The now famous Wankhede stadium was built
in 1973 after disputes between the
Cricket Club of India which owned the Brabourne and Mumbai Cricket Association;
and was named after SK Wankhede – hence Wankhede stadium. It reportedly was built in six months and opened in time for
the final Test between India
and the West Indies in 1975 ~ whence Eknath
Solkar made his century and Clive Lloyd made a double century. . The stadium has a capacity of 45,000 and is
always in contention to host an international match in India. It has
been host to numerous high profile cricket matches in the past, including the
2011 Cricket World Cup Final, in which India defeated Sri Lanka by 6 wickets.
Mumbai,
has seen Test matches played at three different grounds. The Bombay
Gymkhana ground hosted the first ever Test in India,
in 1933–34 against England.
After the world war II, the Cricket Club of India Ltd's Brabourne Stadium –
second ground of the city – was used for 17 Tests and thence came
Wankhede. The first Test here was the
last test for Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi.
The Jubilee Test in 1979–80, remembered
for Botham’s heroics and Gundappa Vishwanath recalling Bob Taylor was
played here.
Just as we have Wallajah road /
Pattabhiraman ends in Chepauk…. It is Garware Pavilion end and Tata End at
Wankhede. The stands are named after :
Sunil Gavaskar, Vijay Merchant, Sachin Tendulkar – while rest are known as
North, MCA, Divecha and Garware…. The
architect was – Shashi Prabhu and
Associates who was also involved in Indira Gandhi indoor stadium, Sports City
Hyderabad, Shree Shiv Chhatrapati Sports Complex in Balewadi, which hosted the
National Games in 1995 and the Youth Commonwealth Games in 2008
Often one uncharitable remark
aired by detractors is that Sachin has not made runs at crucial juncture……
facts are otherwise.
Of his 51 Test centuries, 20 have come in
matches when India
won and in One dayers – 33 of them out of
49 in One dayers were winning efforts ~ not to speak of some more –
where he waged a lone battle. Sure, when the legend
exits – it the end of a great saga…. Farewell to Sachin Tendulkar, the greatest
batsman, whom we had the fortune of seeing playing and making runs…………
Sachin, Sachin……….. Sachin… Sachin…
With regards – S.
Sampathkumar
Photo courtesy : cricinfo.com
