Richard Hadlee had likened a delivery to a 'question' posed by the bowler to the batsman. To me, no one answered this 'test' better than Sunil Gavaskar, says M P Anil Kumar. In cricket, nothing quickens the heartbeat more than the sight of a fast bowler steaming in to knock over the batsman. The full-stride, at-full-tilt run-up of tearaway speedsters Jeff Thomson, Dennis Lillee, Malcolm Marshall, Michael Holding, Garth Le Roux, Imran Khan and Shoaib Akhtar really filled you with adrenaline irrespective of whom you rooted for. Richard Hadlee had likened a delivery to a 'question' posed by the bowler to the batsman. To me, no one answered this 'test' better than Sunil Gavaskar. He had the antidote to defuse the venom of the pacemen, the technique to negotiate the short-pitched stuff. He never looked ungainly while swaying/ducking the bumper or blunting the snorter aimed at the throat or ribs; in fact, doing that too spelled E-L-E-G-A-N-C-E.
In sum, he never danced to a pace bowler's 'chin music'. Besides, he was blessed with the flair to drive the ball with kingly majesty. Very few things have given me greater joy than watching/hearing him take on some of the fastest bowlers the game has seen, with guts, without the now ubiquitous helmet. And, may I add, he was as adept at playing the spinning ball.
In my humble impression, he's the best Test batsman within living memory. Of course, then the Test matches were played at a different pace (pun intended) and environment.
As we know, Gavaskar, the Test run machine, rarely set the Arabian Sea on fire in the limited-overs format. Barring a stodgy 55 against New Zealand in 1979, he made little impression in the first three editions of the World Cup. In fact, he invited scorn for his unbeaten 36 (174 balls) against England in 1975.
Even when India won the Cup in 1983, his presence was kind of talismanic; India won all the matches he played, and lost the two he did not. But an innings that preceded the World Cup had, unarguably, lent psychological impetus to the World Cup campaign.
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M P Anil Kumar, a former IAF fighter pilot, will contribute columns throughout the World Cup.
Please read more about The Pilot who is a Fighter
Sunil Gavaskar had the antidote to defuse the venom of any bowling attack
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