Former India spinner Dilip Doshi dead

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Last updated on: June 24, 2025 09:11 IST

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Dilip Doshi

IMAGE: Dilip Doshi played 33 Test matches and 15 ODIs for India. Photograph: BCCI/X

Former Indian Test Cricketer Dilip Doshi died after suffering a cardiac arrest in London, on Monday.

He was 77.

Doshi is survived by his wife Kalindi, son Nayan, who played for Surrey and Saurashtra, and daughter Vishakha.

In a tweet, late on Monday, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) confirmed the sad news.

'The BCCI mourns the sad demise of former India spinner, Dilip Doshi, who has unfortunately passed away in London. May his soul rest in peace,' the Board's X handle read.

Doshi made his Test debut in 1979 after Bedi's retirement and played his last of his 33 games in 1983.

In those matches, he took 114 wickets with six five-wicket hauls

He was exceptional at home during the first three seasons, completing 100 scalps in just 28 Tests.

His finest hour was getting five wickets in India's Test win at the MCG in 1981 when the visitors defended a paltry target.

Doshi bowled with a fractured toe and was literally unplayable on an up-and-down MCG track. Doshi, Karsan Ghavri and the peerless Kapil Dev won that game for India.

He was also a stalwart in English county circuit having plied his trade for more than a decade there. He represented Nottinghamshire and Warwickshire.

"Dilip bhai suffered a heart attack in London. He is no more," Saurashtra CA president Jaydev Shah told PTI.

"Dilip's passing away is a personal loss to me. He was like a family. He was one of the finest human beings," former BCCI secretary Niranjan Shah said.

Dilip Doshi played 33 Test matches for India

IMAGE: Dilip Doshi is one of only nine Indian cricketers to have a five-for on their debut Test. Photograph: ICC/X

In the Indian domestic circuit, he played for Bengal and Saurashtra. In all he had a staggering 898 first-class scalps with 43 five-fors.

He was Bengal's go-to man in Ranji Trophy for years.

While Bishan Singh Bedi remains India's greatest left-arm spinner, Doshi was one of the most accurate bowlers who would flight the ball when required and was very accurate for the better part of his career.

The touring Australian, English and West Indies teams found it difficult to handle his arm balls, and it was Javed Miandad, who actually hastened his exit from international cricket during the 1982-83 series against Pakistan.

The bespectacled cricketer was a gentleman to the core.

Miandad would often tease him in the middle of game, enquiring in his signature lisp.

"Ae Dilip tela loom number kya hai," Miandad would ask in a slurry tone.

His batting and fielding in those days wasn't top notch but in that era he could survive because his bowling was top drawer.

He was a close friend of Sunil Gavaskar and the legend was first introduced to his wife Marshniel by Doshi.

After retirement, he had migrated to London where he became a successful businessman.

He would divide his time between London, Mumbai and Rajkot, and it was quite strange that the BCCI never bothered to use Doshi's expertise.

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