Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Feel responsibl­e for him missing Test tons twice: Gavaskar

- HT Correspond­ent

NEWDELHI/MUMBAI:FORMER Test batsman Chetan Chauhan, who shone as a gritty player against fiery pace overseas as Sunil Gavaskar’s enduring opening partner in the 1970s, died on Sunday following complicati­ons due to Covid-19, his family sources said.

He was 73.

The two-time former BJP Lok Sabha MP from Amroha was Home Guard minister in the Uttar Pradesh cabinet. He tested positive for Covid-19 last month and was shifted to a Gurugram hospital after his condition worsened. He is survived by wife Sangeeta and son Vinayak.

In an India career from 1969 to 1981, Chauhan played 40 Tests and seven ODIS. He scored 2,084 Test runs with 16 half-centuries, but never scored a century, with a best of 97. The prolific domestic batsman in a two-decade firstclass career played Ranji Trophy for Maharashtr­a and then Delhi. Born in UP’S Bareilly, Chauhan grew up in Pune, where his father was posted in the army. He amassed 11,143 first-class runs (21 centuries, 59 fifties).

In a moving tribute, Gavaskar recalled they used to greet each other in recent years:

after all we are in the mandatory overs of life”.

“I firmly believe I was responsibl­e for him missing out (century) on two occasions, both in Australia in the 1980/81 series,” he said. In the

Perth Test, Chauhan was out for 97 which a superstiti­ous Gavaskar believes was because he moved away from the TV and came on to the players’ balcony to celebrate the century. “The second occasion that I believe I was responsibl­e for Chetan missing a hundred was when I lost my head after being abused by the Australian­s as I was leaving the pitch after a terrible decision.” He was out for 85 in MCG.

Chauhan made his Test debut in 1969, but was discarded after five Tests. He made a comeback in 1977 after scoring 158 for Delhi against Haryana braving a broken jaw. He went on to play 35 Tests between 1977 and 1981, 17 of them away.

He shared 11 Test century stands with Gavaskar, 10 for the first wicket. He didn’t have an orthodox batting technique, but blunted attacks with sheer grit during a phase when helmets were just being introduced.

Chauhan hit 88 at Perth in 1977 against an attack led by Jeff Thomson. In 1980-81, he played a key role as India rallied to draw the series 1-1. At Adelaide, he tackled Dennis Lillee, Rodney Hogg and Len Pascoe for his 97.

At MCG, he looked set for a maiden century when a 165run opening stand ended after Gavaskar (70) was dubiously given out leg before to Lillee. Upset by the sledging, the skipper asked Chauhan also to walk. Though the team manager made Chauhan return to the crease, he was out after India had added 11 runs. India though sealed a famous win, routing Australia for 83 chasing a target of 143.

Chauhan and Gavaskar were involved in a 213-run opening stand at the Oval in 1979. He hit 80 and Gavaskar a then career-best 221. India came within nine runs of winning the Test, reaching 429/8 before it was drawn.

A former national cricket selector and long-time Delhi cricket administra­tor, Chauhan received the Arjuna award in 1981. His biggest contributi­on as a cricket official came as manager on the controvers­ial 2008 tour of Australia, which saw India almost pull out of the series during the “Monkeygate” controvers­y involving Harbhajan Singh and Andrew Symonds at Sydney. India went on to win at Perth.

Former India skipper Dilip Vengsarkar, Chauhan’s teammate in many Tests, mourned the loss. “I’ve lost a very dear friend, a very good human being and a great fighter, and always ready to help. He was very jovial, very easy going. We played a lot together right from 1977, my first tour to Australia. A very gutsy batsman, he played well in the series. He batted very well at Perth; playing without helmet he got 80-odd (88). We shared rooms in many Tests.”

 ??  ?? Chetan Chauhan
Chetan Chauhan

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