Sportstar

Three of India’s famous quartet of spinners reached personal milestones —

Prassie, Venkat and Chandra, three of India’s famous quartet of spinners (Bedi, obviously, the other great), reached personal milestones — recently they celebrated landmark birthdays — much to the delight of the pre-internet generation.

- SUNIL GAVASKAR

they recently celebrated landmark birthdays — and former teammate Sunil Gavaskar has a lot to say about them.

ast month, two of India’s nest matchwinne­rs celebrated landmark birthdays within days of each other. On May 17, Bhagwath Subramanya Chandrasek­har turned 75 and a few days later, on May 22, Erapalli Anantharao Srinivasa Prasanna entered his ■1st year. A month earlier, on April 21, Srinivas Venkatarag­havan had completed 75 years. So three of India’s famous quartet of spinners reached personal milestones much to the delight of the preinterne­t generation. The internet generation was, of course, enamoured by the antics of someone nowhere near the class of these wonderful spinners who bowled India to many a famous win. What was sadder still was the mainstream media, apart from the odd shining example, also did not nd it t to have a paragraph or two if not a whole article about these stalwarts even while nding space to gush about a couple of current superstars calling their teammates’

names while doing their internet chats with overseas players.

Yes, the cricket loving public is understand­ably more keen to know about the current players and how they are dealing with the current situation. And the modern generation is not shy at all. They are happy to put just about everything up on their public platforms and the many websites and call even the silliest stu they see, adorable. Then, of course, there’s this fascinatio­n about the players from across the border. What they are saying gets splashed even when most times they are having a go at the Indian players either directly or subtly. Do any Indian players’ interviews or comments ever feature in the media elsewhere? NO. Then why give the foreign players an outlet to take their animosity out in our media platforms?

Prassie, Venkat and Chandra belong to the generation that played the game for the love of it and the honour and privilege of playing for the country. Chandra was the rst I saw from the North Stand of the Brabourne Stadium against Bobby Simpson’s Australian­s in 1964. The Australian­s had nished a long tour of England for the Ashes and stopped over in India to play a threetest match series on their way back home. Chandra was new to Test cricket but was running in to bowl as if he had been playing Test matches since birth. The condence with which he bowled was unbelievab­le. The North Stand crowd at the Brabourne Stadium was one of the most critical crowds in the country then. It was mainly lled with Mumbai Ranji Trophy players, past as well as current and senior division club cricketers who knew their game. If they got stuck into you then you had it. There are many stories of players from other States pulling out at the last moment of playing a Test match at the Brabourne Stadium and the rumour mills used to suggest that it was because they got cold feet at the prospect of facing the North Stand crowd. Chandra had no such fears and I still vividly remember the ball with which he clean bowled Peter Burge, the burly Australian batsman. It pitched just outside the legstump and hit the top of the ostump knocking it into the gloves of the wicketkeep­er. It was exactly like the Warne delivery to Mike Gatting. Peter Burge was also built like Gatting. Of course there was no TV then and it was not an England game for it to be called the ball of the century or the greatest whatever that has to involve England and Australia, but to bowl that delivery on a at batting pitch like the Brabourne Stadium was very, very special. Thereafter, it was a privilege for me to be in the same Indian team when Chandra bowled India to victories in England and Australia. There was no thumping the chest or giving the batsman any send o. Just a slow walk towards the wicketkeep­er. The gentle assassin that’s what Chandra was.

Prassie on the other hand was a lot more excited when he got a wicket. He would come out with peals of laughter at his success in trapping the batsman. You could actually feel his brain clicking as he plotted the batsman’s dismissal. The revolution­s that he put on the ball could be seen from the time the ball left his ngers till it reached the batsman.

Prassie’s best gures came in Auckland when I captained the team for the rst time as Bishan Singh Bedi got injured just before the toss. It was Day One and on a green tinged pitch Prasanna picked eight wickets which are still the best gures at that venue. What a bowler he was and what a fun guy — always willing to tell a joke and laugh. A privilege to have shared the same change room with him.

Venkat suered from the comparison with Prassie. While Prassie had the loop, Venkat had accuracy. On a pitch giving even the slightest help, Venkat was unscorable. His biggest attribute was a neversaydi­e spirit. He had a temper, but that actually made him more loveable because everybody knew that he was going to be the rst one to laugh after that.

Way back on the 1979 tour, I turned up on the last day of the Lord’s Test match in a kurta and lungi. There was no uniform those days. Venkat, who was the captain, didn’t say anything till after lunch when we had to go upstairs to the lunch room. He came next to me, looked at me up and down and asked sternly “what’s this” ? I replied, “C’mon skip, you know what it is. You wear it all the time in Chennai.” The next moment he gulped out a laugh so loud that the rest of the change room joined in. He then shook my hand in that bone crushing grip of his. Yes, it was preferable to face him even on a spinning pitch than get your ngers crushed in his hand.

Terric cricketers and even more wonderful guys. Stay well, stay healthy all your lives.

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 ?? THE HINDU PHOTO LIBRARY ?? Fabulous four: B. S. Chandrasek­har, S. Venkatragh­avan, Bishan Singh Bedi and E. A. S. Prasanna share a light moment, and the topic seems to be the deadliest weapon they ever had — the cricket ball.
THE HINDU PHOTO LIBRARY Fabulous four: B. S. Chandrasek­har, S. Venkatragh­avan, Bishan Singh Bedi and E. A. S. Prasanna share a light moment, and the topic seems to be the deadliest weapon they ever had — the cricket ball.
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