, chopping, changing, misinterpretation and disregard it has faced by various leaders over the years. Cricket is not much better; it has been waiting on a new constitution now since 1999, when, within the second six months of the year, in turn four different men were heads of Pakistan cricket. To this day, the board is run by an ad-hoc committee in constitutional ambiguity.One of the many tasks in current chairman Shaharyar Khan’s in-tray when he took over on 9 December, 2003 was to devise and implement a new constitution. For two years, deadlines were repeatedly set for the constitution to be put into place. In November 2004, in an interview to this website the chairman said it would take three to four months. A few months earlier, in May, he had told , a national daily, the constitution would definitely be in place in three to four months.A draft, created by a body headed by Justice Karamat Bhandari was finally completed in mid-2005 and handed to President Pervez Musharraf (the head of state in Pakistan is Patron of the PCB and has to approve the constitution) in June. Given that he is president and may have more pressing matters at hand, nothing has happened since, no approval, rejection, only more limbo.”I cannot add much to that I am afraid,” Shaharyar told Cricinfo. “Occasionally, I get the impression that the President’s House has sent the constitution out to legal experts to have it vetted. Beyond that I cannot say anything with any certainty.”Is it likely to emerge any time soon, say before the end of the year? “I am fairly confident that something will emerge in the next two to four months. They are moving on this, it’s not lying around gathering dust.” It’s been said before though and only the foolish would rule out it being said again.Is it disappointing then that over two years after having taken over, one of the primary objectives still hasn’t been achieved? “Frankly I won’t say disappointed but I really would prefer that we had one as soon as possible. In the areas where the old constitution is alive, like district level governance, we have held elections. It is only with the executive committee and electing a general body that we haven’t had elections. But our democratic credentials are still better than many boards in that we have had elections in many districts across the country.”It is a rationalisation Pakistan is familiar with; in 2005, local level elections, although widespread, were widely-disputed and there has only been a referendum for the ultimate head of state – the President – in 2002, the results of which were also disputed. Democracy, it is argued by the government, is not so black and white a concept, or indeed one that, one-size-fits-all, can be applied to every nation. Strands of similar reasoning persist in Pakistan cricket, where it is often argued that the centralised and autocratic functioning of the board allows a smoother administration of affairs nationwide, shred of pesky, dissenting regional voices.”We have spread out the decision-making process with the ad-hoc committee which is a good body with sensible people on it. Look around in India and Sri Lanka and the problems they face in running cricket, particularly in India where it is difficult to make decisions because so many voices are there,” says Shaharyar. But there is of course good reason for its speedy implementation, as Shaharyar reiterates, “I would rather we have a constitution, particularly as the new one has improvements in it and covers loopholes, anomalies and contradictions that the older one didn’t.”The safeguards of accountability and transparency a constitution guarantees is vital, as the current administration, dogged by financial scandals after every big home series may appreciate. And as Imran Khan has pointed out more than once, a constitution provides cricket with stability and protection; in selection processes, in development of domestic cricket, in nurturing of regional associations (which this administration has failed to do) all of which have traditionally been problematic areas for Pakistan. Above all, it makes the chances of something like the administrative shambles of 1999 unlikely to happen so easily.The chairman’s own position is likely to come under review if and when the new constitution is approved. Not only is his three-year term coming to an end in December, the draft constitution has also left the process of finding a chairman in the President’s hands. Traditionally they have been appointed directly by the President. “We have left that to the Patron to decide. He can nominate and have all other positions elected, or he can ask candidates to come in and stand for election. Or a mixture as in he nominates a person and the general body approves or disapproves.”My tenure ends in December. We’ll see after that: if the constitution is there and calls for an elected head I don’t want to run for that. If it is a nomination then I might consider it. Logically if I have been there three years then I should stay another three months for the World Cup. It makes sense to see it through till then. I’m not hankering for it though – I have done a few things and a few still need to be done. The constitution is one of them.” As it has been, unfortunately, since the day he took over.

Sachin and the leg-side blues

Sachin Tendulkar’s tendency to play across the line into the on side got him in trouble against the New Zealanders

Amit Varma08-Jul-2005Just what does Sachin Tendulkar have against the off side? The first ball that he faced today was well outside off, and he turned it with a beautiful flick of the wrist to midwicket for three runs. Such artistry, but what about function? Tendulkar has often got out in the past due to his tendency of playing across the line; would he continue batting in that vein?He did. As many as 38 of Tendulkar’s 55 runs – 69% – came on the on side, with his staple scoring area being midwicket, where he got 16. For a player with such impeccable technique – which is not often commented upon because of his superb eye and his wide array of strokes – he hardly played straight in the V. He had only two scoring strokes in the V between long-on and long-off, both beautiful on-driven boundaries.Where Tendulkar got his runsRunsRuns off boundariesBehind wicket – off side64Square of wicket – off side20Cover – off side94Front of wicket – off side00Front of wicket – on side88Midwicket – on side160Square of wicket – on side60Behind wicket – on side88So how would Stephen Fleming, New Zealand’s captain, counter this? Why, with Daniel Vettori, of course. Of the 39 balls that Vettori bowled to Tendulkar, 13 were pitched on leg stump or further out, with three more on middle stump (besides 23 balls, testingly, on off or just outside). Vettori’s natural spin took the ball across Tendulkar and away from him, inviting him to hit across the line, and against the spin. And that was just how he got out – inside-edging Vettori onto his pads for a catch to silly mid-off.Erapalli Prasanna had once said, “length is mandatory, line is optional”. Vettori, who has grown in stature as a spinner during this tour, in difficult conditions, has clearly internalised that dictum. 36 of his 39 balls to Tendulkar – an astonishing 92% – were either on a good length or just short. Tendulkar, for all his prowess, had met his match.Amit Varma is managing editor of Wisden Cricinfo in India.

Gibbs's fetish for ducks, and Pollock's second coming

A few significant numbers from South Africa’s match against Pakistan at Mohali

S Rajesh27-Oct-2006

Justin Kemp scored a cracking 64 in his first ODI against Pakistan © AFP
18.72 – Makhaya Ntini’s bowling average in ODIs against Pakistan. In 15 matches he has taken 29 wickets29-13 – South Africa’s win-loss in ODIs against Pakistan. In the last 17 matches between the two teams South Africa have won 1389 – Pakistan’s total, which is their lowest in ODIs against South Africa, beating the 109 they made at Johannesburg in 1994-9516 – The contribution of extras in Pakistan’s total. Among their batsmen, only Yasir Arafat scored more49.31 – Mark Boucher’s batting average in the ODIs he has played in 2006. He has scored one century and five fifties during this period64 – Justin Kemp’s score in his first ODI against Pakistan. He had played 58 ODIs before the Mohali game, but none of them were against Pakistan20 – The number of ducks by Herschelle Gibbs in ODIs. Only five batsmen – Chaminda Vaas (21), Muttiah Muralitharan (23), Romesh Kaluwitharana (24), Wasim Akram and Sanath Jayasuriya (28 each) – have been dismissed without scoring more often19.27 & 3.10 – Shaun Pollock’s bowling average and economy rate in his last 20 ODIs

Ambrose checks in

It looked like he had been passed over in favour of his former team-mate Matt Prior. Not quite. Tim Ambrose is England’s surprise choice for the wicketkeeper’s spot in the squad for New Zealand

Andrew Miller05-Jan-2008

England’s new No. 7 is a keeper first and foremost © Getty Images
Tim Ambrose and Matt Prior have been friends and rivals ever sincethey first played together at Sussex in the summer of 2001, but deepdown they always knew that, as two men competing for the samewicketkeeping position, one of them would have to win out in the end.In the summer of 2005, when Ambrose packed his bags and left forWarwickshire after two difficult seasons in Prior’s shadow, it lookedas though the argument had finally been settled. At Lord’s on Friday,however, the tables were turned in spectacular fashion.”I’m a little bit surprised but thrilled,” said Ambrose, afterlearning that he had been earmarked for a Test debut at Prior’sexpense, when England begin their three-match series against NewZealand on March 5. “I’m a little bit numb and for now I’m justletting it sink in before focusing on the job. Matt and I have alwayshad a healthy competition – I wouldn’t call it a rivalry because he’sa good friend of mine, so I feel for him and I’m sure he’ll be verydisappointed at the moment.”Prior’s performances in Sri Lanka were wholehearted but sadly flawed,with the nadir coming at Galle where he dropped three crucial chances,all diving to his right. Despite his undoubted success with the bat -he has averaged in excess of 40 in his first ten Tests – those missestook his tally for the year into double figures. For the selectors whoare still intent on finding a long-term successor to Alec Stewart, itis a catalogue of errors that cannot be ignored any longer.Mind you, Prior has never pretended that wicketkeeping was his firstlove – batting was always No. 1 for him, and he only stumbled on thekeeping role by accident as a teenager, when a junior team-mate failedto turn up for a match. Ambrose, on the other hand, presents himselfas a gloveman first and foremost. “I’ve always kept since the firstgame I played, so it’s always been a major, major part of my game,” hesaid. “I take a lot of pride in it, and I thoroughly enjoy it. It’s why I play the game.”A glance at the bald statistics would tend to tell the same tale.Ambrose has managed just four first-class centuries in seven seasons,and none at all in his final three years at Sussex. In 2003, the yearin which the county secured their first Championship title, he playeda vital role with 931 runs and a top score of 93 not out, but in 2004and 2005 his form fell away as Prior seized the role of top dog. “Weknew from a long way out that one of us would have to go elsewhere totry and pursue our dreams,” said Ambrose. “The opportunity came up forme at Warwickshire and I received good support in making that move.Sussex were very helpful and understood the situation, and it’s workedout well for us.”It wasn’t, however, the first time that Ambrose had upped sticks tofurther his career. He was born and brought up in New South Wales,the son of an English mother and Australian father, but at the age of17 made a leap of faith and emigrated to England. “I had playedjunior levels for NSW U17s, but I always felt the opportunity to keepwicket and bat in that situation was against my favour, so when theopportunity came up to come over here I grabbed it.”Ambrose sent off letters to various counties asking for a trial, andreceived replies from Hampshire and Sussex, with whom he spent hisfirst three days in England after landing from Sydney. “My trialstarted the morning after I got off the plane, so it was a prettyshotgun thing,” he said. “I was looking to explore the world really,and experience new things, and also to play some cricket. In thatfirst year Sussex asked me to play and offered me a contract, andobviously I’d have to be a fool to pass up. It’s resulted in me havinga great life here for the last seven or eight years.”The Ashes are looming in 2009, and are the obvious target for everyEnglish cricketer with international aspirations, but Ambrose insistedthere would be no conflict of allegiance if he ever got the chance toplay. “I’ve lived all my adult life here, and this is my home,” hesaid. “All my friends are here, and I haven’t even been to Australiafor a few years. I’ll be very pleased and proud to have opportunity torepresent my country.”My mother and all her family were born in England and went toAustralia to seek opportunities,” he added. “She was fairly young,around 15 or 16, so it’s similar to the age I was when I came backhere. I’ve spoken to quite a few of them this morning, as they’ve beenvery supportive of me for the last seven or eight years.”The Ashes are looming in 2009, and are the obvious target for everyEnglish cricketer with international aspirations, but Ambrose, who was born in New South Wales, insistedthere would be no conflict of allegiance if he ever got the chance toplayHow equipped for success is Ambrose likely to be? If any manshould know, it would have to be England’s head coach, Peter Moores,the man who offered that Sussex contract back in 2001. “I’m a big fanof Peter, as everyone who’s worked with him is,” said Ambrose. “He’san excellent manager and coach, and he’ll be great to help with mykeeping, confidence, and every aspect of the game. I’m very muchlooking forward to reuniting with him.”It was to Moores that Ambrose turned when he realised his time atSussex was running out. “He was very supportive, because he realisedthat it was going to be the case for one of us,” said Ambrose.”Obviously he wanted to make sure that whichever one of us did makethe move, it was the right thing to do, at the right time and theright place. I spent five or six years under his guidance, and Iattribute a lot of my success and learning experience in the earlypart of my career to him.”And yet, because of Prior’s claims, Moores was never able to offerAmbrose a long-term role as wicketkeeper. Judging by the drama of thisselection, he still hasn’t quite made up his mind. Once again, thespotlight is set to burn furiously on England’s latest No. 7 when theNew Zealand series gets underway.

Kapil the brightest in starry '83 reunion

Sidharth Monga takes in an emotional and fun night commemorating 25 years of India’s World Cup win

Sidharth Monga in New Delhi22-Jun-2008
The host with the most: Kapil Dev enthralled a captive audience with jokes and anecdotes about each of his World Cup-winning team-mates © AFP
Four of them are involved with the ICL; three others spent the better part of the IPL promoting the tournament on television and in their columns, in between going hoarse shouting about “DLF maximum sixes”; one of them is an active politician; a few others work as outspoken critics in different media outlets. Twenty-five years ago Kapil Dev knew little English and Roger Binny didn’t know Hindi, yet for six years they played together and shared precious little; Sunil Gavaskar couldn’t play an incorrect shot, Kris Srikkanth couldn’t play one that conformed; Sandeep Patil could not go to sleep at night because of extra-curricular activities, his room-mate Gavaskar was the epitome of discipline.They are as diverse now as they were then, perhaps more so now. But it was most ironic that on the same day the BCCI felicitated the winners of World Cup 1983, it struck a low blow to Kapil and the ICL by barring English counties playing in the Champions League due to the ECB’s policy of letting ICL players play in their leagues. And this barely weeks after Kapil’s mural was removed from the PCA Stadium in Mohali.Thus, as the evening began, a distinct feeling of discomfort engulfed the outsider: Kapil, of the ICL, and Gavaskar, one of the most influential men in the BCCI, sat next to each other as Sharad Pawar began his speech.Thankfully, the BCCI got it right this time. Pawar’s speech finished in less than nine minutes and the stage was all Kapil’s. Put together in one room, irrespective of their differences, this motley crew became world champions again. Being champions is a force that will always define their lives and the bond of unshakable success allowed them, middle-aged today, to bask in the sunlight of their youth. Like boys, they reminisced and rejoiced India’s greatest achievement, and one that defined its cricket.Their party had started half an hour before they even entered the function, in Kapil’s room, and would continue for hours after the ceremony was over. An emotional Kapil took over the microphone, and went on to give every one of his team-mates unique introductions. Teary-eyed and lumpy-throated, he poured his heart out in broken English and when really emotional, in Hindi. Some of the most heart-felt descriptions for his Devils had every one in the crowd – which included such greats as Ajit Wadekar, Mohammad Azharuddin, Anil Kumble and Rahul Dravid – emoting, whether it was uproarious laughter or just goose-bumped awe.The second man he called upon the stage was Dilip Vengsarkar, the “true Lord of Lord’s,” as Kapil referred to him. “When we were growing up he was Colonel, I don’t know what to call him now. The only title we can give him now is Lord,” said an emotional Kapil.Syed Kirmani, who was the last of the ’83 champions to reach the function, was in next. “He is a senior, but I have had the pleasure of laughing with the seniors, not at them,” Kapil said. “And Syed Kirmani always comes late.” The crowd roared in appreciation. “One thing I can till you,” added Kapil, “is that he is never late on the catch.”
Boys to men to boys again: The class of 1983 gets together © AFP
Kirti Azad – “the son of the politician” – was the star guest. “In the dressing room he was never a politician,” Kapil clarified. “I can’t forget his getting Botham out in the semi-final. He is the only person to have got a shooter, the surli as we call it in Hindi, to turn big.” The crowd lost control but Kapil, like a true comic, remained deadpan.Patil was in next, the “true allrounder”: cricketer, writer, filmstar, businessmen. “If everyone in the team is like Gavaskar, it will be very difficult to laugh. We needed people like Sandeep; he could make even Sunil laugh,” was Kapil’s summary of the dashing batsman.By the end of the introductions, everyone from the 1983 team could be seen in a new perspective; the perspective of their leader and their friend. Yashpal Sharma’s sense of humour “we still don’t understand much”; Ravi Shastri “had 50% in cricketing ability, but 200% determination”; Sunil Valson “I can feel sorry for”; PR Man Singh was the “finest Public Relations Man”; Roger Binny “everyone loved”; Balwinder Sandhu was “a true ; once he made up his mind to do something, you couldn’t stop him”; and Maddi Pa [Madan Lal] “100 times earthier than me”.Srikkanth “couldn’t understand half of what he said in Hindi, and even though I couldn’t speak English we were the best buddies. Wherever he passes, people make way for him. Because he just can’t walk straight; he tries to play straight – through the slips.”Story after story followed seamlessly: how Madan was fed up of the continuous credit given to Kapil for the legendary Viv Richards catch. “After listening to it again and again, he finally snapped, ‘Bas karo yaar [Stop it mate], I bowled the damn ball.'”; how Mohinder Amarnath taught Kapil to manage money on tour – by washing his own clothes – “actually showing me the tub in the bathroom” – and damaging his knuckles enough in the process to render himself unfit for bowling the next day. “These are the things you learn from the seniors,” said Kapil. “Ninety per cent of the world cricketers think he [Amarnath] is just going for a jog, and the ball takes their stumps.”As for Gavaskar, Kapil said that no-one in the 70s could say they didn’t follow him. “The country couldn’t produce fast bowlers to give him practice, but on his first tour to the West Indies he scored more than 700 runs. How he did that, only God knows. Only he can tell how he did it.” Gavaskar, after Kapil said that without Gavaskar the function would not be possible, returned the favour. “The captain has spoken about the whole team, but who’s to speak about the captain,” he said. “Who’s to speak about the man who showed us the way?”One story from Gavaskar summed up Kapil’s influence. “At Tunbridge Wells, we were down in the dumps at 17 for 5. I don’t think people really understand what an innings Kapil played then. Your top order was not able to lay bat on ball, but here came a man who started hitting the same ball to all corners of the ground. Because of 60-over games, there used to be a lunch and a tea break – the lunch before the end of the first innings.”When Kapil came for lunch, there was nobody in the dressing room, just a glass of orange juice on his seat. None of us was in the lunch room either; we were hiding our faces. Here was a man who had shown how we should have batted. It was from there the Indian team took off, and started to once again believe in themselves. He is the greatest cricketer India has ever produced.”
Sunil Gavaskar, Balwinder Sandhu, Kris Srikkanth and friends horse around © AFP
The highlights of the semi-final and the final followed, with breaks for eyewitness accounts from the players available; more laughter, more awe. But the story of the day belonged to NKP Salve, the then board president, who said even 25 IPL victories would not be able to match the enthusiasm, the josh, the hysteria that World Cup ’83 brought, for its sheer simplicity. In that day and age, the board had no money whatsoever, leave alone comparisons with the insane amounts involved today. In heavy-loaded Hindi he narrated how the same players had made his life difficult just after winning the World Cup. “Sunil Gavaskar asked, ‘What do we get now that we have won the World Cup?’. I said, ‘Neither I nor the board has money, we will try and give the team Rs 2 lakh’. Gavaskar said, ‘We are not asking for tips, sir.'”He looks a very straight, innocent character, but when he asked me for money, don’t ask my plight. Kapil instigated from behind and the whole team joined. I relented and offered Rs 3 lakh, and he said, “Sir what is the difference between two and three? May as well don’t give.’ I reached five lakh, and then seven lakh but they wouldn’t agree.”Inderjit Bindra suggested to have a function in Delhi, and to use the proceeds to pay everybody a lakh each. But we soon realised we would get nothing from the function. Then Mr Bindra suggested a Lata Mangeshkar concert to raise money I went to Lata and told her how the players have been asking for so much money. No sooner had she suggested that they deserved it I jumped on the opportunity and persuaded her for the concert. ‘Salve bowled a googly, and I was clean bowled,’ Lata later said.”Mangeshkar, though not present here because of ill health, sent a letter to congratulate the team. Salve continued on how she had saved his izzat [honour]. “Otherwise these very players would have beaten me up with their boots. They look dignified today, but they were young once upon a time. Only I was not young. I was old then, I am old now.”The evening ended on a light note, fittingly. Gavaskar said the party had not ended; it would continue for long in Kapil’s room once the function was over. Having only read about it and seen the highlights, this evening brought one so close to understanding what the 1983 win meant then. May the party in Kapil’s room continue.

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