Five very significant Indian triumphs
Partab Ramchand - 16 March 2001
Is India's victory at the Eden Gardens on Thursday the greatest ever
in the country's cricketing history? Going by some of the comments
after the triumph, most seem to put it either right there at the top
or somewhere near the summit. That may be an emotional reaction but
even when considered in rational terms, there is little doubt that the
win will feature very high in anyone's list.
Well, what makes a victory special? One supposes there are many
factors that one has to consider before terming a triumph as truly
great or significant. The opposition is one, alien wicket and weather
conditions is another. Then comes the manner in which the victory is
achieved against odds. One must also not lose the historic aspect too.
And if it is the kind of victory that is only rarely achieved in Test
cricket, then this becomes a very important factor in analysing its
greatness.
India have notched up 64 victories in 340 Tests from 1932 to date.
Obviously some of the wins have been notched up against weak
opposition, in familiar home conditions with there being no
significant historical aspect to consider too. These can be dismissed
straightaway when considering the greatest victories. Narrowing the
list down further by elminating some more prosaic wins would cut the
list to perhaps a dozen. But choosing the greatest, or even the top
five from this list should prove quite a task. But I have decided to
stick my neck out and come out with my choice of the five greatest
Indian victories - in no particular order I might add.
Port of Spain, 1971: Very significant historically since it was our
first victory over West Indies in 25 attempts. There was nothing very
alien about the wicket and weather conditions but it was still a rare
away triumph. The West Indies were in the midst of a slump, but they
still had Sobers and Fredericks, Kanhai and Lloyd. It was also the
only decisive result of the rubber, giving India the series.
The Oval, 1971: Again very important historically, since it was
India's first victory in 22 Tests in England dating back to 1932.
England were also perhaps the best team in the world and India came
back after being on deficit by 71 runs on the first innings. Another
rare away triumph, it clinched a series victory in England for the
first time.
Port of Spain, 1976: Very high in the rare category stakes for only
once before had a team chased a victory target of 400 plus and won.
The victory was achieved away against a West Indian side which
included Lloyd, Richards, Kallicharan, Fredericks, Rowe, Murray and
Holding and after India had finished 131 runs behind on the first
innings. India's total of 406 for four set a new high for a team's
winning score in Test cricket.
Melbourne, 1981: The most notable aspect of this triumph is acheiving
it against the odds. Finishing 182 runs behind in an away Test and
then coming back to bowl out the Australians, needing only 143 runs
for victory, for 83 runs is significant enough. And this was an
Australian team that included Greg Chappell, Walters, Border, Hughes,
Lillee and Rod Marsh. But the most notable aspect was that the final
victory was shaped with one fit bowler in Ghavri and two half fit
bowlers in Kapil Dev and Doshi. Truly a miraculous and dramatic
triumph.
Kolkata, 2001: Yes, the most recent triumph finds a place in my top
five. Duplicating a feat that has been achieved only twice before in
some 1500 Tests is very special indeed. Turning a 274 run first
innings deficit into victory by 171 runs, winning after following on
and against a team on a roll, the kind that no side has achieved in
the history of Test cricket - all this is stuff that dreams are made
of. Even if the victory is achieved in familiar wicket and weather
conditions, it is a notable feat.
Finally one honourable mention - Kanpur, 1959: A totally unexpected
triumph registered by a team which had lost eleven out of the last 14
Tests over a team which had won ten out of the last 14 Tests. The
opposition included Benaud as captain and all rounder and other
stalwarts like Harvey, McDonald, O'Neill, Davidson and Mackay. It was
hailed as the miracle at Kanpur and even after more than 40 years, has
lost none its lustre.
© CricInfo
Teams
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India.
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Players/Umpires
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Gary Sobers,
Roy Fredericks,
Rohan Kanhai,
Clive Lloyd,
Viv Richards,
Lawrence Rowe,
Michael Holding,
Greg Chappell,
Allan Border,
Kim Hughes,
Dennis Lillee,
Rodney Marsh,
Karson Ghavri,
Richie Benaud,
Alan Davidson.
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