The Critic

RECORD-SETTING SONS

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Patrick Kidd (THIS SPORTING LIFE, FEBRUARY) writes with his customary sagacity about teenage sporting sensations and the difficulty so many of them have in sustaining early promise.

He mentions Vinod Kambli who at 16 was discussed in the same breath as his schoolboy contempora­ry, Sachin Tendulkar, but whose initially promising Test career was over within three years. Then again, Kambli still has India’s highest test match average (54). So not a total fail.

But might space be found here to recall another Indian cricket prodigy, Pranav Prashant Dhanawade?

In 2015, when he was 15 and playing in an inter-school tournament, Dhanawade set the record for the highest-ever score in a single innings in a recognised match, swatting 1,009 runs. His school declared on an also record-breaking 1,465 for 3.

Their opponents replied limply with innings of 31 and 52. Hopefully, rather than feel embarrasse­d, they have learned to dine out on their role in helping history be made.

Overnight, Dhanawade went from being the teenage son of a rickshaw driver to an internatio­nal sensation. His state government paid for his subsequent education and cricket coaching.

But the high expectatio­n was a hindrance as much as a help. “Every time I walked out to bat, I used to feel the pressure and that on occasions got the better of me. It became difficult for me as I lost focus at times and played a loose shot,” he admitted in 2021.

By then, Covid lockdowns had denied him — and countless other up-and-coming cricketers at the formative period of their developmen­t — two seasons of trials. By 2022, he was playing for Northwick Cricket Club in Cheshire. Age 23, his sights are still set on proving he was not a “one-knock wonder” and playing for India. But of this there is, as yet, no sign.

Dhanawade beat the record which had lasted for 116 years, set in 1899 by A.E.J. (Arthur) Collins, a 13-year-old playing in an inter-house match at Clifton College.

Crowds accumulate­d along with his profusion of boundaries over the course of his four days at the crease and prompted a report in The Times . He notched up 628 not out.

Aged 16, Collins joined the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich (for whom he scored a century against Sandhurst) and played at Lord’s for the Royal Engineers.

His army career, however, took precedence. Mentioned in despatches, he was killed at the First Battle of Ypres on 11 November 1914.

Jeremy Barnett

Bristol

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