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Wednesday, February 4

Sudhir Naik (1945-2023) Test Cap # 132


Ramnath Dhondu Parkar (1946-1999) Test Cap # 129

© fanphobia.net
Full name Ramnath Dhondu Parkar
Born October 31, 1946, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Died August 11, 1999, Mumbai, Maharashtra (aged 52 years 284 days)
Major teams India, Mumbai
Batting style Right-hand bat

Profile
One of the tragic figures of Indian cricket in more ways than one, Ramnath Parkar will be remembered for many things. He was one of the many cricketers to be given a raw deal by the selectors. A dashing right handed opening batsman and an outstanding cover fielder, Parkar should have played more than just the two Tests he did and he certainly should have been a member of the Indian team for the 1975 World Cup.

Pochiah Krishnamurthy (1947-1999) Test Cap # 127

© en.wikipedia.org
Full name Pochiah Krishnamurthy
Born July 12, 1947, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh
Died January 28, 1999, Hyderabad, Andhra Pradesh (aged 51 years 200 days)
Major teams India, Hyderabad (India)
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
© trialx.com
Wisden obituar Pallemoni Krishnamurthy, died on January 28, 1999, aged 51. Pochiah Krishnamurthy was a tall wicket-keeper who enjoyed standing up even to fast bowlers, and played five Tests for India against West Indies in 1970-71 when Farokh Engineer was unavailable. He was also reserve keeper on the following summer's tour of England, and four years later in New Zealand and West Indies.

Krishnamurthy played for Hyderabad throughout the 1970s, batting in every position and sharing hundred stands both as an opener and as a No. 11. His 218 victims in 108 first-class matches included 68 stumpings, a proportion that was by then already unthinkable anywhere outside India.
Quietly efficient is the adjective most used to describe Krishnamurthy's work behind the stumps and that is not being off the mark. He was not flamboyant or showy but performed his duties very well. Making his Ranji Trophy debut when only 17, Krishnamurthy improved by leaps and bounds and by 1971 was first choice wicketkeeper in the absence of Farokh Engineer - even when he had not played a Test. He played in all five matches in that series in the Caribbean and had the good fortune of being a member of a side which won a rubber against the West Indies for the first time. He also toured England later that year but Engineer was back and he kept in the Tests. However, in nine-first class matches,Krishnamurthy made 24 dismissals. He continued to play first-class cricket until the end of the 70s and by the time he retired, he had made 218 dismissals, 150 of them caught.

Test debut West Indies v India at Kingston, Feb 18-23, 1971
Last Test West Indies v India at Port of Spain, Apr 13-19, 1971
Only ODI New Zealand v India at Auckland, Feb 22, 1976
First-class span 1966-1979

Eknath Dhondu Solkar (1948-2005) Test Cap # 123

© Getty image
Full name Eknath Dhondu Solkar
Born March 18, 1948, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Died June 26, 2005, Mumbai, Maharashtra (aged 57 years 100 days)
Major teams India, Mumbai, Sussex
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm medium, Slow left-arm orthodox

Profile
 Eknath bowls against Somerset,
Solker, Eknath Dhondu, died on June 26, 2005. He was 57, and suffered from diabetes. Statistically, Solkar remains Test cricket's most successful fielder, with 53 catches in just 27 matches - of those who played at least ten, the nextbest is Bob Simpson's 110 in 62 Tests, or 1.77 per match to Solkar's 1.96. The top catchers are usually firmly camped in the slip cordon, but most of Solkar's came at forward short leg, where he lurked uncomfortably up close and personal to the batsman. Bishan Bedi, one of the great Indian spinners of the time whose menace was greatly enhanced by this, confirmed: "His close-in catching was really intimidating. We would not have been the same bowlers without him." Tony Greig, an opponent in the 1972-73 series in India, said: "Ekki was the best forward short leg I have ever seen."

His catching was often preceded by some very idiosyncratic sledging. "I'll get you, bloody," he advised Geoff Boycott, and he told Garry Sobers to mind his own business. Solkar rose from humble roots. His father was the groundsman at the Hindu Gymkhana in Bombay, and he grew up in a oneroom hut on the ground shared with his parents and five siblings (one of whom, Anant, also played first-class cricket). He impressed the Bombay players with his bowling
Eknath punches the ball down,
the ground, World Cup,75,
© Getty image

 

in the nets, and turned himself into a handy all-rounder, allying adhesive batting to his enthusiastic left-arm seamers - for Indian Schools, who he captained despite his lowly birth; for Bombay, taking six for 38 on his Ranji Trophy debut in 1966-67; for Sussex in one match in 1969; and then for India.

Some affectionately called him "the poor man's Sobers", but he outdid even him in India's victory in the West Indies in 1970-71, with six catches and a crucial 55 in the only definite result, India's win at Port-of-Spain. Later in 1971, he played an equally vital role in India's first Test and series victory in England, with 44 and three wickets in a famous triumph at The Oval. There were also three catches, one - in England's second-innings collapse to dispose of Alan Knott, who had made 90 first time around - as fine as any, when Solkar was stationed even closer than usual.

Test debut India v New Zealand at Hyderabad, Oct 15-20, 1969
Last Test India v England at Kolkata, Jan 1-6, 1977
ODI debut England v India at Leeds, Jul 13, 1974
Last ODI New Zealand v India at Auckland, Feb 22, 1976
First-class span 1965-1981

Ambar Khirid Roy (1945-1997) Test Cap # 121

© indianautographs.com
Full name Ambar Khirid Roy
Born June 5, 1945, Calcutta (now Kolkata), Bengal
Died September 19, 1997, Calcutta (now Kolkata), Bengal (aged 52 years 106 days)
Major teams India, Bengal
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Ambar Roy, who died on September 19, 1997, aged 52, from malaria, was a left-hand batsman who played four Tests for India, against New Zealand and Australia, in 1969-70. He scored a fighting 48 in his first Test innings, but did little thereafter. However, he was an effective Ranji Trophy player for almost two decades: perhaps the most talented left-hander to come from Bengal. He was a Bengal selector for 15 years and was credited for spotting the talent of Sourav Ganguly. He was also a national selector from 1984 to 1986. Roy was a nephew of the Indian opening batsman Pankaj Roy.

Ashok Vinoo Mankad (1946-2008) Test Cap # 119

© hindu.com
Full name Ashok Vinoo Mankad
Born October 12, 1946, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Died August 1, 2008, Central Mumbai (aged 61 years 294 days)
Major teams India, Mumbai
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
© Cricket.mohankumars.com
© Shailesh Mule
The tragedy of Ashok Mankad was that he never really enjoyed the confidence of the selectors, nor was he given a fixed place in the batting order. In his 22 Tests, spread over almost a decade, he went in anywhere between No. 1 and No 8. And quite often, he often played in only one Test of a series. This was a pity for Mankad possessed a wide range of strokes and even though he could never measure up to the level of his great father Vinoo Mankad, he did have the talent and class to run up better scores than his overall career figures suggest. He first came into prominence by scoring a half century as a teenager against the MCC for West Zone in 1963-64. A series of big scores over the years saw him get his break against New Zealand in 1969-70.

Chetandra Pratap Singh Chauhan (1047-2020) Test Cap # 118

 

Full name:Chetandra Pratap Singh Chauhan
Born:July 21, 1947, Bareilly, Uttar Pradesh
Died:August 16, 2020, Gurugram, (aged 73y 26d)
Major teams:india,Delhi,Haryana,Southern Punjab
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Bowling Style:Right arm Offbreak
Relations:Pururaj Singh (nephew)
Playing Role:Opening Batter

profile
Chetan Pratap Singh Chauhan was a cricketer who played 40 Test matches for India. He played Ranji Trophy for Maharashtra and Delhi. He played most of his international cricket in the late 1970s and was the regular opening partner of Sunil Gavaskar during that period. Chetan Chauhan was appointed Chairman of NIFT (National Institute of Fashion Technology) from June 2016 to June 2017. He was also twice elected to the Lok Sabha from Amroha in Uttar Pradesh, in 1991 and 1998. From 2018 to 2020, he was minister for youth and sports in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India. On 12 July 2020, he was admitted to the hospital after testing positive for COVID-19. He died due to complications and multiple organ failure on 16 August 2020 at the age of 73.

Syed Abid Ali (1941) Test Cap # 116


Ramesh Chand Saxena (1944-2011) Test Cap # 115

© 123people.ca
Full name Ramesh Chand Saxena
Born September 20, 1944, Delhi
Died August 16, 2011, Tata Main Hospital, Jamshedpur (aged 66 years 330 days)
Major teams India, Delhi, Jharkhand
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak

Profile
A teenage prodigy, Ramesh Saxena was a middle-order batsman who combined style with technical expertise. A stalwart for Delhi for many years, Saxena made 113 not out on his debut in the Ranji Trophy against Southern Punjab in 1960-61 when he was only 16. Saxena toured England with the Indian team in 1967 as a reserve middle-order batsman and scored 238 runs (23.80) in first-class games. He played his only Test, against England at Headingley, scoring 9 in the first-innings when he opened and then 16 dropping down no No. 7 in the second.

He also toured Australia and New Zealand in 1967-68 with modest success. He was also an occasional legbreak bowler and a sound cover fielder. He later served as secretary of the Bihar Jharkhand Cricket Association, before his death at the age of 66.

Only Test England v India at Leeds, Jun 8-13, 1967
First-class span 1960-1982

Subrata Guha (1946-2003) Test Cap No:# 114

© coneect.in
Full name Subrata Guha
Born January 31, 1946, Calcutta (now Kolkata), Bengal
Died November 5, 2003, Mumbai (aged 57 years 278 days)
Major teams India, Bengal
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium-fast

Pprofile
© en.wikipedia.org
Sunrata Guha was an accurate right-arm medium-pace bowler who could swing the ball both ways, but his Test appearances were limited. He played only four Tests for India in the late 1960s, taking three wickets at an unflattering 103.67, and 17 runs at 3.40. His best bowling was 2 for 55 - the wickets of Paul Sheahan and John Gleeson - at Kanpur in 1969-70. He made his presence felt when he took 11 wickets in the match to bowl an unfancied combined Central & East Zone team to a shock victory over the all-conquering West Indian side in 1966-67. But he had a nightmarish start to his Test career, when he sent down 48 overs for 0 for 115 against England at Headingley in 1967.

In the Ranji Trophy, however, Guha was a pillar of strength for Bengal for over a decade, and took 209 wickets at 14.61, with a best of 7 for 88 against Assam at Gauhati in 1972-73. In his first-class career, Guha captured 299 wickets at an average of 20.29.

Test debut England v India at Leeds, Jun 8-13, 1967
Last Test India v Australia at Kolkata, Dec 12-16, 1969
First-class span 1965-1977

Bishan Bedi (1946-2023) Test Cap # 113


Ajit Laxman Wadekar (1941-2018) Test Cap # 112

© indianetzone.com
Full name Ajit Laxman Wadekar
Born April 1, 1941, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Died August 15, 2018, Mumbai, Maharashtra (aged 77 years 136 days)
Major teams India, Mumbai
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm medium, Slow left-arm orthodox
Other Referee

Profile
An aggressive left-hand batsman who became slightly bogged down by responsibility, Ajit Wadekar's name will forever be linked with 1971 when he led the Indian team to historic triumphs in the West Indies and England. Wadekar made his first-class debut in 1958-59 but had to wait eight years before playing for India in 1966-67, despite a string of big scores around the domestic circuit. But he took little time to establish himself in the Indian team and was a tower of strength to the Indian batting for seven years, playing scintillating or valuable knocks depending upon the state of the game. He was one of the best No. 3 batsmen in the history of Indian cricket and one of the finest slip fielders.

Vijay Merchant's casting vote as chairman of the selection committee ended MAK Pataudi's long reign as Indian captain and handed over the leadership to Wadekar in January 1971. He proved himself to be a capable captain, if not a shrewd tactician, and a combination of circumstances, and a fair share of good fortune, led to India beating West Indies and then England. A third successive series triumph over England, this time at home, followed in 1972-73 and Wadekar was at his peak as batsman and captain when he led India to England in 1974. What followed was anti climax. All three Tests were lost by margins that brooked no argument in what went down as the inglorious `Summer of 42'. Made a scapegoat, Wadekar was forced to retire, although a reluctance to spend time away from his young family would probably have led to him standing down whatever the outcome of the tour. Almost three decades later he renewed his association with Indian cricket as a successful manager of victorious Indian teams, striking a particularly good working relationship with Mohammad Azharuddin.

In 2007, Wadekar joined the ICL where he served as a match referee, but was released from his contract with the unofficial league and was granted amnesty by the BCCI in 2009.
Partab Ramchand June 2009

Test debut India v West Indies at Mumbai (BS), Dec 13-18, 1966
Last Test England v India at Birmingham, Jul 4-8, 1974
First-class span 1958/59 - 1974/75
List A span 1973/74 - 1974

S M Jadeja Indrajitsinhji (1937-2011) Test Cap # 109


Full name Shri Madhavsinhji Jadeja Indrajit sinhji
Died March 12, 2011, Mumbai (aged 73 years 270 days)
Major teams India, Delhi, Saurashtra
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Born June 15, 1937, Jamnagar, Gujarat

Profile
A competent wicketkeeper and a sound right-hand batsman, who could open or go in the middle order, Indrajitsinhji was perhaps unfortunate that the best part of his career coincided with those of Engineer and Kunderan, meaning his only cnaces came when both of them were injured or out of favour. He got his big break when he played in all three Tests against Australia in 1964-65. He achieved only modest success both as batsman and wicketkeeper but enjoyed his moment of glory when he helped Chandu Borde to put on 32 runs for the unbroken ninth-wicket partnership to help India clinch a memorable two-wicket victory at Bombay.

However he did not do enough to consolidate his place in the side and Kunderan and Engineer kept him out until an injury to Engineer brought him back for one more Test - against New Zealand at Hyderabad in 1969-70. That remained the extent of Indrajitsinhji's Test career. But he was a major success in the Ranji Trophy while playing for both Delhi and Saurashtra. He was one of the first wicketkeepers to complete 100 dismissals in the national competition and in 1960-61 claimed 23 victims, then the record. In a first class career that stretched almost 20 years, Indrajitsinhji scored 3694 runs (26.76) with five centuries and had 210
dismissals, 133 of them caught.

Test debut India v Australia at Chennai, Oct 2-7, 1964
Last Test India v New Zealand at Hyderabad (Deccan), Oct 15-20, 1969
First-class span 1954-1973\

Hanumant Singh (1939-2006) Test Cap # 108

© Getty image
Full name Hanumant Singh
Born March 29, 1939, Banswara, Rajasthan
Died November 29, 2006, Breach Candy Hospital, Mumbai (aged 67 years 245 days)
Major teams India, Madhya Bharat, Rajasthan
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak
Other Referee

Profile
© International Cricket Council
Hanumant Singh lived regally and generously. He was born a prince and batted like one, though it enabled him to play only 14 Tests, which was too few for one with his abundant talent. Those of us who relished his association and friendship knew that Hanumant was always courteous, ever smiling and blessed with a delightful sense of humour. He detested bores and pretenders, though he was too gentle to tell them so. He kept clear of them.

Rajinder Pal (1937-2018) Test Cap # 107

Full name:Rajinder Pal
Born:November 18, 1937, Delhi
Died:May 09, 2018, Dehradun, Uttarakhand, (aged 80y 172d)
Major teams:india,Delhi,Haryana,Southern Punjab
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Bowling Style:Right arm Fast medium
Relations:Ravinder Pal(brother)

profile

Rajinder Pal was an Indian cricketer who played in one Test in 1964. He played first-class cricket in India from 1954 to 1973. An opening bowler, Rajinder Pal made his first-class debut in 1954–55 for Delhi at the age of 17. While he was studying at Delhi University he played for Indian Universities in first-class matches against the New Zealanders in 1955–56 and the Australians in 1959–60, as well as playing for Delhi University in the inter-university competition, the Rohinton Baria Trophy. When Delhi University won the trophy in 1959–60 he took eight wickets in the final.

He took 8 for 54 and 4 for 125 for Delhi against Railways in the Ranji Trophy in 1959–60, and captained Delhi in 1960–61 and 1961–62.[5] In his first match as captain he took 6 for 3 and 3 for 17 against Jammu and Kashmir, bowling unchanged while Jammu and Kashmir were dismissed for 23 and 28.In 1961–62 Pal was selected to play for the Indian Board President's XI against the MCC and took four wickets, including that of Ted Dexter, bowled for 3. He also played in the corresponding match when England toured in 1963–64, and despite taking only one wicket, he was selected to play in the Second Test shortly afterwards.

Only Test:India vs England at Brabourne - January 21 - 26, 1964
Span:1954/55 - 1973/74

Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi (1941-2011) Test Cap # 104

© businessreviewindia.in
Full name Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi Jr.
Born January 5, 1941, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh
Died September 22, 2011, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, Delhi (aged 70 years 260 days)
Major teams India, Delhi, Hyderabad (India), Oxford University, Sussex
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi has a net,
 session, April 25, 1967 © PA Photos
Mansoor Ali Khan or Mansur Ali Khan(sometimes M.A.K. Pataudi), Nicknamed Tiger Pataudi, was an Indian cricketer and former captain of the Indian cricket team. He was the ninth Nawab of Pataudi until 1971, when India abolished royal entitlements through the 26th Amendment to the Constitution of India.

Mohamed Mansur Ali Khan was the son of  Iftikhar Ali Khan, eighth Nawab of Pataudi and his wife Sajida Sultan, second daughter of the last ruling Nawab of Bhopal. He was born in Bhopal and educated at A.M.U Minto Circle School in Aligarh and then went to Welham Boys' School in Dehradun (Uttarakhand), Lockers Park Prep School in Hertfordshire (where he was coached by Frank Woolley), and Winchester College. He read Arabic and French at Balliol College, Oxford.

His father died while playing polo in Delhi on Mansoor's eleventh birthday in 1952, whereupon Mansoor succeeded as the ninth Nawab of Pataudi. While the princely state of Pataudi had been merged with India after the end of the British Raj in 1947, Mansoor inherited the titular dignity of Nawab of Pataudi. He held the title until the entitlements were abolished by the Government of India through the 26th amendment to

Dilip Narayan Sardesai (1940-2007) Test Cap # 103

© Playfair Cricket Monthly 
Full name Dilip Narayan Sardesai
Born August 8, 1940, Margao, Goa
Died July 2, 2007, Mumbai (aged 66 years 328 days)
Major teams India, Mumbai
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm bowler
Relation Son - RD Sardesai

Profile
Dilip Sardesai batting in England in 1971,
© Playfair Cricket Monthly

The 1970-71 West Indies tour was the last chance for Dilip Sardesai. He was lucky to be picked - it had looked as if his career was dead and buried - he went on to be Indian cricket's Renaissance Man in the watershed year of 1971. A technically correct player, the solid, wristy Sardesai was proficient against spin, but in West Indies he showed his mettle against pace, and pulled India repeatedly out of quicksand. He scored 642 runs, with two single hundreds and a double, and provided an inspirational launching-pad for a legend - Sunil Gavaskar, in his first series. In England later in 1971,

Sardesai's pivotal double of 54 and 40 allowed Chandrasekhar to hasten England's defeat at The Oval. Sardesai was limpet-like and usually defensive, but he could attack when he needed to, and scored one of India's fastest hundreds, against New Zealand at Delhi in 1964-65. In the previous Test, his 200 not out at Bombay salvaged a draw after India had been skittled for 88 in the innings.

B,.Pandharinath Gupte (1934-2005) Test .Cap # 100

© rediff.com
Full name Balkrishna Pandharinath Gupte
Born August 30, 1934, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Died July 5, 2005, Mumbai (aged 70 years 309 days)
Major teams India, Bengal, Mumbai, Railways
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

Profile
© Connect.in.Com
Gupte, Balkrishna Panddharinath, died on July 5, 2005. He was 70. A prolific wicket-taker in Indian domestic cricket for Bombay, Bengal and Railways, "Baloo'' Gupte was overshadowed by his older brother - and fellow leg-spinner - Subhash Gupte. Baloo's Test debut came after his brother had been dropped, against Pakistan at Madras in 1960-61 - but he could not take a wicket. He earned a recall, having secured nine for 55 for West Zone in the 1962-63 Duleep Trophy final, but his three Tests brought only three wickets in all. However, he took 417 in first-class cricket.

The younger brother of Subash Gupte, Baloo was also an orthodox legspin googly bowler who performed many notable feats in domestic cricket. But he could never attain the heights achieved by his elder brother. He was harshly treated on his Test debut on a perfect batting pitch against Pakistan at Madras in 1960-61, finishing wicketless after conceding 116 runs after bowling 35 overs. Surprisingly brought back against England at Kanpur three years later, he was again ineffective. And he did not do much better in his only other Test, against New Zealand at Calcutta the following season. In the Ranji Trophy, however Gupte was one of the leading wicket takers of his time and finished with 255 wickets (23.47). His innings figures of 9 for 55 for West Zone in the 1962-63 Duleep Trophy final against South Zone is still the best in the competition.

Test debut India v Pakistan at Chennai, Jan 13-18, 1961
Last Test India v New Zealand at Kolkata, Mar 5-8, 1965
First-class span 1953-1970

Rusi Framroze Surti (1936-2013) Test Cap # 99

© dnaindia.com
Full name Rusi Framroze Surti
Born May 25, 1936, Surat, Gujarat
Died January 13, 2013, Mumbai, Maharashtra (aged 76 years 233 days)
Major teams India, Gujarat, Queensland, Rajasthan
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm medium

Profile
© 123people.ca
After an uncertain start to his Test career, when he was more out than in the Indian team, Rusi Surti in the mid and late sixties was a pillar of strength to the side with his all round qualities. A sound left hand batsman, a left arm bowler who could bowl either medium pace or spinners and an outstanding fieldsman, Surti rendered valuable service almost throughout the sixties. In his second Test he scored 64, going in at No 3 and put on 107 runs for the second wicket with Nari Contractor against Pakistan at New Delhi in 1960-61. But he was promptly forgotten till the 1962 tour of West Indies when he came good scoring 246 runs in the five Tests.He then made a few sporadic appearances but it was not until the 1966-67 series against West Indies that he consolidated his place in the side.

Man Mohan Sood (1939-2020) Test Cap # 98

Full name:Man Mohan Sood
Born:July 06, 1939, Lahore, Punjab
Died:January 19, 2020 (aged 80y 197d)
Major teams:india,Delhi
Batting style:Right hand Bat

profile
Man Mohan Sood pronunciation was an Indian cricketer. He was born in Lahore, and played in one Test in 1960. He played first-class cricket in India from 1957 to 1965. Sood was a middle-order batsman. After top-scoring with 73 for the Indian Board President's XI against the touring Australians in late December 1959 he was selected for the Fourth Test two weeks later. Batting at number nine, he failed twice, and India lost by an innings. He made his only first-class century in 1960-61 when he scored a quick 170 for Delhi against Southern Punjab, adding 290 for the fifth wicket with Ramesh Saxena.He was later a prominent cricket administrator in the Delhi & District Cricket Association, and served as a national selector in the 1980s.

Only Test:India vs Australia at Chennai - January 13 - 17, 1960
Span:1956/57 - 1965/66

Amritsar Govindsingh Milkha Singh (1941-2017) Test Cap # 97

© madrasmusings.com
Full name Amritsar Govindsingh Milkha Singh 97
Born December 31, 1941, Madras (now Chennai)
Died November 10, 2017, Chennai (aged 75 years 314 days)
Major teams India, Madras
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
Another of the cricketers who never quite got their due, Milkha Singh was a dashing left-hand batsman and a fine fielder. An outstanding schoolboy cricketer, Milkha made his Ranji Trophy debut at 17 and played his first Test when just after his 18th birthday. But his four Tests were played in a period of less than two years and his career was over before he was 20. Though he continued to be a prolific and stylish run getter in first-class cricket in the early and mid sixties, he was surprisingly not considered again.

Milkha was a mainstay of the Madras (later Tamil Nadu) batting for a decade. In the Ranji Trophy alone he scored 2150 runs (41.35). He scored the first century in the Duleep Trophy championship hitting 151 for South Zone against North Zone in the inaugural match at Madras in 1961-62. He and his elder brother Kripal Singh appeared together against England at Bombay in 1961-62. In a decade long first-class career, Milkha scored 4324 runs (35.44) with eight centuries.

Test debut India v Australia at Chennai, Jan 13-17, 1960
Last Test India v England at Mumbai (BS), Nov 11-16, 1961
First-class span 1958/59 - 1968/69

B.Krishnappa Kunderan (1939-2006) Test.Cap # 96

© ESPNcricinfo Ltd
Full name Budhisagar Krishnappa Kunderan
Born October 2, 1939, Mulki, Karnataka
Died June 23, 2006, Scotland (aged 66 years 264 days)
Major teams India, Scotland, Mysore, Railways
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Fielding position Wicketkeeper

Profile
© Wisden Cricket Monthly
Born on the same date as Mahatma Gandhi, Budhi Kunderan was rather more violent in his chosen profession,hitting the cricket ball with a power and confidence that came naturally to Indian wicketkeepers who knew they had two strings to their bow. He opened India's batting in 21 of the 34 innings he played, averaging 41 in that position. His Karnataka captain V Subramanya rated Kunderan as a better batsman and wicketkeeper than his contemporary Farokh Engineer. Kunderan played his early cricket in Mumbai but, with Naren Tamhane established as wicketkeeper there, Kunderan turned his attention to Railways. It was a good move. Kunderan was picked to play for India even before he had played a single first-class game and showed his gratitude to his Railways captain Lala Amarnath by scoring a double-century on Ranji debut.

At 20 Kunderan played for India ahead of the older Engineer and gave a glimpse of his approach by getting out hit-wicket to the Australian fast bowler Ian Meckiff while attempting to pull him. "He took batting into a different dimension," says Indian offspinner Erapalli Prasanna. "The 192 he made in Chennai against England in 1964 was an innings that was ahead of its time - the sort that today's big hitters would play. As wicketkeeper he showed the others how to keep to BS Chandrasekhar, using his body as a second line of defence. He was flamboyant, versatile and a good human being." Kunderan was the first wicketkeeper to score over 500 runs in a series, as he did in that 1963-64 series against England. Three years later he opened injury-hit India's bowling in a Test match in England. That was to be his last Test. He was 29.Rather like the characters Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in Tom Stoppard's play, things happened around Kunderan that he could not control or understand.

Salim Aziz Durani (1934-2023) Test Cap # 95

Salim Aziz Durani (11 December 1934) is a former Indian cricketer who played in 29 Test matches from 1960 to 1973. An all-rounder, Durani was a slow left-arm orthodox bowler and a left-handed batsman famous for his six-hitting prowess. He is the only Indian Test cricketer to have been born in Afghanistan.[2]

Venatappa Musandra Muddiah (1929-2009) Test Cap # 94

© indianetzone.com
Full name Venatappa Musandra Muddiah
Born June 8, 1929, Bangalore, Karnataka
Died October 1, 2009, Bangalore (aged 80 years 115 days)
Major teams India, Hyderabad (India), Mysore, Services
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium, Right-arm offbreak

Profile
An offspinner, Muddiah met with modest success in his two Tests. In the first game against Australia at New Delhi in 1959-60 he finished wicketless. He was more successful against Pakistan at Kanpur, the next season with figures of 1 for 62 and 2 for 40. He took the wickets of Mushtaq Mohammed in the first innings and dismissed both openers Hanif and Imtiaz in the second.

Arvindrao Laxmanrao Apte (1934-2014)Test Cap # 92

 

Full name Arvindrao Laxmanrao Apte
Born October 24, 1934, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Died August 5, 2014, Pune (aged 79 years 285 days)
Major teams India, Indian Universities, Mumbai, Rajasthan
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Relation Brother - ML Apte

Profile
The younger brother of Madhav Apte, Arvind Apte was taken on the tour of England in 1959 as a reserve opener, based on his fine performances at home. An attacking opening batsman with a wide range of strokes, mostly cavalier, he met with modest success on the tour scoring 881 runs (27.53) with three centuries. His best score was 165 against Derbyshire. Given a chance in the third Test at Leeds following an injury to Nari Contractor, Apte was out for 8 and 7, falling to Alan Moss both times. He continued to play first-class cricket till the early 70s, finishing with an aggregate of 2782 runs (33.51) which included six centuries.

Only Test England v India at Leeds, Jul 2-4, 1959
First-class span 1955-1971 

Motganhalli Laxminarsu Jaisimha (1939-1999) Test Cap # 91

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Full name Motganhalli Laxminarsu Jaisimha
Born March 3, 1939, Secunderabad, Andhra Pradesh
Died July 6, 1999, Sanikpuri, Secunderabad, Andhra Pradesh (aged 60 years 125 days)
Major teams India, Hyderabad (India)
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak
Other Coach, Administrator

Profile
© cwforums.net
A stylist in the purest sense, Motganhalli Laxmanarsu Jaisimha brought a certain panache to everything he did. He opened the innings with the flair and poise we have now come to expect from Hyderabadi batsmen. No-one drove off the front foot - or knotted a tie - like ML Jai, it was said. Polite to a fault, warm and generous, he was a source of great inspiration to many Hyderabad cricketers, including Mohammad Azharuddin, who copied many things from Jai, not least the collar-up style that a younger generation wrongly believes is Azhar's trademark. Jaisimha's death in 1999, aged only 60, was widely mourned across the country.

Jaisimha made over 2000 runs in Test cricket, including three centuries. He made his Test debut against England in 1959 at the age of 20, having made his first-class debut almost five years before, and against England in 1963-64 he made his highest Test score, an unforgettable 129 in the second innings at Calcutta. And what of that apocryphal Brisbane Test against Bill Lawry's Australians in 1968? Jaisimha, called up as a replacement for the third Test, virtually walked off the plane and into the Gabba, and smashed 74 and 101. Jaisimha was also used as a part-time offbreak bowler.While he never captained India, he was a close aide of Ajit Wadekar, coming up with crucial advice at key moments. After his playing days were finished Jaisimha served Indian cricket as the manager of the national team, keeping up his close ties with the game.

Test debut England v India at Lord's, Jun 18-20, 1959
Last Test West Indies v India at Port of Spain, Apr 13-19, 1971
First-class span 1954-1977
List A span 1973-1975

Ramakant Bhikaji Desai (1939-1998) Test Cap # 90

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Full name Ramakant Bhikaji Desai
Born June 20, 1939, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Died April 27, 1998, Mumbai, Maharashtra (aged 58 years 311 days)
Major teams India, Mumbai
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
© fanphobia.net
Ramakant Bhikaji "Tiny" Desai, died in a Mumbai hospital on April 27, 1998, aged 58, while awaiting heart surgery. Tiny Desai was only 5ft 4in tall but, from a supple run-up, generated sufficient pace to sustain the Indian attack in the 1960s, when it desperately needed sustenance, and usually got it only from spin bowlers. He was drafted into the side as a 19-year-old for the Delhi Test in 1958-59, and had to bowl 49 overs in West Indies' only innings, taking four for 169; he promptly took over the leadership of the attack for the 1959 tour of England. At Lord's he had England in deep trouble at 80 for six, and finished with five for 89 in the innings.

Wisden praised his rare ability, endless courage, and his out-swinger, though the team was hopelessly overmatched, and he was over-bowled. That was often the way: he was on the winning side in only four of his 28 Tests. But he played a crucial role in blunting the threat of Hanif Mohammad in the 1960-61 series against Pakistan. Hanif had some trouble against Desai's deceptive bouncer, and was dismissed by him four times in nine innings: the Indians joked that he was Ramakant's bakra- the Hindi equivalent of rabbit. With the older ball, Desai was especially effective. His finest hour arguably came in that series,

Apoorva Kumar Sengupta (1939-2013) Test Cap # 89

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Full name Apoorva Kumar Sengupta
Born August 3, 1939, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh
Died October 2013, Noida (aged 74 years days)
Major teams India, Services
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

Profile
Apoorva Kumar Sengupta (born 3 August 1938, Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh) is a former Indian cricketer who played in one Test in 1959.A. K. Sengupta's test appearance came in the middle of a major controversy in Indian cricket. Ghulam Ahmed announced his retirement a few days before the Madras Test against the West Indies in 1958-59, and Vijay Manjrekar dropped out due to an injury. This led to a confusing situation where Jasu Patel, A. G. Kripal Singh, Manohar Hardikar and Sengupta were all considered. The captain Polly Umrigar wanted Hardikar but when the President of the BCCI insisted that he pick Patel, Umrigar resigned during the night before the match. In the end, Sengupta and Kripal singh played. Sengupta was dismissed for 1 and 8 by Wes Hall and Roy Gilchrist.

Surendranath (1937-2012) Test Cap # 88

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Full name Surendranath
Born January 4, 1937, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh
Died May 5, 2012, New Delhi (aged 75 years 122 days)
Major teams India, Services
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
One of the many cricketers who did not get their due from the selectors, Raman Surendranath was a tireless medium pacer who could swing the ball prodigously. His bowling was ideally suited to English conditions and he was a success on the 1959 tour when he took 79 wickets in first-class games, next only to Subash Gupte's 95. He played in all five Tests, heading the Test averages with 16 wickets (26.62) and taking five wickets in an innings at both Old Trafford and the Oval. He did well at home too. Against Australia in 1959-60 he bowled both the openers McDonald and Favell. Against Pakistan in 1960-61, he was outstanding in the third Test at Calcutta, when he used the conditions very effectively. He picked up 4 for 93 from 46 overs in the first innings. In the next Test at Madras, however, he was less successful and was promptly discarded for good. He certainly deserved better.Surendranath however continued to play in the Ranji Trophy until 1969. He took 178 wickets (20.67) in the national competition. In a first-class career that started in 1955, he took 284 wickets (24.95).

Ramnath Baburao Kenny (1930-1985) Test Cap # 87

Full name Ramnath Baburao Kenny
Born September 29, 1930, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra
Died November 21, 1985, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra (aged 55 years 53 days)
Major teams India, Bengal, Mumbai
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm offbreak
Other Coach

Profile
A sound right-handed bat, with quick footwork and stylish strokeplay, and an off-break bowler of almost medium pace, Ramnath Kenny played in five Tests for India: at Calcutta against West Indies in 1958-59 and four times against Benaud's Australian side in 1959-60, scoring in all 245 runs with an average of 27.22 and a highest innings of 62. Playing for Bombay from 1950-51 to 1960-61, and then for Bengal until 1963-64, he scored in all first-class cricket 3,079 runs with an average of 50.47 and took fifteen wickets at 31.20. Among his eleven hundreds, three in 1956-57 came in successive innings with the third, 218 against Madras, remaining his highest score.

A qualified coach, he helped in the development of the young Sunil Gavaskar, and it was while playing and coaching professionally in the north of England that he played for

Test debut India v West Indies at Kolkata, Dec 31, 1958 - Jan 4, 1959
Last Test India v Australia at Kolkata, Jan 23-28, 1960
First-class span 1950-1964

Vasant Baburao Ranjane (1937-2011) Test Cap # 86

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Full name Vasant Baburao Ranjane
Born July 22, 1937, Poona (now Pune), Maharashtra
Died December 22, 2011, Ruby Hall Clinic, Pune (aged 74 years 153 days)
Major teams India, Maharashtra, Railways
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
Vasant Ranjane was perhaps unfortunate that he played most of his Test cricket on dead batting tracks or spin oriented pitches when the new ball bowler's function was limited to just a few overs to take the shine off the ball. Very rarely was he given a long spell, which was a pity for he was resourceful medium-pace bowler, able to swing the ball both ways and cut the ball off the seam to good effect. He made a sensational first-class debut when he took nine for 35 (including a hat-trick) and 4 for 36 for Maharashtra against Saurashtra in 1956-57. Ranjane made his Test debut two years later, but was promptly forgotten until 1961-62 when he played against England at Bombay. He was the most successful bowler with 4 for 76 in the first innings. He played two more Tests in the series and was taken on the 1962 tour of West Indies where he played one game, the final Test at Kingston. He again did well taking the wickets of Hunte, Kanhai, Sobers and Worrell in the first innings for 72 runs. He played in only two more Tests, against England at Madras in 1963-64 and against Australia at the same venue a year later with modest success. He continued to play first-class cricket until 1971 and in the Ranji Trophy took 116 wickets (22.11).

Manohar Shankar Hardikar (1936-1995) Test Cap # 85

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Full name Manohar Shankar Hardikar
Born February 8, 1936, Baroda, Gujarat
Died February 4, 1995, Bombay (now Mumbai), Maharashtra (aged 58 years 361 days)
Major teams India, Mumbai
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium, Right-arm offbreak

Profile
Hardikar, Manohar Shankar, who died on February 4, 1995, in Bombay, aged 58, was an allrounder who played two Tests for India against West Indies in 1958-59. On his debut in Bombay, he took his only Test wicket (Kanhai, lbw) with his third ball and then helped save the game with 32 not out, having been out first ball in the first innings. In the next match at Kanpur, he was hit on the head, which badly affected his confidence. However, he remained a highly effective all-rounder for Bombay.

He made his debut for them aged only 18 in 1955-56 and his slow to medium-paced bowling had its greatest day when he took eight for 39 against Bengal in the final of the Ranji Trophy that season. He played 14 seasons in all, captaining Bombay in the last two, and scored eight centuries, including 207 not out against Services in 1964-65.

Test debut India v West Indies at Mumbai (BS), Nov 28-Dec 3,1958
Last Test India v West Indies at Kanpur, Dec 12-17,1958
First-class span 1954-1968

Ghulam Mustafa Guard (1925-1978) Test Cap # 84

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Full name Ghulam Mustafa Guard
Born December 12, 1925, Surat, Gujarat
Died March 13, 1978, Ahmedabad, Gujarat (aged 52 years 91 days)
Major teams India, Gujarat, Mumbai
Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Left-arm fast-medium

Profile
Ghulam Mustafa Guard was an Indian cricketer who played in two Tests from 1958 to 1960. Ghulam Guard, 'a tall, high-shouldered man, who shuffled up to the wicket in twelve steps and ran the ball away from the right-handed batsmen at distinctly above medium pace, especially when fresh' wasthe first left-hander to open the bowling for India. At 6' 3", he was the tallest cricketer to play for India between Ladha Ramji in the 1930s and Abey Kuruvilla in the nineties. Guard bowled successfully in Indian domestic cricket for Bombay and Gujarat for more than 15 years from 1946-47.But he was almost 33 before he was picked for his first Test appearance, the first match against West Indies at Bombay (Mumbai) in 1958-59.

Gundibail Rama Sunderam (1930-2010) Test Cap # 81

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Full name Gundibail Rama Sunderam
Born March 29, 1930, Udupi, Karnataka
Died June 20, 2010, Mumbai, Maharashtra (aged 80 years 83 days)
Major teams India, Mumbai, Rajasthan
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium

Profile
When Lala Amarnath was chairman of the selection committee, he encouraged many youngsters by giving them their break. One of them was Sunderam, who played two Tests against New Zealand in 1955-56. A medium pacer who played for Mumbai and then for Rajasthan, Sunderam did well enough in his restricted appearances. Confronted by a featherbed Kotla pitch on his debut, he sent down 39 overs and finished with 1 for 99 as New Zealand amassed 450 for 2. In the next Test at Calcutta, he took the wickets of opening batsman JG Leggat and John Reid for 46 runs off 21 overs. But he never got another chance to represent the country. In a fairly long first-class career, which stretched throughout the 1950s and 1960s, Sunderam took 127 wickets .

Rameshchandra Gangaram Nadkarni (1933-2020) Test Cap # 80

Full name:Rameshchandra Gangaram Nadkarni
Born:April 04, 1933, Nasik, Maharashtra
Died:January 17, 2020, Mumbai, (aged 86y 288d)
Major teams:india,Maharashtra,Mumbai
Batting style:Left hand Bat
Bowling Style:Slow Left arm Orthodox
Playing Role:Allrounder

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Rameshchandra Gangaram "Bapu" Nadkarni was an Indian international cricketer, mainly known for being an economical bowler. The chances of scoring against him was either nil, or negligible.Nadkarni bowled a record 21.5 consecutive overs (131 balls) without conceding a run against England in Madras on January 12, 1964.

Nadkarni was famous for bowling an unerring line to batsmen which made it nearly impossible to score. It is often told that he used to put a coin on the pitch when he practiced in the nets, and would practice hitting the coin with every delivery. He had a career economy rate of less than 2.00 runs per over.Nadkarni was perhaps best known for his bowling in the Madras Test against England in 1963–64. His figures at the end of third day of the match, bowling mostly against Brian Bolus and Ken Barrington, read 29 overs, 26 maidens, and no wickets for three runs. He finished with figures of 32-27-5-0 and bowled a record twenty one consecutive maiden overs (131 dot balls in a row) in a 114-minute bowling spell. In the final Test of that series, Nadkarni hit 52* and 122*. It remained his only hundred in Test cricket.

Nadkarni took 5/31 and 6/91 against Australia in Madras in 1964–65, but with the emergence of Bishen Bedi as a left arm spinner, his chances became scarce. He was dropped from the tour of England in 1967 but, in New Zealand that winter, he bowled India to a win at Wellington with career best figures of 6/43. On return from this trip, he announced his retirement from first-class cricket.Nadkarni represented Maharashtra in Ranji Trophy from 1951–52 to 1959-60 and Bombay thereafter until 1967–68. He scored 201* and took 6/17 and 3/38 against Saurashtra in 1957-58 and 167 and seven wickets in the match against Gujarat in 1958–59. His highest score was the six hour innings of 283* against Delhi in the 1960-61 semifinal.

Test Debut:India vs New Zealand at Delhi - December 16 - 21, 1955
last test:New Zealand vs India at Auckland - March 07 - 12, 1968
Span:1951/52 - 1967/68

Sadashiv Raoji Patil (1933-2020) Test Cap # 79

Full name:Sadashiv Raoji Patil

Born:October 10, 1933, Kolhapur, Maharashtra
Died:September 15, 2020, Kolhapur, Maharashtra, (aged 86y 341d)
Major teams:india,Maharashtra
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Bowling Style:Right arm Fast medium
Sadashiv Raoji Patil was an Indian cricketer who played in one Test in 1955.He also played 36 First-class matches for Maharashtra.
Only Test: India vs New Zealand at Brabourne - December 02 - 07, 1955

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Span:1952/53 - 1963/64