The Moin-ud-Dowlah Gold Cup of today is about as similar to the
tournament it was even a couple of decades ago, as McDonald's is to
Udipi Sukha Nivas. The very idea that this lazy tribute to the late
Nawab after whom it is named can be played in the one-day limited
overs format as it is this year - is preposterous to anyone who had
anything to do with it in its glorious past. The only event of the
current edition that had a touch of deja-vu about it was the bursting
of a piece of plumbing in the middle that cut short a match involving
the New Zealand team. Matthew Bell and his men may not know that
India drew a Test match it was about to lose to Graham Dowling's Kiwis
back in the sixties on the very same Fateh Maidan, because the ground
drying brigade took unduly long to warm up after a shower, and Dowling
and his men were not allowed to lend a helping hand, even though they
were willing to mop up without pay.
The Gold Cup is part of the romance of Hyderabad cricket. The first
edition was out in the 1920s, but even in the late seventies, the
matches in the tournament were played at a leisurely pace, over three
days. Almost all the top players of the country would congregate at
the Lal Bahadur Stadium, staying in the rooms in the stadium that had
balconies with a lovely view of the cricket. When your side won a
match and waited for its next encounter, you had all of three days of
cricket-watching before you, sitting on the balcony with fellow
cricketers, swapping cricket stories, pulling one another's legs. This
is where you heard the fabulous yarns spun by Hanumant Singh and
Pataudi, Salim Durrani and Ashok Mankad. This is where you absorbed
the cricket wisdom around you by osmosis.
The New Zealand XI is not the first overseas team to take part in the
tournament. The Ceylon Tobacco Board XI in the seventies was as good
as the national team. There was also the Hindustan Breweries XI led by
Tiger Pataudi which had Budhi Kunderan, by then settled in Scotland,
Rohan Kanhai, still a couple of years shy of his masterly Prudential
Cup final knock, Duleep Mendis, Anura Tennekoon, David Heyn, Russell
Hamer and Tony Opatha. This star-studded side was beaten by State Bank
of India, which had its own stars in G R Viswanath, Abid Ali, Ambar
Roy, Syed Kirmani and Rajinder Goel. I had the unusual experience of
originally being included in the Breweries XI and getting drafted into
the bank team on the eve of the match.
It was in this tournament that I, an unknown, bowled my first ball in
first class cricket to Rohan Kanhai in 1973. It was my eight-wicket
haul in the 1975 final against the Pataudi-led JK XI, which had
batsmen of the calibre of Salim Durrani and the Amarnath brothers in
it, that made me a Ranji Trophy player at the ripe old age of 28.
Ironically, it was in this very tournament that I bit the dust too,
when I was sacked along with every other member of the Hyderabad XI on
the morning of the opening day of the tournament a few years later, in
what came to be known as the tracksuit incident.