The English stars in India
Partab Ramchand - 19 December 2001
Every country has very characteristic cricketing conditions, and the
good player learns to acclimatise quickly. The seaming conditions of
England, the fast and bouncy tracks of Australia and South Africa, the
blustery winds of New Zealand are all part of a cricketer's education.
Over the years, the English batsmen, rather than the bowlers, would have
fancied their chances in India. The pitches, for long, were sleeping
beauties, and the spin quartet were at their peak only in the 70s, while
Kapil Dev did not play against England in this country before 1980.
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Similarly, conditions in India are very different from anywhere else,
and visiting players have looked upon these as the ultimate challenge.
English teams in India have had some taste of success, with three of
their nine Test campaigns here having been victorious. In addition, Mike
Brearley's team won the Golden Jubilee Test in 1979-80.
But, in victory or defeat, the really outstanding English players have
always adapted themselves admirably to Indian conditions and have come
off well. For a batsman, patience, concentration and skill in playing
spin bowling have been the chief ingredients for success. For the
bowlers, the ability to bowl fast even on pitches that are not always
encouraging is an exceptional quality, while good spin bowlers have also
enjoyed success, despite Indians having the reputation of being among
the best players of slow bowling in the world.
Indeed, in the very first series between India and England in this
country, it was a spin bowler who would have garnered the Man of the
Series award had it been in existence almost 70 years ago. A peerless
artist with the ball, Hedley Verity took 23 wickets in the three Tests,
including 11 in the final game, and, even though Indian batsmen were
just cutting their teeth in international cricket, it was a notable
achievement. Verity, of course, was the leading England spin bowler of
his time, a master of the art and craft of control, flight and turn.
Forty-three years later, another left-arm spinner of a very different
school, Derek Underwood, had a major role to play in shaping the next
English triumph in India. Underwoord was a bowler who sent down fast
deliveries that turned and kicked. That series saw him finish with 29
wickets in the five Tests. His forte was accuracy, and none of the
Indian batsmen could take any liberties with him.
Skilful off-spinners, when not afraid to toss the ball up under
favourable conditions and able to keep things tight under unfavourable
ones, have also been successful, as the deeds of Roy Tattersall and Fred
Titmus will testify. In 1951-52, Tattersall, then only in his second
season of international cricket, took 21 wickets in five Tests and
starred in England's only victory of the series at Kanpur, where he
reveled in helpful conditions and took eight wickets for 125 runs.
Twelve years later, Titmus, then at the peak of his powers, took 27
wickets, a remarkable achievement on pitches that were loaded heavily in
favour of the batsmen; more importantly, it came against a batting line
up that included Dilip Sardesai, MAK Pataudi, ML Jaisimha, Budhi
Kunderan, Chandu Borde, Salim Durrani, Hanumant Singh, Vijay Manjrekar
and Bapu Nadkarni.
The fast men have traditionally dreaded bowling on Indian pitches. In
the words of Brian Statham, who had a frustrating time on the 1951-52
tour, "the wickets were as useful to a fast bowler as a refrigerator is
to an Eskimo." But that has not stopped a few of them from wreaking
havoc, albeit in conditions more helpful than those that Statham
encountered. One recalls Ian Botham running through the Indians during
the Golden Jubilee Test, taking 13 wickets for 106 runs. Three years
earlier, John Lever made his Test debut at New Delhi a memorable one
with a match haul of 10 for 70, on his way to a series aggregate of 26
wickets. The tireless Bob Willis was not far behind with 20 wickets. And
one cannot forget the inspired pace bowling of Neil Foster, who put in a
match-winning performance of 11 for 163 at Madras in 1984-85.
Over the years, the English batsmen, rather than the bowlers, would have
fancied their chances in India. The pitches, for long, were sleeping
beauties, and the spin quartet were at their peak only in the 70s, while
Kapil Dev did not play against England in this country before 1980.
Batsmen thus found run-making a fairly easy proposition. Both the
artists and the artisans have struck gold in India. Those willing to
graft, like Alan Watkins in 1951-52 and Ken Barrington and Geoff Pullar
10 years later, gave the Indian bowlers massive headaches. But the
Indian wickets also encouraged elegant stroke-players like Tom Graveney
in 1951-52, Ted Dexter 10 years later, and Colin Cowdrey, who scored
successive Test centuries in 1963-64 after being flown over as a
replacement to bolster a side plagued by injuries.
Batting against the spin quartet on tailor-made pitches was a tougher
proposition, but that did not stop Tony Greig from scoring hundreds on
both his tours here. Botham was another who got two Test hundreds in
India. Other century makers have included Cyril Walters, Geoff Boycott,
Dennis Amiss, Keith Fletcher, Tony Lewis and Graham Gooch. In 1984-85,
Mike Gatting and Graeme Fowler got a double century each in the same
match at Madras, the first pair to make double centuries in the same
innings for England. As can be seen from the list, all have a very good
international record, while some like Gatting have also been
exceptionally fine players of spin bowling. Why, even in the debacle of
1992-93, attacking players like Graeme Hick and Chris Lewis got
hundreds.
© CricInfo
Teams
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India.
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Players/Umpires
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Derek Underwood,
Roy Tattersall,
Fred Titmus,
Dilip Sardesai,
Nawab of Pataudi,
Motganhalli Jaisimha,
Budhi Kunderan,
Chandu Borde,
Hanumant Singh,
Vijay Manjrekar,
Bharat Nadkarni,
Ian Botham,
Chris Cowdrey,
Graham Gooch,
Graeme Hick,
Chris Lewis.
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Tours
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England in India
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