After Harbhajan's success, Kumble will heave a sigh of relief
Partab Ramchand - 25 March 2001
Harbhajan Singh is certainly the man of the moment. He has made
countless Indian cricket fans happy with his record breaking
exploits with the ball in the just concluded Test series against
Australia. But one suspects that the happiest - and certainly the
most relieved - person will be Anil Kumble. The 30-year-old Indian
spin spearhead has been carrying the expectations of millions of
Indians on his tall frame for about a decade now. He will surely
welcome a comrade in arms in the teasing and tormenting trade.
Indeed, no other bowler has dwarfed every other spinner of his time
to the extent that Kumble has done. A quick look at India's spin
bowling history will confirm this. Compatriots Vinoo Mankad, Ghulam
Ahmed and Subash Gupte took 162, 68 amd 149 wickets respectively.
Salim Durrani and Bapu Nadkarni, who were among India's main spin
bowlers in the sixties, finished with 75 and 88 wickets. The spin
quartet took 853 wickets between them and the figures were not
disproportionate: Bedi 266, Chandra 242, Prasanna 189 and Venkat
156. In the eighties, basking under the glory of Kapil Dev, the
country's leading spin bowlers still had their moments. Dilip Doshi
claimed 114 wickets, Shivlal Yadav 102, Ravi Shastri 151 and Maninder
Singh almost one hundred.
In the 90s however the spin attack has been virtually Kumble. Just
consider these figures. Kumble's overall Test figures are 276 wickets
from 61 Tests at an average of 28.00. None of his many spin bowling
colleagues over the past decade has even crossed 100. The nearest
to this mark is Venkatapathi Raju. No mean performer in his own
right, the left arm spinner from Hyderabad has been in the shadow
of Kumble. Including the recent Test at Kolkata, he has taken 93
wickets in 28 games at a little over 30 apiece. He however played one
Test before Kumble made his debut in which he took three wickets. So
his figures during the `Kumble period' are 90 wickets from 27 matches.
Rajesh Chauhan, who made his debut against England in 1992-93, has
taken 47 wickets in 21 Tests at an average of 39.51. Narendra
Hirwani's overall figures are 66 wickets from 17 Tests at an average
of 30. But in the period under review - since Kumble's debut against
England in August 1990 - the Madhya Pradesh leg spinner has taken
eight wickets in three Tests at an average of 23.50. Ravi Shastri's
career was grinding to a halt as Kumble's was rising and the left arm
spinner bowled in just seven Tests in 1991-92 and 1992-93, taking
eight wickets at an average of 34.00.
Now let us consider the relative newcomers. First, some left arm
spinners. The newest addition to the list of left arm spinners who
have won the India cap, Rahul Sanghvi played in only the recent
Mumbai Test taking two for 78. Nilesh Kulkarni had a dream debut
by becoming the first Indian bowler to take a wicket with his
first delivery in Test cricket. But his overall figures are much
less impressive than that feat. Including the recent Chennai Test,
he has two wickets for 332 runs from three Tests. Sunil Joshi
has been in and out of the team but has still managed to play 15
Tests in which he has taken 41 wickets at 35.85 apiece. Maninder
Singh is of course very much Kumble's senior having made his debut
some eight years before the leg spinner. He has been instrumental
in bowling India to victory in at least a couple of Test matches
as his overall figures of 88 wickets from 35 games would indicate.
But in the period under review he played in only one Test against
Zimbabwe picking up seven wickets at 20.71 apiece. Murali Kartik
has played only four Tests over the past two seasons, taking nine
wickets at 34.33 apiece.
Now let us consider some off spinners. Aashish Kapoor, who made his
debut against West Indies in 1994-95, has played only four Tests
with modest figures of six wickets at 42.50 apiece. Sarandeep Singh
has played in just one Test, picking up six wickets at 34.33 apiece.
And the latest in the long line, leg spinner Sairaj Bahutule has two
wickets from his only Test at an average of 51.
One assumes that Sachin Tendulkar must be included in the list. The
batting maestro has broken many partnerships with his mix of off
spinners, leg spinners, googlies, top spinners and what have you. For
a specialist batsman his figures are not bad - 22 wickets at 38
apiece.
And finally we come to the man of the moment. Harbhajan Singh,
before the recent series, had bowled in eight Test matches and
took 21 wickets at an average of about 37. He seemed to be under
the shadow of Kumble as much as the other bowlers. Now he has not
only emerged out of the shadows, he also threatens to upstage Kumble.
His 32 wickets from three Tests in the just concluded series has
spiralled his tally to 53 from eleven games while the average has come
hurtling down to 25.56.
With Kumble in the process of recovering from his shoulder injury,
Harbhajan's form could not have been more timely. Also, if, as feared,
Kumble may not be the same bowler after his return, given the
background of shoulder injuries and other bowlers affected by it
(Srinath, Warne), India could well have discovered their main strike
bowler for the new millennium.
© CricInfo
Teams
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India.
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Players/Umpires
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Harbhajan Singh,
Anil Kumble,
Bapu Nadkarni,
Vinoo Mankad,
Fergie Gupte,
Bishen Bedi,
Bhagwat Chandrasekhar,
Erapalli Prasanna,
Venkat,
Kapil Dev,
Shivlal Yadav,
Dilip Doshi,
Ravi Shastri,
Maninder Singh,
Venkatapathy Raju,
Narendra Hirwani,
Nilesh Kulkarni,
Murali Kartik,
Aashish Kapoor,
Sachin Tendulkar,
Javagal Srinath.
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Tours
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Australia in India
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