With the latest India-Australia series currently
under way we take a brief look at all such encounters
starting with that Bradman dominated era: 1947-48, in
Australia: Having maintained a high standard of
first-class cricket throughout World War II, India
went to Australia in 1947-48 for the first series
between the two countries. Thus they were present
during the last home season of Sir Donald Bradman,
then preparing for his swan song in England in
1948. There were several players of high reputation
and achievement in team. Lala Amarnath captained on
the first visit to Australia. But even with 'Vinoo
Mankad, Vijay Hazare, and Gul Mohammad, the Indians
could not make an impression in alien conditions, and
unfortunately the captain himself did little in the
Test. In fact they proved very poor opponents as
Australia clinched the five-match series 4-0. The
margins of victories were whopping and the draw was
achieved mainly because there was no play on three
days. Bradman ruled supreme with scores of 185, 13,
132, 127 not out, 201 and 57. The high point of the
series for India was Vijay Hazare's 116 and 145 in
the fourth Test at Adelaide and the centuries by
Vinoo Mankad (116 in the third and 111 in the fifth),
Dattu Phadkar too distinguished himself with 123 in
the fourth Test.
1956-57, in India: Australia was a clear winner in
the three-Test series. The visitors won at Madras and
Calcutta while the second Test at Bombay ended in a
draw. The Indians were foxed by wily Richie Benaud
who grabbed 8 wickets at Madras and 11 at
Calcutta. In the drawn Test he had four wickets. G.S.
Ramchand (109) was the lone centurion for the Indians
while Australia had two (Jim Burke 161 land Neil
Harvey 140). Incidentally, all the hundreds came in
the Bombay Test.
1959-60, in India: Australian standards had risen
again and the Ashes had been recovered when Richie
Benaud took his side to India for a full series three
years later. But the visitors were baffled by
illness. On top of that India's off-spinner
J.S. Patel (9-69 and 5-55) used a new turf pitch in
Kanpur with such success that Australia lost the
second Test by 119 runs. They had as such to work
hard to clinch the series though they had won the
first Test by an innings.
Neil Harvey, who with Norman O'Neill was one of the
successes of the series, made a second hundred in the
third Test, but the only other Australian victory was
in the fourth Test at Madras, where Les Favell made
his only Test hundred and Benaud took eight Test
wickets.
1964-65 in India: The next Australian visit was by
Bobby Simpson's side on its way back from England in
1964, and for the first time India drew the
series. Australia acclimatized themselves well to win
by 139 runs at Madras, although the young Nawab of
Pataudi Jr., the Indian captain, made 128 not out, in
Bombay however, India made 256 in the last innings
and won by two wickets. Pataudi made 86 and 53, but
Australia were handicapped by the illness that
prevented Norman O'Neill from batting in either
innings. The series ended in an anticlimax at
Calcutta, for after India had led by 61 runs in a
low-scoring first innings and Australia were fighting
back with 143-1 in the second, rain set in and
prevented any play on the last two days.
1967-68 in Australia: The Nawab of Pataudi Jr. led
the second Indian tour to Australia, where his father
had toured with the England team in 1932-33. India's
usual lack of class fast bowling prevented them from
doing themselves justice, and they were also found
wanting in close catching. Nor was their later
batting as reliable as needed in an away tour.
Simpson (103) and Bob Cowper (108) made hundreds in
the first Test, which Australia won by 146 runs,
though India's form was an improvement on what they
had shown against the states. The hundreds in the
second Test at Melbourne came from Simpson (109),
Bill Lawry (100), and Ian Chappell (151) and though
India made 352 in the second innings (A.L. Wadekar
99) they lost by an innings. After two Tests Simpson
relinquished the captaincy to Lawry, who was to take
the side to England later on Simpson's retirement,
and India gave one of their best performances of the
tour. Their off-spinner Erapalli Prassana took 6-104
on a good pitch in Australia's second innings, after
which India required to score 395 to win lost by 39
runs, M.L. Jaisimha scoring 101, the 'tourists' only
hundred of the series. The last of the four-Test
series was an easy win for Australia. Simpson, took
5-59.
1969-70, in India: By the time Bill Lawry took the
Australians to India for the last two months of 1969,
as the first half of a tour that would also take them
to South Africa, the spinning duo played a prominent
part of Prassana and B.S. Bedi. But their batting
collapsed in the second innings of the first Test
against Alan Connolly (3-20) and Johnny Gleeson
(4-56). They shared an even draw in Kanpur before
winning by seven wickets in New Delhi, where Bedi
(5-37) and Prassana (5-42) bowled Australia out for
107 in their second innings, and Wadekar's 91 not out
ensured India to reach 181 to win in the last
innings.
Excitement was intense with the series thus levelled
and two Tests to play, but Australia won them both,
through the fast bowling of Graham McKenzie, Eric
Freeman, and Connolly in Calcutta, and perhaps through winning the
toss in Madras. In the final match, the two off-spinner Prassana and
Ashley Mallett took 10 wickets each, but Australia batted first and,
though at one time they were 24-6 in their second innings, Redpath's
staunch 63 restored their position.