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Thursday, February 5

David Johnson (1971–2024) Test cap # 208


Raman Lamba (1960-1998) Test Cap # 177

© Connect.in.Com
Full name Raman Lamba
Born January 2, 1960, Meerut, Uttar Pradesh
Died February 22, 1998, Dhaka, Bangladesh (aged 38 years 51 days)
Major teams India, Ireland, Delhi
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
© Bill McLeod
Raman Lambs,s posterize image
Raman Lamba was a journeyman cricketer who came into prominence in the 1986-87 one-day series against Australia, when a hundred and two fifties in six matches won him the Man of the Series award. Short on technique but long on bravado, Lamba was blessed with a superb eye and quickfire reflexes. He liked to give bowlers the charge, and had a flair for improvisation that made for great entertainment. His one-day form was patchy after that dream debut, and he looked pedestrian in his four Tests. He remained a prolific scorer in first-class cricket, with two triple-centuries and a Ranji Trophy average of 53. He had expressed a desire to play on for Delhi until the age of 45, but was only 38 when he died after being hit on the head while fielding at forward short leg during a club match in Bangladesh.

© Bill McLeod
Raman Lamba appeared for India as a one day player in the 1986 Australasia Cup final, when he also took an acrobatic catch to dismiss Abdul Qadir off Kapil Dev, where he played as substitute fielder. He had a great opening in One day cricket as he scored 64 in his first match and 102 in his sixth match as he won the man of the series against Australia for scoring 278 runs at an average of 55.60 per innings with a century and 2 fifties. His scoring pattern in 6 innings were 64, 01, 20*, 74, 17 and 102. Lamba and Krishnamachari Srikkanth were India's openers for the Jawaharlal Nehru Centenary Cup 1989. Twice they had 100 runs opening partnership, against Australia and Pakistan. Their approach was similar, as both were stroke players. Their aggessive batting approach as openers was later seen in opening pair Sanath Jayasuriya and Romesh Kaluwitharana.
50's and 100's
vs Australia 1986 scored 64
vs Australia 1986 scored 74
vs Australia 1986 scored 102
vs Sri Lanka 1987 scored 60not out
vs West Indies 1989 scored 61
vs Australia 1989 scored 57
vs Pakistan 1989 scored 57
Raman lamba, had a moderate start at an average of 33.67 against the Srilankans, but failed the only test against the West Indies scoring just one run in two innings which virtually ended his career as a Test player. He did made a come back to test cricket playing XI against Pakistan in 1989, but injured his finger during nets and couldn't play in the match as Mohammad Azharuddin replaced him.

Rakesh Chandra Shukla (1948-2019) Test Cap # 160

  
Full name Rakesh Chandra Shukla
Born February 4, 1948, Kanpur, Uttar Pradesh
Died June 29, 2019, Delhi (aged 71 years 145 days)
Major teams India, Bengal, Delhi
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak googly

Profile
One of the several Indian cricketers to have played just one Test, Rakesh Shukla was a pillar of strength for Delhi for many years. He had an excellent record in the Ranji Trophy where his allround skills were seen to good effect. A pugnacious late order batsman and a legbreak-googly bowler, Shukla took 313 wickets (18.98) in the national competition. With the bat his finest moment came in the 1981-82 final against Karnataka when he and Rajesh Peter added an unbeaten 118 runs for the ninth wicket to steer Delhi past Karnataka's first innings of 705 for a memorable triumph. In the only Test he played - against Sri Lanka at Madras in 1982-83 ,incidentally the first Test between the two countries - Shukla did not get to bat but finished with figures of 0 for 70 and 2 for 82, the prized wickets of Roy Dias and Duleep Mendis. But despite continuing to do well around the domestic circuit he was not considered again.

Only Test India v Sri Lanka at Chennai, Sep 17-22, 1982
First-class span 1969/70 - 1985/86

Tirumalai Echambadi Srinivasan (1950-2010) Test Cap # 153

© catchindia.com
Full name Tirumalai Echambadi Srinivasan
Born October 26, 1950, Madras (now Chennai)
Died December 6, 2010 (aged 60 years 41 days)
Major teams India, Tamil Nadu
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Legbreak

Profile
© Hindu.com
A stylish batsman whowas a joy to watch in full flow, Srinivasan was a batting stalwart for Tamil Nadu for a decade. A late bloomer, he came into the limelight with a brilliant 112 for South Zone against North Zone in the Duleep Trophy at Bangalore in 1977-78. In 1980-81, he scored a superb 129 for South Zone against West Zone in the Deodhar Trophy final at Madras and clinched his place in the team to tour Australia and New Zealand with an unbeaten century in the Irani Trophy game at New Delhi.

On his only tour, Srinivasan did well in the first class games, but could not make it to the playing eleven either as opener or middle order bat. He belatedly got a chance to play his only Test against New Zealand at Auckland when he scored 29 and 19.An occasional leg spinner, Srinivasan represented Woodhouse in the Yorkshire League for some years and also played Grade cricket in New South Wales. He died in December 2010 after a long and painful battle with brain cancer.

Only Test New Zealand v India at Auckland, Mar 13-18, 1981 
ODI debut Australia v India at Melbourne, Dec 6, 1980
Last ODI India v New Zealand at Melbourne, Jan 10, 1981 
First-class span 1970-1984

Yashpal Sharma (1954-2021)Test Cap # 145

 

Full name:
Yashpal Sharma
Born:August 11, 1954, Ludhiana, Punjab
Died:July 13, 2021, New Delhi, (aged 66y 336d)
Major teams:india,Delhi,Haryana,Southern Punjab
Batting style:Right hand Bat
Bowling Style:Right arm Medium
Relations:C Sharma (nephew)
Playing Role:Middle order Batter
Fielding Position:Wicketkeeper
Other:Umpire, Referee

profile
Yashpal Sharma was an Indian international cricketer. He was an explosive middle order batsman who played during the 1970s and 80s. He was a member of the India team that won the 1983 Cricket World Cup. He represented India in 37 Tests and 42 One Day Internationals between 1978 and 1985. His nephew Chetan Sharma was also a cricketer. He was fondly nicknamed the Crisis Man for India.

Yashpal Sharma first drew attention when he scored 260 for Punjab schools against Jammu & Kashmir schools in 1972. Within two years, he was in the state team, and a member of the North Zone team that won the Vizzy Trophy. His first major innings in first class cricket was a 173 in the Duleep Trophy for the North, against the South Zone which had Chandrasekhar, Erapalli Prasanna and Venkataraghavan.

Test Debut:England vs India at Lord's - August 02 - 07, 1979
Last Test:India vs West Indies at Delhi - October 29 - November 03, 1983
span:1977/78 - 1982/83

Anshuman Gaekwad (1952– 2024)) Test Cap # 135


P.Harishchandra Sharma (1948-2010) Test Cap # 134

© catchindia.com
Full name Parthasarathy Harishchandra Sharma
Born January 5, 1948, Alwar, Rajasthan
Died October 20, 2010 (aged 62 years 288 days)
Major teams India, Rajasthan
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium

Profile
© cricketcountry.com
A cricketer whose Test career did not compare to his impressive domestic record, Parthasarthi Sharma was a well-built, right-hand batsman. Selected in the national team following a series of impressive performances for Rajasthan and Central Zone in the Ranji and Duleep Trophies,

Sharma had a promising beginning, scoring 54 and 49 on debut against West Indies in Delhi in 1974-75. A less successful outing in the next Test, in which he scored 6 and 9, had him axed. On tours to New Zealand and West Indies, Sharma opened with Sunil Gavaskar in the first Test in Bridgetown, but scored only 6 and 1. At home against England in 1976-77, he had scores of 4, 29, 9 and 20 in two Tests and was discarded for good after defeats in both games.On the domestic circuit, however, Sharma played with distinction during a first-class career that spanned two decades. In the Ranji Trophy he scored 4372 runs (38.69) and in the Duleep Trophy he made 1379 runs (38.31). He was a mainstay of the Rajasthan side that repeatedly won the Central Zone championship and finished runners-up several times in the national competition. He was one of the stars of Central Zone's maiden triumph in the Duleep Trophy in 1971-72. Sharma died of cancer at the age of 62 in 2010.

Test debut India v West Indies at Delhi, Dec 11-15, 1974
Last Test India v England at Kolkata, Jan 1-6, 1977
ODI debut New Zealand v India at Christchurch, Feb 21, 1976
Last ODI New Zealand v India at Auckland, Feb 22, 1976
First-class span 1962-1985

Hemant Shamsunder Kanitkar (1942-2015) Test Cap # 133

© espncricinfo.com
Full name Hemant Shamsunder Kanitkar
Born December 8, 1942, Amravati, Maharashtra
Died June 9, 2015, Pune (aged 72 years 183 days)
Major teams India, Maharashtra
Batting style Right-hand bat
Fielding position Wicketkeeper
Relation Son - HH Kanitkar

Profile
Hemant Kanitkar came into national reckoning by a series of splendid performances around the domestic circuit. But his international record did not come anywhere near his feats at the national level. A stocky and gritty right-hand batsman and a sound wicketkeeper, Kanitkar scored a career-best 65 in his first Test innings against West Indies at Bangalore, but successive scores of 18, 8 and 20 meant that he could not consolidate his place in the side and he was discarded for good. He remained a tower of strength for Maharashtra in the Ranji Trophy in which he scored 3632 runs (43.75), with a highest score of 250 against Rajasthan in 1970-71. In a first-class career that lasted from 1963 to 1978, Kanitkar scored 5007 runs (42.79) with 13 centuries and 87 dismissals, 68 of them caught. He is the father of Hrishikesh Kanitkar.

Test debut India v West Indies at Bangalore, Nov 22-27, 1974
Last Test India v West Indies at Delhi, Dec 11-15, 1974
First-class span 1963/64 - 1977/78
List A span 1973/74 - 1974/75