Cricket's age of Dadaism
This week, we dive into the long, occasionally polarising, and always entertaining career of Sourav Ganguly
Before he became BCCI president, Sourav Ganguly was a pretty useful cricketer • Getty Images
Ganguly was six months short of his 20th birthday when he made his international debut at the Gabba in 1992. He was immediately thrown into the deep end, facing Malcolm Marshall with India on a dicey 35 for 4. He failed to make any contact off his first ball, a wicked awayswinger, and 12 balls later he was out, lbw to Anderson Cummins. His reaction to the umpire's decision gave us our first glimpse of a man who always felt he was right, even when he might not have been. This was Ganguly's only opportunity on a four-month tour of Australia, and he wouldn't play another game for India for the next four years.
Within a year, Ganguly was a well established member of India's team, proving particularly effective in ODIs. His value came to the fore in a five-match series against Pakistan in Toronto in 1997, with bat and ball: he scored more runs than anyone else on either side, as India romped to a 4-1 win, and more wickets than anyone else too, on green pitches that made his gentle medium pace a potent force. There were four back-to-back Man-of-the-Match awards, and you can find the highlights of his performances here and here.
The turn of the millennium was Ganguly's peak as a batsman, particularly in ODIs; in that format, in 1999 and 2000, he scored 3346 runs at 50.69, including 11 hundreds - half his career total. Some of those hundreds were the most memorable knocks of his career.
Captaincy turned Ganguly into a fascinatingly combative on-field personality. He was often involved in feisty exchanges with opposition players - Russel Arnold, Andrew Symonds, Mohammad Yousuf and countless others - and his send-offs (Paul Collingwood is at the receiving end here) made for a prototype that Virat Kohli has since built on. And, of course, there was the shirt-waving on the Lord's balcony.
Stripped of the captaincy, and then left out entirely, Ganguly could very well have faded away. But it was a measure of the man's character that he didn't just come back, but came back stronger. So assured was his batting during the Test tour of South Africa in 2006-07 that Tendulkar even told him it was the best he'd seen Ganguly bat. There was a gritty first-day half-century in Johannesburg, which helped set up a rare overseas win, and a quickfire 66 in Cape Town, which featured some brilliant strokeplay after Dale Steyn dealt him an early blow to the helmet.
Sreshth Shah is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo