Castrol Lifetime Achievement award for Vijay Hazare
Captain Vijay Samuel Hazare - Indian cricket's first triple centurion, the first Indian to complete 1000 and 2000 runs in Test cricket and the first Indian to score a century in each innings of a Test, now has another `first' to his credit
Partab Ramchand
13-Dec-2000
Captain Vijay Samuel Hazare - Indian cricket's first triple centurion,
the first Indian to complete 1000 and 2000 runs in Test cricket and
the first Indian to score a century in each innings of a Test, now has
another `first' to his credit. He is the first recipient of the
Castrol Lifetime Achievement Award, instituted to honour those who
have made a significant contribution to Indian cricket.
The 85-year-old former Indian captain will be presented the Castrol
award which comprises of a glittering trophy and a cheque worth Rs. 5
lakhs, at his residence in Baroda. The award will be presented by
Jiten Goswami - Director Automotive Sales & Marketing, Castrol India
Limited.
Born in 1915 at Sangli in Maharashtra, Hazare spent his formative
cricketing years under the tutelage of three legends; DB Deodhar, CK
Nayudu and the Australian leg-spinner Clarrie Grimmett. The years of
the second World War saw him pile on the runs and drive many a bowler
to despair in the Ranji Trophy and Pentangulars.
Hazare made his Test debut on the tour of England in 1946. The fourth
Test of the 1947-48 series between India and Australia, played at
Adelaide, marked a watershed for Hazare and for Indian cricket. With
scores of 116 and 145, against a mighty side led by `the Don' himself,
Hazare provided what was at that point the most outstanding
achievement by an Indian Test cricketer.
Hazare went on to lead India to her first-ever Test win, against the
touring Englishmen in 1951-52. He bowed out of Test cricket after
taking the side to the Caribbean in 1952-53, but his services to
Indian cricket did not end there. He was chairman of the selection
committee when India recorded her first-ever victory in a Test series
against England, in 1961-62.
In 30 Test matches, Hazare scored 2192 runs at an average of 47.65
including seven centuries with a highest score of 164 not out against
England at New Delhi in 1951-52. He also took 20 wickets including
that of Bradman twice in Tests. In a first class career spanning over
30 years, Hazare amassed 18,740 runs at an average of 58.38 including
60 centuries. He also took 595 wickets (average 24.61) and held 165
catches. He was one of the outstanding performers in the Ranji Trophy,
running up a tally of 6312 runs at an average of 68.61 with 22
hundreds - figures that stood as records for years. He also took 291
wickets at an average of 19.66.
For three years, Castrol has honoured the present and future of Indian
cricket. Sachin Tendulkar was a deserving first winner of the Castrol
Indian cricketer of the Year Award in 1997-98. He was emulated by
Rahul Dravid in 1998-99. Among the juniors, Jyoti Yadav, the talented
opening batsman from UP won the Castrol Junior Cricketer of the Year
Award in 1997-98, and Rajesh Pawar, the diminutive left-arm spinner
from Mumbai, pocketed the prize the following year. This year, Castrol
has for the first time, paid a tribute to the glorious past of Indian
cricket.