The Daily Telegraph - Sport

How Mumbai made Douglas Jardine – the original Stokes

Captain famed for leadership skills and tactical nous was victorious in the first Test staged in the city of his birth

- By Nick Hoult CHIEF CRICKET CORRESPOND­ENT in Mumbai

ground staff at the Bombay Gymkhana are re-marking the fivea-side football pitches with whitewash, and the cafe in the Swiss chalet-style pavilion is doing a roaring trade.

The wicker chairs on the verandah overlookin­g the pitch are all taken and the ceiling fans are whirring hard to keep everyone cool, while waistcoate­d waiters take orders and pour drinks.

It is a scene that has changed little since 1933 when the club hosted India’s first home Test match, the 90th anniversar­y of which came round recently. Then it was a club for the British. Clubhouse rules had to be relaxed to allow the India players to enter the pavilion.

Now it remains an exclusive haunt of the wealthy, a contrast to the scraggy Azad Maidan that is separated from the Gymkhana by a narrow path Mumbaikers use to cut through to the city. Descending the stairs from the verandah, you pass a black and white photograph taken on Dec 15, 1933, the first day of the Test, of two men staring down at the camera. One is Douglas Jardine, the other CK Nayudu, the two captains cutting dashing figures.

Jardine, with his hands behind his back, wears a white cravat with the George and Dragon crest on his blazer, which is done up by three buttons. Nayudu looks like a film star with his neat moustache and pomaded hair. He is slightly less formal, posing with hand in pocket, his blazer unbuttoned. Another picture shows him walking out to bat with Lala Amarnath, followed by a pith-helmeted official. The young Amarnath would make his name, and a small fortune, with a century in the match.

A short walk away is the Cricket Club of India’s Brabourne Stadium, founded by the Maharaja of Patiala in reaction to being told he could not sit in the pavilion of the Gymthe khana. It hosted Test cricket until the early 1970s when a dispute led the Board of Control for Cricket in India to build the Wankhede Stadium, the modern home of the Indian Premier League and internatio­nal cricket.

Less than a mile apart, but separated by almost a century of progress and change, the three grounds tell the story of cricket’s evolution in India.

The Gymkhana is a protected building, so Jardine would recognise it from his time, along with the Bombay High Court just opposite, where his father, Malcolm, practised law at the turn of the 20th century.

Jardine’s tour to India was a year after Bodyline. He had to be persuaded to captain England again, and part of his motivation was to see where he was born and the old family home. Malabar Hill, where the Jardines lived, is now home to modern skyscraper­s, a place for the super rich of Mumbai. Many of the colonial buildings are long gone, the skyline dramatical­ly changed.

Jardine gave many speeches on the tour, predicting India would one day be cricket’s major power. That is something Ben Stokes would recognise now.

Reading through the press reports of the match, some of the comments feel very familiar today. Jardine was a tactical master, totally committed to his team and their methods. He was not without vanity, and the tour would contain some tense moments when England bowled bumpers, but he was praised for fielding changes, rotation of his bowlers and for being a diplomat, not a natural strength of his, giving many speeches recognisin­g the importance of Anglo-indian ties.

Stokes does not have to bother with that kind of diplomacy. He would also blanch at the itinerary: 50 matches in 5½ months with a 14-man squad. This latest tour is five Tests in seven weeks, with a chef, analyst and massage therapist tending to the players.

While Jardine relaxed by biggame hunting (his haul included a lion, tiger, panther, bear and stag), Stokes prefers taking pot shots on the golf course. The current England squad speak about Stokes’s management skills with awe.

In his excellent biography of Jardine, Spartan Cricketer, Christophe­r Douglas quotes letters he received from some of the players on the 1933 tour. Kent wicketkeep­er Hopper Levett said Jardine did not radiate “much cheerfulne­ss and appeared to take an aggressive attitude towards the opposition”. By contrast John Human, Middlesex batsman, described a “wonderful man and credit to Winchester College” who wrote to his parents when Human went down with malaria in Bombay. Human felt his stand-offishness was because of an “inferiorit­y complex to strangers”.

The players line up to praise his tactics, even with a severely weakened team. The tour featured four seam bowlers – Nobby Clark of Northants and Essex’s Stan Nichols, while India had Mohammad Nissar and Amar Singh. There were more bruises than Bodyline, although leg theory was rarely deployed. When it was during the first Test, England were barracked and again in Madras when India opener Naoomal Jeoomal missed a hook and was knocked out.

England won the first Test by nine wickets (and would take the series 2-0). The wire report states most of the opening over by England consisted of “bumpers” and Jardine dropped a “sitter” of a catch. “The ground presented an animated appearance as members of all castes crowded in, struggling for vantage points. Improvised shelters against the sun, consisting of sheets of canvas spread over poles, were filled to capacity, and as a background there were minarets of mosques, some of the finest examples of Indian architectu­re,” read a front page report in the Birmingham Daily Gazette.

Former England captain Arthur Gilligan, writing in the Daily News, gave his verdict from reading wire copy and an on-the-spot report by Jack Hobbs, who was working for the Daily Star. “The outstandin­g feature was the magnificen­t captaincy of DR Jardine who, as I suggested he would do, excelled in field placings and bowling changes. A study of the cables shows us that

Jardine was plotting and scheming all the while.

“Naidu [sic] dismissal was the result of an astute piece of captaincy by Jardine... [who] moved a man over from leg side, leaving a gap in the field, and Naidu, trying to place the ball in that direction, missed it with fatal result (and was lbw).”

A similar verdict has been written about Stokes many times, including on this tour. It was Lala Amarnath (written as Amar Nath in the UK press) who became a hero for his 118, and a crowd of 50,000 were drawn to the Gymkhana on day three to see him make his century. He was garlanded at the end of the match as India cricket’s obsession with personal milestones began. The front page of the UK’S Daily Herald read: “Cheques, cash, jewellery, cups, medals and bats were showered on him. Several millionair­es present insisted on the cricketer accepting cheques from them. Tonight Amar

Nath is the most famous man in India. A week ago he was unknown outside local cricket circles.”

Cricket had the power to change lives then, as it does now. Just ask Yashasvi Jaiswal, who began his cricket journey on the Azad Maidan, a short lofted drive from the Gymkhana.

A final word on Jardine. On his day off in Bombay, he met with his old family servant and visited his late wife’s grave. Moments later, the man dropped dead, Jardine rushing him to hospital in vain. It was a very different touring life then.

Jardine relaxed by big-game hunting – including a panther and bear – but Stokes prefers pot shots on the golf course

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 ?? ?? Empire days: The pavilion at the Bombay Gymkhana, which was set up in 1875
Empire days: The pavilion at the Bombay Gymkhana, which was set up in 1875
 ?? ?? Leaders: Ben Stokes bowls in the nets in Rajkot yesterday (left); England captain Douglas Jardine with India counterpar­t CK Nayudu during the 1933-34 series (top); the England touring party are welcomed to Mumbai before the first Test (middle); Jardine batting for Surrey at the Oval in June 1933 (right)
Leaders: Ben Stokes bowls in the nets in Rajkot yesterday (left); England captain Douglas Jardine with India counterpar­t CK Nayudu during the 1933-34 series (top); the England touring party are welcomed to Mumbai before the first Test (middle); Jardine batting for Surrey at the Oval in June 1933 (right)
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