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As India kick off their Test series in the West Indies, a look back at a few cautionary tales from the past
June 20, 2011
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Subramaniam Badrinath
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Many of us are familiar with Jack Sparrow and the Curse of the Black Pearl. But for some Indian cricketers, especially batsmen, heading to the islands that the pirates of the Caribbean once preyed on has brought with it misfortune of another kind. Think woe in the West Indies and your mind goes to Nari Contractor and a career cruelly cut short by a fracture to the skull in Barbados. But as Abhinav Mukund and Virat Kohli prepare for their Test debuts, and Suresh Raina bids to get his career back on course, there are at least three men who could tell them which channels not to sail.
Long before Contractor, there was Madhav Apte, who outperformed even Sir Frank Worrell in scoring 460 runs at 51 on the 1952-53 tour. Opening the batting, his painstaking unbeaten second-innings 163 saved India the Trinidad Test after they had slumped to 10 for 3. But after that tour, he was never selected again, disappearing into a black hole of administrative ineptitude and bias.
On the Contractor tour, where India were hammered 5-0 by one of the all-time great West Indian sides, the Afghanistan-born Salim Durani was one of the consolations, scoring 259 runs and taking 17 wickets. In Port of Spain, where India made a match of it after conceding a big first-innings lead, he scored 104 in the second innings and had match figures of 4 for 118. But though he would represent India another decade, there would only be 19 more games and no more hundreds. The wait for an allrounder would last till 1978.
The Queen's Park Oval saw more Indian heroics in 1976. Most supporters are aware of the third Test, where India chased down 403 with just four wickets down. Brijesh Patel, who would go on to have one of the most celebrated Ranji Trophy careers, was in the middle when the winning runs were hit, but his finest hour had come a fortnight earlier at the same venue.
That forgotten Trinidad Test, saved only by Clive Lloyd's obdurate 70, saw Patel make 115. In 21 Tests, it was the only time this pillager of domestic attacks would get to three figures. As for the big picture, those two Trinidad results and the loss of Andy Roberts to injury pushed Lloyd towards the four-man-pace solution. Wayne Daniel made his debut in Jamaica, and you don't need Fire in Babylon to tell you what happened next.
In the colour-television age, we have the story of Sanjay Manjrekar, who walked in at 68 for 4 in only his third Test, at the abattoir that was the Kensington Oval. Less than 18 months earlier, Winston Benjamin had sent him to a Delhi hospital in his debut Test. Against Malcolm Marshall, Curtly Ambrose, Courtney Walsh and Ian Bishop, he made a marvellous 108, handling both pace and bounce with a veteran's aplomb. There would be two more centuries in Pakistan later that year (1989), but little to celebrate afterwards, as a career that promised so much fizzled out.
The likes of Wes Hall, Charlie Griffith, Michael Holding, Roberts and that 1989 quartet no longer await Kohli and Mukund. But as India head into a series that will reveal much about the bench strength, they can reflect on a one-day campaign where little went according to plan apart from the scoreline.
| India know what they have to do in the Caribbean. Victory will be gracefully accepted - they have, after all, won only four of 42 Tests in the West Indies - but they also need to make a statement before heading to England | |||
The standout batsman was Rohit Sharma, who at times resembled the player he was in Australia in 2008, when it seemed that India's batting would one day revolve around him. He remains on the wait list as far as a Test berth is concerned, though, and only Kohli of the other young hopefuls made any sort of impact.
Raina specialised in the Bollywood shots, and will doubtless be put through a short-ball wringer if he plays at Sabina Park. S Badrinath had a golden opportunity to cement a place, but three innings that brought to mind Lot's wife mean that he's again likely to be on the outside looking in.
The bowling, too, offered little by way of encouragement. Amit Mishra and Munaf Patel excelled in patches, but given the welter of absentees, they were likely to play anyway. Praveen Kumar remains a new-ball specialist, while Ishant Sharma's form fluctuates like the wind at Port Royal.
In the season that has seen that cinematic paean to Lloyd's side released, India know what they have to do in the Caribbean. Victory will be gracefully accepted - they have, after all, won only four of 42 Tests in Guyana and the islands - but they also need to make a statement before heading to England.
Once the five missing stalwarts return, this is a very good side, potentially a great one. But it's also a team with more than a touch of grey at the temples. For Kohli, Mukund, and even Raina, these storied venues that once resounded with the footsteps of Headley and Sobers offer a matchless opportunity to be part of the process of renewal that the team will have to go through sooner rather than later. Hopefully they can steer clear of the Caribbean curse.
Dileep Premachandran is an associate editor at ESPNcricinfo
© ESPN EMEA Ltd.
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Associate editor Dileep Premachandran gave up the joys of studying thermodynamics and strength of materials with a view to following in the footsteps of his literary heroes. Instead, he wound up at the Free Press Journal in Mumbai, writing on sport and politics before Gentleman gave him a column called Replay. A move to MyIndia.com followed, where he teamed up with Sambit Bal, and he arrived at ESPNCricinfo after having also worked for Cricket Talk and total-cricket.com. Sunil Gavaskar and Greg Chappell were his early cricketing heroes, though attempts to emulate their silken touch had hideous results. He considers himself obscenely fortunate to have watched live the two greatest comebacks in sporting history - India against invincible Australia at the Eden Gardens in 2001, and Liverpool's inc-RED-ible resurrection in the 2005 Champions' League final. He lives in Bangalore with his wife, who remains astonishingly tolerant of his sporting obsessions.

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Interestingly, Dileep, you leave out Sunny Gavaskar from the discussion completely, arguably the greatest success story of Indian cricket; but for whom, our glorious ascendancy in international cricket wouldn't have begun. This success story began in Caribbean in 1971 - and its echo rings in till date. Of course, Gavaskar history is a complete antithesis to that of the 'curse'.
Posted by pradeep_dealwis on (June 21 2011, 09:36 AM GMT)India has good bench strength, definitely as far as the batting is concerned...the bowling is average anyways, except for Zaheer, who is one of the top five bowlers in the world now.
Posted by donda on (June 20 2011, 19:28 PM GMT)Wining a series in WI is just like stealing all the gold from pirates, its so difficult and young players from India will have to go through that toughness to become great players. To me it's as difficult to win in WI as in India. To Ian Chapel misery , it will show us how the youngster will perform if we retire all Indian batting legends today. Chapel will take his words back after this series. But he is stubborn. he will keep on bugging Indian cricket in Jealousy for ever.
Posted by@esarun Abey Kuruvilla was inexplicably not selected for further series even though he fared ok. Nobody knows why he was left out and he faded away. He never had enough chances. I guess the same is going to happen to Badrinath too.
Posted byOn paper WI and India seem to be on balance. But with WI one can never be sure. They have on many occasions plucked defeat form the jaws of victory. For this Test one would expect Edwards to prove a point but if the spinners can get in India could have an uncomfortable time. Dhoni has a reputation of winning and he won't want to lose to WI because the World Champion status is at stake. So for now it look evens. The end of the first day, barring weather, will give us some indication as to where the Test is heading. WI have the edge, playing at home and the batting and bowling are good too, but don't underestimate India.
Posted by@DeveshJinwala: Cheteshwar Pujara is missing because broke his leg in the outfield in the IPL
Posted byNice record of events. It's true that over the years a lot of promising careers came to a screeching halt once faced with the Caribbeans pace machine of the yore. Similarly, such highly regarded was a Caribbean success story that anyone succeeding here just went ahead of themselves as an international cricketer. Wouldn't exactly call Wasim Jaffer or Kuruvilla unfulfilled promise - Jaffer got a fair run, and did produce the riches for a while. Kuruvilla was selected 4 years too late. That's the biggest leeway all these incumbents have got: they are at an age where they can afford some mistakes, and absorb from the veterans. How quickly they learn would be defined by their ambition and set them ahead of the race.
Posted by MeowCat on (June 20 2011, 14:06 PM GMT)England,SAfrica,India,NewZealand are the top teams right now.Ireland will come Number 1 some day aswel!!
Posted by esarun on (June 20 2011, 13:31 PM GMT)Of players who never kept their promise, you can add Abey Kuruvilla too. He made his test debut in the Carribbean and in only his third test took a 5-for that had seemingly set up a famous Indian win in that fortress of West Indian cricket, Barbados. Leave it to our inept batsmen to make a meal of a target of 120 !!
Posted by KishorKumar25 on (June 20 2011, 09:42 AM GMT)I think they should give a chance to mithun, In bouncy pitches of WI he ll be tough to play.