Is MJ Gopalan the oldest living Test cricketer?
Partab Ramchand - 6 June 2001
Who is the oldest living Test cricketer? On the face of it, this may
seem an unlikely question to ask, except at quiz time. But a clearer
picture will emerge when I point out that this question is being asked
on a former Test cricketer's 95th birthday. But is he, at this age,
the oldest Test cricketer alive?
The doubt arises because Wisden cricketers' almanack lists Alf Gover
as the oldest Test cricketer alive. Gover, a right arm fast medium
bowler, played for England in four Tests in the 1930s and 1940s. He
made his Test debut against India in 1936, toured this country with
Lord Tennyson's side in 1937-38 and played his last Test against India
on his home ground at the Oval in 1946. Wisden lists his date of birth
as February 29, 1908. Interestingly enough, just a few entries above
Gover is the name of MJ Gopalan. The former Indian cricketer's date of
birth is given as June 6, 1909.
This was the accepted entry till a few years ago till members of his
family clarified that he was born on June 6, 1906. Since then it is
accepted in certain cricketing circles that Gopalan is the world's
oldest living Test cricketer.
Not that these contradictions mean anything to Morappakam Joysam
Gopalan. For him, today was just another day. A recent hip injury has
restricted his movements and so a visit to the temple, regretfully,
was not possible. But there was time for a puja at home, followed by a
few visitors and a generally quiet day spent at home with family
members.
When this writer rang him up to wish him, Gopalan himself picked up
the phone. Blessed with a strong physique and good memory, the former
double international - he also represented the country in hockey as a
contemporary of the peerless Dhyan Chand - spoke in calm and clear
tones. Asked whether he looked forward to his 100th birthday, Gopalan
exclaimed "My God, is living 95 years not enough. I am also not in
very good physical shape these days with age having caught up and with
this injury I have."
Asked pointedly whether he was born in 1906 or 1909, Gopalan clarified
the correct year of birth was the former. "I don't know how the
school where I studied listed my year of birth as 1909 but that stuck.
It's so long ago that I don't know how it happened. But I can confirm
that I am 95 today," he asserted.
Gopalan is well known in India even though his international cricket
credentials, on the face of it, may be modest. He played just one Test
- against England at Calcutta in 1933-34, scoring 11 not out and 7,
taking one wicket (James Langridge) with his medium pacers and holding
three catches. He also toured England in 1936 but, not unexpectedly,
does not wish to recall the events of that unhappy tour.
In fact, Gopalan with the benefit of hindsight, probably made the
wrong decision. Having toured New Zealand as a member of the Indian
hockey team under Dhyan Chand in 1935, he was an automatic choice for
the Indian team that was certain to retain their gold medal at the
Berlin Olympics in 1936. Faced with the choice between cricket and
hockey, Gopalan opted for the former, thus denying himself a gold
medal which the Indian team, predictably enough, won.
If Gopalan is well known in India, he is a living legend in Chennai.
He played with distinction for the state in the Ranji Trophy and
against visiting sides. To him goes the honour of bowling the first
ball in the national competition, on November 4, 1934. The all rounder
led Madras for many years, and after his playing career was over, was
a member of the national selection committee for three years in the
late fifties and early sixties.
Having retired from active public life for many years now, Gopalan is
still a highly respected figure in sports circles. Whenever he attends
a function, he is the cynosure for both young and old. Sunil Gavaskar
for one, always bends down to touch the feet of the doyen whenever the
two come together at a public gathering. With a toothy smile and a
firm handshake, MJ as he is popularly known, greets everyone with
childlike enthusiasm.
Gopalan can never be cynical. In frequent conversations with him, I
have never heard him say, "you know, in my day...", that rather
irritating phrase so common to cricketers of yesteryears. He enjoys
the modern game, has a kind word or two about the present day
cricketers and eschews, like the plague, the controversial and seamier
side of the game. He watches the game on TV and is ready for a
pleasant discussion on any aspect of cricket.
It really does not matter whether Gopalan is 92 or 95, or whether he
is the oldest living Test cricketer in the world or not. He is the
father figure of Indian cricket, a man who lives and breathes sport.
No Test cricketer has lived to be a hundred. We all hope and pray that
this gentleman cricketer will be the first to reach the `century.'
© CricInfo