Have you
ever stood in that long queue waiting to enter the Chepauk ground – there would
be excitement in the air, one would have to show the ticket at more than a
couple of places – security, Police and others would frisk you, one would have
to pass through narrow barricades, contents checked, not allowed to carry water
bottles ~ the spectator, the common man bears it all for his love for the game
!
Test matches
were so enticing, especially the last day, when the result hung on a fine
balance. The fourth day's play of the
third Test at Headingley in August 1975 ended with the match balanced on a
knife-edge. Australia, chasing a record 445 to beat England and retain the Ashes, were 220 for 3, with their
opener Rick McCosker still there, within one hit of a maiden Test hundred. There was Doug Walters and Ross Edwards to
follow too and all the 3 results were possible ! ~ history was to record
another improbable one (nay, not the tie !!)
Back home, in a strange
incident, a man drove his car onto the
pitch during the Ranji Trophy match between Delhi and Uttar Pradesh at the Air
Force ground in Palam on Friday afternoon. The man, who identified himself as
Girish Sharma, 32, claimed that he had lost his way, and since there was no
security at the entrance, he drove his vehicle, a Maruti Wagon R, onto the
ground. Newspaper reports suggest that
the incident occurred at 4.40 pm, 20
minutes from close of play. The unexpected entry of the vehicle startled both
the players and umpires. As Sharma tried to drive away, he was caught by
security officials and handed over to the Air Force Police.
Thoda dar laga
(Felt a bit scared), but there was no time to react, said Delhi all-rounder
Manan Sharma. There was Gautam Gambhir, Suresh
Raina, Ishant Sharma, Rishab Pant and
others on the pitch when the security breach occurred. The venue for this match had to be shifted to
Palam at the last minute because Feroz Shah Kotla was hosting the India-New Zealand
Twenty20. The man claimed he didn't see
any security and was merely lost, despite what looked like deliberate swerves
to drive over the pitch twice, completely ignoring attempts from players and
umpires to stop him. Justice Vikramjit
Sen, the administrator in charge of DDCA, said that the issue was being sorted
by the Services Control Board, which is in charge of the Palam ground.
My hero Krish
Srikkanth on his cricketing days was portrayed as a restless, especially after his habit of walking away from the crease, towards
the square-leg umpire, cost him dearly in his debut test in 1981 against
England in Mumbai; he nonchalantly strolled
outside the crease when the ball was still in play. John Emburey swooped on the
ball and ran him out. Do you remember
that he was the captain in Pak 1989 tour when Sachin Tendulkar made his debut.
That was a series
troubled ~ ODI no. 594 had to be abandoned because of crowd behavior. At Karachi, a spectator later identified as
a calligraphist of an Urudu daily and a
member of a religious fundamentalist group entered the field shouting slogans,
gheroed Manoj Prabhakar, confronted Kapil Dev and tore the shirt of Krish Srikkanth.
Though it was a physical assault, Indians chose to underplay the incident !
That last day of Headingley
cricket ground in Leeds, - dawned cloudy, but when George Cawthray, the
groundsman, pushed back the covers, he was greeted with the sight of a pitch
which had been vandalised. Several lumps of soil had been gouged out of the
surface just short of a length at the Rugby Ground End. While Cawthray later
admitted that he could have repaired those sufficiently to allow play to recommence,
what sent a chill down his spine was that the holes had been filled with about
a gallon of oil. Cawthray found the solitary nightwatchman, who had not heard
anything unusual, and then summoned the police.
It was revealed that campaigners calling for the release of robber
George Davis from prison had vandalised the pitch. The walls surrounding the ground were also
daubed with slogans demanding the release of Davis, the east London minicab
driver jailed for his part in an armed robbery.
The campaigners'
actions led to the final match between England and Australia being abandoned. It
was declared a draw robbing the
spectators of a good match, bringing an unnatural end to the Ashes series.
Cricket
is always interesting !
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
4th Nov
2017