Tears in vain as India crash out
Defeat proved to be too hard to take, both for Eden Gardens and Vinod Kambli

Tendulkar's dismissal signalled the beginning of the end for India • Getty Images
Walking off the field after the result was decided, Kambli couldn't contain himself. It was a miracle for India to win from there on - needing close to nine an over on a raging turner - but Kambli's spontaneous outburst captured India's frustration. Not only had he run out of support but he had to endure the ignominy of conceding the match before its logical conclusion. It was an intensely embarrassing moment for the hosts - one spectator raised a banner reading "Congratulation Sri Lanka, we are sorry" - and Kambli's tears symbolised both the anguish and the shame.
"It was a sad moment - people still remember Vinod Kambli being stranded there and tears and crying; but that is what Vinod Kambli is all about. And all of us felt the same but Vinod Kambli is more demonstrative."
- Sanjay Manjrekar, watching from the dressing room
Just like the Pakistani fans four days before, India's enraged public raged against their unsuccessful players and a guard was put on captain Mohammad Azharuddin's house. Kambli's next 35 one-dayers for India were forgettable - he averaged 19.31 with three fifties - and he never attained the heights that made him an instant hero back in 1993. He'd already played his last Test, in November 1995, and will forever be remembered as a prodigy who slipped on the threshold of greatness.
Siddhartha Vaidyanathan is a former assistant editor at ESPNcricinfo