Matches (24)
IPL (4)
Pakistan vs New Zealand (1)
WT20 Qualifier (4)
County DIV1 (4)
County DIV2 (3)
RHF Trophy (4)
NEP vs WI [A-Team] (2)
PAK v WI [W] (1)
BAN v IND (W) (1)
March 9 down the years

Sachin 1 Shane 0

A Tendulkar masterclass in Chennai

One more notch against Australia  •  Getty Images

One more notch against Australia  •  Getty Images

1998
Among Sachin Tendulkar's finest hours. He took the first Test against Australia in Chennai by the scruff of the neck today with a majestic unbeaten 155. The Aussies led by 71 on first innings, but Tendulkar's 191-ball masterclass, which included four sixes, 14 fours and a calculated assault on Shane Warne, changed the momentum of the whole series. Australia collapsed on the final day to lose by 179 runs, and India went on to win 2-1.
1887
An English run machine is born. Only Jack Hobbs, Frank Woolley and Patsy Hendren have made more first-class runs than Phil Mead (55,061), and nobody has made more for one team than the 48,892 he piled up for Hampshire. Solid in defence and a crisp strokeplayer, Mead was extremely prolific for England too. He averaged 49 over 17 Tests, including an unbeaten 182 at The Oval against the rampant 1921 Australians. John Arlott wrote: "First he touched his cap four times to short leg (whether that fieldsman was there or not), then he tapped his bat four times in the crease and, finally, took four small, shuffling strides up to it. Then, and only then, the bowler might bowl: if he tried to do so before the ritual was completed, Philip stepped away from his stumps and, when the bowler stopped, started the whole procedure over again." Mead played his last Test at 41; he went blind later in life and died in Boscombe in 1958.
1996
World Cup quarter-final day, and the systematic obliteration of English hopes. The manner in which Sanath Jayasuriya assaulted the England bowlers in Faisalabad bordered on the indecent. His 82 took only 44 balls, with 22 off one over from Phil DeFreitas, including a six that almost took out half the press box. Earlier he had lost his opening partner, Romesh Kaluwitharana, for 8... off three balls. England were never in the hunt, and only a fierce 67 from DeFreitas - who was promoted to No. 5 - got them to what was still a grossly under-par total of 235. Sri Lanka sped past it with almost ten overs to spare, and their approach took them all the way to a famous victory over Australia in the final eight days later.
1996
On the same day, India knocked out Pakistan, the holders, in a dramatic clash in Bangalore. The match ultimately hinged on Waqar Younis' last two overs, which Ajay Jadeja smashed for 40. After that, despite an opening stand of 84 in ten overs, Pakistan were always behind the eight ball. Effigies of Wasim Akram, the Pakistan captain who pulled out at the last minute with a side strain, were burned in the streets, and his house was pelted with rotten eggs and stones. A number of Pakistan fans committed suicide, including one man who shot his TV and then himself. The match also marked the end of Javed Miandad's international career, in what was a record sixth World Cup appearance.
2001
Another Sri Lanka-England meeting, and more fireworks. But this time they were of a less savoury variety, as anarchy reigned in a fractious second Test in Kandy. Today was the day when it all went off: there was a hoo-hah over Sanath Jayasuriya's bump-ball dismissal, Mike Atherton's finger-wagging spat with Kumar Sangakkara, and a wretched performance from umpire BC Cooray. All's well that ends well, though - for England anyway, who squeezed home by three wickets thanks to a trademark counterattack from Graham Thorpe and a first-innings century from Nasser Hussain.
2024
After three consecutive defeats followed England's historic win in the first Test against India, their hopes of saving face with victory in the final Test ended in a heap of wickets on the third day in Dharamsala. Faced with a deficit of 259, neither of their openers got going. R Ashwin, playing his 100th Test, prised out the top three in the first ten overs, took four by the stroke of lunch, and picked up his 36th Test five-for just after with the wicket of Ben Foakes. Jonny Bairstow, also playing his 100th Test, capped an unfulfilling series when Kuldeep Yadav pinned him in front. Joe Root stoically limped to 84 while England's batting collapsed all around him, but it was nowhere close to enough as India sealed their 4-1 victory by an innings and 64 runs in under 50 overs. Earlier in the Test, both Rohit Sharma and Shubman Gill brought up centuries, and Yashasvi Jaiswal his fifth fifty of the series to run up a total of 477. England had one bright spot in an otherwise dismal Test - James Anderson knocked over Kuldeep Yadav to claim his 700th Test wicket, the most by any seamer in history; he became the third overall, after Muthiah Muralidaran and Shane Warne, to the milestone.
2015
Another World Cup, another embarrassing exit for England. This time at the hands of Bangladesh in Adelaide. Mahmudullah's century and Mushfiqur Rahim's 89 took Bangladesh to a total of 275 - modest in a tournament that had seen three 400-plus totals till then. Rubel Hossain then took 4 for 53 - Ian Bell and Eoin Morgan in one over and Stuart Broad and James Anderson in another - as England limped to 260. The only time England crossed 300 in the World Cup was against Scotland.
1985
When he made his debut in 2002, Parthiv Patel, born on this day, was the youngest wicketkeeper to play a Test. He scored an unbeaten 19, which helped stave off a defeat against England. But his glovework varied from the competent to the shoddy - he was splendid in the home series against West Indies in 2002-03, but struggled to inspire confidence thereafter, especially when standing up to the spinners. He scored an aggressive 62 in Sydney in 2003-04, and 69 opening against Pakistan, but was dropped in 2004. He got a call-up in 2008 and played one Test against Sri Lanka, and was recalled to the one-day side in 2010, after six years, as an injury replacement opener, and made four half-centuries in ten innings - against New Zealand, West Indies and England. In 2016, Parthiv made a return to the Test side for three home matches against England as an injury replacement and opened the batting and made two half-centuries. He also captained Gujarat to their maiden Ranji Trophy title that season. In December 2020, he announced his retirement from all forms of cricket.
2000
A second consecutive series win for Sri Lanka in Pakistan was sealed with a 57-run victory in the second Test in Peshawar. Muttiah Muralitharan was to the fore with ten wickets, and Russel Arnold made a classy 99 in a low-scoring match. It all added up to bad news for Pakistan - it was their fourth home series defeat in five.
1944
Because of the political situation in South Africa, Lee Irvine, who was born today, played only four Tests - but what a quartet it was: South Africa's 4-0 demolition of Australia in 1969-70, their last series for 22 years. Irvine, the son of a Natal baseballer, was a punishing left-hander - he hit 26 sixes in his first season with Essex, in 1968 - who was just coming into his prime when he and South Africa were cut off. He made 102 in his last Test innings, on his 26th birthday.
1949
England snatched a three-wicket win in Port Elizabeth with less than a minute left for close of play - Jack Crapp hitting ten runs off three balls - after Dudley Nourse set them a target of 172 in 95 minutes. Nourse and Billy Wade (125) had taken South Africa to 379 in the first innings and then George Mann scored an unbeaten 136 to give England a marginal lead. Nourse declared at 187 for 3 on the final day (of the four-day match). England looked set for the win at 104 for 1 but they lost six wickets for 49 runs before Crapp made an unbeaten 26 to give them a 2-0 series win.
Other birthdays
1904 Edwin St Hill (West Indies)
1938 Grahame Chevalier (South Africa)
1962 Eric Simons (South Africa)
1974 Mark Harrity (Australia)
1981 Samuel Badree (West indies)
1988 Shamima Sultana (Bangladesh)
2006 Mahika Gaur (England)