Kapil on attaining record
Kapil said he had never spent time wondering how difficult it
was to take wickets on India's lifeless pitches, usually
prepared to aid the spinners. "You have to put aside such negative aspects," said Kapil, who has won the respect of India's
cricket-crazy nation as much for his perseverance as his humility. The Gujarat Cricket Association which is staging the third
test is offering a rich purse to Kapil for breaking the record
and the Ahmedabad city council has planned a civic reception for
the mustachioed former India captain. The honours came at a time
when Kapil had begun attracting mixed reviews from sportswriters over his place in the team. Some had urged the selectors to
give other players a chance, saying that Kapil was too old.
But none had questioned his contribution to Indian cricket. One
of Kapil's biggest feats is missing only one test in the 16 years
since his debut. "For enduring the strain of bowling in India's
humid condi- tions, Kapil deserves to be labelled cricket's
marathon man," the Times of India newspaper said. Kapil, a hero
to India's millions of cricket fans, built his stamina and endurance doing cross-country runs in Haryana, his home state in
northern India, where the most popular sport is "kushti" (sand
pit wrestling). Kapil's exploits on the cricket field have made
him commercially popular, with India's biggest companies paying him to endorse their products. He has also displayed business acumen with varied interests in hotels, exports and media
making him Indian cricket's first millionaire.
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Whether blasting a spectacular World Cup century at Tunbridge
Wells or taking nine West Indies test wickets in an innings at
Ahmedabhad, Kapil Dev has been the jewel in India's cricket crown
for more than a decade.
The record books are already full of all-rounder Kapil's outstanding deeds, and now he has added his greatest achievement by
becoming the world's leading test wicket-taker. Kapil, who
equalled Sir Richard Hadlee's mark of 431 wickets during the
second test against Sri Lanka last month, moved clear of the New
Zealander's tally to claim the record as his own in the third
and final test here on Tuesday. It is testimony as much to
Kapil's stamina and durability as to his pace bowling skills
that he has set the mark in an age when the volume of international cricket at one-day and test level imposes considerable
physical strain.
At 35, Kapil may have lost some of the pace that made him
India's finest-ever quick bowler, but he can still command
rhythm, accuracy, guile and the ability to seam and swing the
ball effectively. A charismatic figure, Kapil captained India to
their World Cup triumph in 1983 -- they were originally quoted
at 500-1 for the tournament -- and played county cricket for
Northamptonshire and Worcestershire in the 1980s. It was during
the 1983 World Cup in England that Kapil, though essentially
a bowler, gave a perfect demonstration of his ability to play an
explosive middle order innings. In a group match against Zimbabwe at Tunbridge Wells, Kapil rescued India from 17 for five
with a breathtaking 175 not out that hauled his team to a final
score of 266 for nine. They won the match by 31 runs. More
briefly, though no less spectacularly, Kapil thrilled the
crowd at the 1990 Lord's test with a glorious exhibition of hitting against England off spinner Eddie Hemmings. India wanted 24
to avoid the follow-on with one wicket left, and Kapil answered
the challenge in magnificent style by driving four consecutive
sixes.
Significantly, Kapil's best test bowling figures were
against the most powerful team of the 1980s -- West Indies.
He took nine for 83 in the second innings of the third test
in Ahmedabad, though still finished on the losing side. Kapil
has been unique in Indian cricket from the moment he made his
debut at the age of 19 against Pakistan in the 1978 series
that saw the two nations resume sporting contacts halted since
1963 by war and constant animosity. He was genuinely fastmedium, unusual for a side in which the new ball was generally shared by medium pacers who took the shine off before handing
over to the world-class spinners on whom India relied to take the
wickets. Kapil has become the role model for a generation of
young Indian cricketers and, by the mid-1980s, medium-fast
bowlers were pressing their test claims. Kapil is a temperamental player, and even his most ardent fans say he needs
motivating. "He needs to be spurred on, provoked, chided, cajoled into performing," said India's former captain Sunil
Gavaskar. For all his batting feats, bowling is what Kapil believes is his principal
"My focus has always been bowling," Kapil said. "I am primarily a bowler and I have never forgotten that."