11 August 1996
"Life goes on" - Bhagwat Chandrasekhar
Prem Panicker
"Hello. This is Chandra here."
The voice is strong. Self-assured. And, given his recent tribulations, surprisingly cheerful.
Or perhaps `surprisingly` is the wrong word - for Bhagwat Chandrasekhar, pain is an old friend. A comrade in arms, a constant companion who has shared - even accentuated - his
greatest triumphs. And today, in retirement, pain like a family
retainer or a faithful pet continues to dog his footsteps.
After a lifetime of more than nodding acquaintance, Chandrasekhar is now almost unconcious of his pain.
"What can I say, life goes on," says the fabled spinner, when I
call him at his home in Bangalore to enquire into his state of
health.
Chandrasekhar - `Chandra`, to everyone who has followed Indi- an
cricket - returned from the United States just two weeks ago.
When the Customs officials at Bombay airport asked him whether he
had anything to declare, he did not, in the style of Oscar Wilde,
say "Only my pain. And some disappointment!"
But he could well have used those words - for pain and disappointment were all that he carried back with him from the States,
where he had flown two months ago with hope and anticipation.
"I saw many doctors," says Chandra, recalling his most recent
odyssey. "In Chicago, Baltimore, New York, Los Angeles. And they
all told me essentially the same thing - that an operation was
not possible. Some said not now, some said never - but the bottom line was, they could not do anything."
And so Chandra returned to Bangalore, to live with his legacy.
That he has been a victim of polio from his boyhood on was
bad enough, that he was badly injured in a freak accident a couple of years ago, an accident that left him without the use of
his legs and all but paralysed him from armpit to the knee,
was just one more of life`s cruel ironies.
"What they have told me," says Chandra, "is to do a special
type of massage. I have to do it all over, from the armpit to
the waist. And that," says Chandra, the laugh coming through
strong and clear on the phone line, "is my main occupation these
days."
That laugh stops conversation for the space of a heartbeat.
For somehow, when a man meets the worst that fate can do to him
and still laughs, it seems somehow mundane, petty, to ask him for
more details of his condition.
Chandra steps into the silence, and supplies the unsought-for information himself. "They told me, no matter what I do, there
will be no permanent cure. All my life, there will be uneasiness, itching, burning, that sort of thing... but if I keep up
the massage and the medicines, then the swelling will go down.
And the ulcerous sore that now infests my leg will heal.... basically, what I have to do is guard against re-infection."
So I gently ease into the new item that had prompted my call in
the first place - a news report that the Cricket Club of India,
in Bombay, had presented him with a cheque of Rs 100,000 for his
treatment and expenses.
"Oh, the response - unasked for, I must add - has been very
heartening. Ever since the TWI satellite channel on its own
initiative broadcast an international appeal, help has been
flooding in. I am very grateful - and for the first time, it
feels like the wickets I have taken, the bowling I have done,
the times I have played for my country, have finally been rewarded," says Chandra.
When he talks of his playing days, the memories flood back,
unasked. Of the lanky, wiry Chandrasekhar running in to bowl to
batsmen who, judged by their facial expression, felt very much as
a goat in its prime must have felt when confronted by the
butcher`s knife.
Memories of Chandra, his long sleeved shirt buttoned at the
[Image] wrist and flapping in the breeze, turning his poliostruck arm over, to propel the ball at a pace more suited to a
seamer. Of batsman after international batsman poking forward
blindly, despairingly with the bat. Of wickets flying, edges
flying to the greedy hands of Eknath Solkar at forward shortleg.
Memories of India winning against England, against the West Indies.
And most importantly, personal memories of feeling proud,
happy to be an Indian. Of knowing that I, and the rest of this
cricketcrazy country, did not have to be apologetic about our
cricketing prowess any longer.
Chandra gave us that pride. And in return, we gave him -
what?
A lifetime of pain. An endless vista of massaging his ruined
body, in a desperate, and fruitless, attempt to keep the pain at
bay. And in his lonely vigil, the television screen - and the
endless of telecasts of international cricket contests - is his
only amusement, his diversion.
"Frankly," says Chandra, moving away from the subject of his
pain to the subject of his greatest pleasure, "I could not
follow most of the Indian tour of England because I was in the
States at the time. But from the little I saw, and all that I
read, I think that we have a good side, a young side. There are
lots of players of promise, it is just a phase we are passing
through.
"I mean, in 1969 we were losing to Bill Lawry`s Australia at
home. Less than two years later, we were beating the West Indies
in West Indies, and England in England. That`s what cricket is
like - you are up one day, down the next."
When Chandra speaks of playing in England, he does so from a
wealth of experience. And therefore when he tells you that a
bulk of India`s misfortunes in the recent series owed to the
weather, you listen. "The cold in England in the early part of
the season, it cannot be explained," says the ace spinner. "When
you bowl, you find that your fingers cramp, you cannot grip
the ball properly and spin it. When you bat, your feet don`t
move smoothly, your fingers get cramps holding the handle...
it is very easy to criticise, but very tough to play out
there under those conditions. And if you notice, India`s performance improved in the second and third Tests, when the
weather warmed up again."
Of particular interest to Chandra is the natural inheritor of his
spinning mantle, Anil Kumble. Who, incidentally, is on record as
saying that he had patterned his bowling, in considerable part,
on the style patented by his idol.
"Yes, Anil does come home once in a while, we talk of his
bowling," said Chandra. "But I don`t think it is right to say
that I guide him. I believe you can`t coach anybody, you can`t -
and shouldn`t - change anyone`s natural style. Anil has evolved
his own style, he bowls with nip and bounce, he is good. What
happened in England was only temporary, I am sure he will be
taking wickets in plenty again."
And what does Chandra, who in his time mesmerised the best of
international batsmen with his unplayable mix of googlies, topspinners, leg-spinners and the odd extra-fast ball that skidded
through off a length, think of Shane Warne, now being hailed as
the best leg-spinner the world has ever seen?
"Well, he does turn the ball rather a lot, doesn`t he?"
laughs Chandra, while forbearing further comment. "It`s been
nice, chatting about cricket," he says, a beat later. "But it is
time for my massage... excuse me..."
The voice fades, and an image replaces it.
The image of a man who, in his time, transcended pain to give
pleasure to many millions.
A man who, today, continues his lifelong battle against pain.
Alone. Far removed from the eyes of the multitudes that
once thronged cricket stadia to witness his unique brand of
cricketing magic...
Source :: Rediff On The NeT (https://www.rediff.co.in)