Yuvraj Singh grinds Bihar into pulp (December 1999)
The finals of the Cooch Behar Trophy played at the Keenan
Stadium in Jamshedpur saw one of the most determined innings in
the history of Indian first class cricket. The sheer weight of
runs scored itself inspires awe. Punjab took on Bihar, in what
turned out to be a totally one sided affair.
On winning the toss, the Bihar captain Vikash Kumar elected to
bat first. At the top of the innings, Ratan Kumar narrowly missed
making a century. Stumper Dhoni made 84, the skipper helped
himself to a half century and Bihar totalled 357. Though not a
specially large total, it was one that would have given the Bihar
side some hope.
Three youngsters, Ravneet Ricky, Manish Sharma and Yuvraj Singh
were at the top of the order for Punjab. With 60 runs on the
board, Ricky was dismissed and Yuvraj Singh walked out to the
middle. From then on, it was all downhill for Bihar. Dominating
the bowling completely, Yuvraj formed partnerships with whoever
was batting alongside him.
First it was Manish Sharma. An attacking batsman in his own
right, Sharma had to be content playing second fiddle. Not just
Sharma, but all the batsmen that followed had to play around
Yuvraj. The Patiala south paw's half century came off just 67
balls and included 8 boundaries. In contrast, Manish Sharma took
all of 160 balls to get to his fifty.
The milestones rolled on, one after the other. First the century,
then the one fifty. Surely a double hundred was not on the cards?
Not merely a double hundred, but a lot more was in store. The
Bihar captain rotated his bowlers around in a vain attempt to
stem the flow. Nothing, absolutely nothing could stop Yuvraj
Singh. He crossed the double hundred mark with ease, requiring
just 249 balls to do so.
The 300 came and went. When Yuvraj crossed the 350 mark, tongues
began to wag. Would this innings shatter all records? Would
Yuvraj be able to go on long enough and indeed did he have the
time, to overhaul Nimbalkar's long standing record for the
highest score in Indian first class cricket history? The answer
to those questions disappointingly is no.
At 358, Yuvraj Singh finally faltered. Falling to Aamir Hashmi,
Yuvraj was bowled by the offspinner. His marathon effort of 358
lasted just short of 10 hours and was studded with 40 boundaries
and six sixes.
A truly mammoth effort, Yuvraj had shown that he could not only
play aggressively, but could also spend long hours at the wicket.
There's not much more anyone can ask for.
Cooch Behar Trophy, 1999-2000
Bihar-U19s v Punjab-U19s at Jamshedpur (Keenan), 16-19 Dec 1999
[Scorecard | Reports]