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Home»Sports»When Salim was in the Mood
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When Salim was in the Mood

Kashmir NewslineBy Kashmir NewslineJuly 12, 2023No Comments8 Mins Read
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Known for his exhilarating strokeplay, Durani, on his day, was a match-winner either with the bat or with the ball.
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A tribute to cricketer Salim Durani by friend Partha Chatterjee.

Salim Durani, who died on April 2, 2023, at the age of 88, was one of the most entertaining cricketers in independent India. He batted and bowled left-handed with complete ease and fluctuating interest — inexplicably so. His batting average of 25.04 in 29 Tests and 75 wickets at 35.42 runs per wicket would be considered moderate at best, but those who saw him playing in the ’right mood’, as did this writer, first, in the 1962 Calcutta Test versus  Ted Dexter’s Englishmen, would vouch for his prodigious gifts with the bat and ball. In the first Innings he scored a scintillating 43, which included a lazy flick over mid-wicket for six off his bête noir, Dexter, a deceptive fast-medium bowler besides being a marvelous attacking batter. E.A.S. Prasanna, the great off-spinner, recalled in his autobiography, One More Over: “Those were the best 43 runs in the match.’’

 It was Durani’s match with the ball. With his sharply spun, lifting leg-breaks (to the right-hander) that came quickly off the pitch and his surprise arm-ball that came in, he took five for 47 in the first innings and three for 66 in the second. India won that Test, as they did the next at Madras—it wasn’t Chennai then—thanks to Durani taking 10 wickets in the match, including six for 105. Overnight, he became a national cricketing hero.

His stylish 71 runs along with his friend, Chandu Borde who made 68 in a crucial partnership in the first Innings of the first Test at Bombay (now Mumbai) got noticed. What was not noticed was his sudden loss of interest, if the bowling was not challenging enough! It was said, within four years of his Test career, that he would throw away his wicket if he was bored – a trait of the aristocratic amateur.

This trait was noticed in the 1964-65 Test series against Bobby Simpson’s Australians. In the second Test at Bombay, which India won in a thrilling finish, in the second innings, Durani, going great guns, with Vijay Merchant exhorting “steady, Salim, steady’’ suddenly lost concentration, got out for 30 to Simpson, who had him caught  by Bob Cowper. It was left to Borde, who made a gritty 30 not out to help India just scrape through to a win. Merchant, chief national selector and an excellent Test batter in the 1930s and 40s, noticed this moodiness in Durani.

In the third and final Test at Calcutta, an inspired Durani took six for 73 off 28 overs, and bowled the Aussies out for 177 runs, who were earlier 117 for no loss! Merchant said: “When in the mood, Durani is the best bowler of his type in the world.” Yet, in 1966, after the first Test at Bombay against the West Indies led by Garry Sobers, Durani’s sparkling 55 in the first innings, which included a straight six over the still very fast Charlie Griffith’s head, came in for criticism. When Sobers bowled him out with a swinging full toss, Durani’s response was a cavalier one-handed shot that was seen as an irresponsible act. Mansur Ali Khan, a mercurial captain and an excellent attacking batter, it was said then, dropped Durani from the Test team at Merchant’s behest.

It was not until Ajit Wadekar came in to captain India in 1970-71 against the West Indies that an ageing Durani made a comeback. In the only Test that India won and with it the series, Durani, brought in to bowl, got out two brilliant and explosive batters capable of winning the match on their own. Sobers was bowled with a hugely spun ball that pitched outside the leg stump to clip the bail of the off stump and then the six-foot-five-inch Clive Lloyd, thrown off-balance to a suddenly dipping ball that pitched near his toes, forcing him to spoon an easy catch to skipper Wadekar at short mid-wicket.

One suspects that the extremely tiring, both mentally and physically, tour of the West Indies in 1961-62 somehow affected his subsequent career as a Test cricketer. After the second Test, Nari Contractor, the captain, playing in a first-class match, unsighted by an extremely fast delivery from Charlie Griffith, ducked into it and caught a nasty blow behind his ear, nearly dying. A16-hour surgery saved him but ended his career. This incident certainly affected the morale of the team. Twenty-one-year-old Mansur Ali Khan, aka Nawab of Pataudi, then vice-captain, was promoted to lead the eleven.

The Indian Test selectors out of sheer pique dropped their star leg-spinner, Subhash Gupte, for the West Indies tour of 1961-62, as they did leg-spinner V.V. Kumar, a potential star. Had either been in the team, the burden on Durani as the lead bowler would have lessened considerably and he could have got many more wickets than the 17 he managed with a four for 82 in the Port-of-Spain Test as his best. Poor catching and ground fielding also prevented him from getting more wickets. The bowling load was carried by Durani and the stalwart all-rounder, Polly Umrigar, playing his last series at age 38, who in addition to restricting the aggressive, pulverising West Indies batting with his persistent off-cutters, scored  172 not out, one of the two centuries by the Indians. The other was Durani’s terrific 104, remembered 40 years later with awe by his two senior colleagues on the tour, Borde and Bapu Nadkarni, in a TV interview in Marathi. India were drubbed 5-0 in that Test series and saw a winning racehorse like Durani employed as a cart-horse.

Vinoo Mankad, India’s first great all-rounder, was Durani’s mentor. From the day he saw him play as a boy, he was clearly impressed.  “Who is that boy?’’ asked a princely cricket patron.  “My son,’’ said the mentor. Mankad was a professional cricketer, who earned his living playing Test cricket, first class cricket, and in the Lancashire League in England during the summer months. Durani did the same, later. He told this writer, at one of several lunch meetings at the Press Club of India, Delhi, in the late 1990s: “I played in the Lancashire League for six years. Garry (Sobers) and I became good friends then, spent time together in the evenings, chatting, cooking,’’ It was in a one-day match in the same league that he got 133 runs off Roy Gilchrist of the West Indies, the fastest and most fearsome bowler in the world. The one trait he shared with Sobers was fondness for alcohol. Durani was also a chain smoker.

There was a constant struggle for money. His earnings as a cricketer in India in those distant non-IPL days were peanuts; even that he did not learn how to spend, leave alone save, sensibly. Playing in Calcutta in the 1972-73 season vs England, he was heard muttering, smoking his third cigarette, all padded up to bat, “Chalo teen hazaar rupaye toh aa gaye  – well, I earned three thousand.” His 53 runs in the second innings helped India to 192. England lost by 28 runs. Durani took a dipping skier to dismiss wicket keeper-batter Alan Knott who could have got the runs off his own bat.

In the next Test at Madras which India, led by Wadekar, won by a whisker, he made 38 and 38 with the bat in the two innings and while bowling in England’s second innings, tricked the very tall, technically and temperamentally solid batter capable of turning a game, Tony Greig, then on five, into spooning a catch to the ever-alert Eknath Solkar at forward short leg by subtly altering the trajectory and angle of the ball. In the final drawn Test at Bombay, he scored 73, helping G.R. Vishwanath, who made a century on debut in 1969 versus Australia, to break the voodoo and score his second. That was also Durani’s last Test match.

The obits said he was a carefree, bindaas man who took each day at a time. The observation may be true but he was also aware of having been short-changed by the Indian cricketing administration. He expressed deeply felt admiration for B.B. Nimbalkar, the Maharashtra cricketer, who was left high and dry at 443 not out in a Ranji Trophy match in 1948, by the opposing team, Kathiawar’s captain, the Thakore Saheb of Rajkot, conceding the match because he didn’t want an ‘untouchable’ to break the great Australian Don Bradman’s record of 452 runs in a first class match. Durani identified with Nimbalkar, who averaged 47.93 in 80 first class matches but never played for India. He once compared him to the great West Indian batter, Everton Weekes, in a conversation in which he also said: “Main Bhausahab ke kapde dhota thha – I used to wash Bhausahab’s (Nimbalkar) clothes.

The write-up was first carried by Hardnews magazine.

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