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Vijay Hazare tribute: The man who Sir Don Bradman admired

Updated on: 11 March,2016 08:35 AM IST  | 
A Correspondent |

Today marks the 101st birth anniversary of Indian cricket legend - Vijay Hazare. Here is a tribute by cricket historian Kersi Meher-Homji to the Indian batting giant; says he was a crisis specialist

Vijay Hazare tribute: The man who Sir Don Bradman admired

Vijay Hazare

Sydney: Today marks the 101st birth anniversary of Vijay Hazare, an all-time great cricketer. A classy batsman with a faultless technique, solid defense and elegant stroke-play, he was a man of few words. A crisis specialist, he often came to India’s rescue in her darkest hours.


Vijay Hazare batting against England in the Manchester Test of 1952. PIC/GETTY IMAGES
Vijay Hazare batting against England in the Manchester Test of 1952. Pic/Getty Images

India achieved her first Test win under Hazare, against England at Chennai in 1952. He was the first Indian to reach 1000 runs and 2000 runs in Test cricket, scoring 2192 runs at 47.65 in 30 Tests. His most prolific home series was against the West Indies in 1948-49, when he collected 543 runs at 67.87, including two centuries, both in Mumbai. His unbeaten 134 in the second Test saved India and his 122 brought India close to her first Test win.


Vijay Hazare in 2000. Pic/mid-day archives
Vijay Hazare in 2000. Pic/mid-day archives

Many of Hazare’s best innings were played when most needed. In the Leeds Test of 1952, India had lost their first four wickets for no run, with England’s raw fast bowler Fred Trueman and master seamer Alec Bedser threatening to rout the tourists for the lowest total in Test history. Hazare was nursing a painful injury but gallantly came out and blunted the attack scoring 56. In the same series at The Oval, India was 5 for 6 with Trueman on rampage on a wet, treacherous pitch. Hazare scored 38 out of India’s 98. “It was the innings of my life,” he said.


Don Bradman
Don Bradman

His finest performance was in the Adelaide Test of January 1948 against Don Bradman’s Invincibles. India had lost the previous the first and third Tests by huge margins and appeared set for further humiliation after Australia amassed 674.

Hazare came to the middle with India 3 for 69 and facing oblivion. Undaunted, he scored 116. Forced to follow on, India was 2 down for none when he made 145. He became the first Indian to hit centuries in both innings of a Test, and that against the fury of Ray Lindwall and Keith Miller. These gutsy centuries moved Bradman to write: “Hazare gave a display which ranks with one of the finest seen in this country. There is no doubt Hazare was among the most accomplished batsmen ever to visit Australia and cricket-lovers are indebted to him for the enjoyment he gave them.”

RS Whitington added: “The (Archie) Jackson-like grace of Hazare fired the imagination of the Australian public.”

Bobby Talyarkhan described him as “immaculate in appearance and studied in every movement, Hazare might well be dubbed the Indian Jack Hobbs.”

Hazare’s on-drives, hooks, cuts and cover-drives were equally awe-inspiring. In The Romance of Indian Cricket, Sujit Mukherjee wrote, “Should ever a sculpture be made of Hazare, it should be in this, the most glorious of his batting postures, playing the cover-drive.

A change bowler, he twice clean-bowled Bradman, once each in the Sydney and Adelaide Tests. When interviewed in 2000, he said wiping away nostalgic tears, it was this  feat he remembered more than his centuries.

If only Hazare had played for a stronger side. Often he rescued India with a big score but before he could unstrap his pads a couple of wickets would topple, so brittle was India’s batting. In a Ranji Trophy match for Baroda against Holkar in 1946-47, he added 577 runs with Gul Mahomed, a world record for any wicket that stood till 2006 when Sri Lanka’s Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene added 624 runs against South Africa at Colombo.

In the Pentangular final for Rest against Hindus, a team including nine Test players, in Mumbai in 1943-44, he added 300 runs in 332 minutes for the sixth wicket with younger brother, Vivek. As Vivek held one end up with 21, Vijay smashed 266. He went from 294 to 300 with a six to become the first Indian to hit two triple centuries in first-class cricket. He went on to score 309 out of The Rest’s total of 387 all out. This 79.8 per cent monopoly in scoring was a world record in first-class cricket until 1977.

First-class machine
At first-class level from 1934 to 1966, he amassed 18,754 runs at 58.06, hitting 60 centuries (including eight double and two triple centuries). He also took 595 wickets at 24.61. Hazare was coached in 1938 by Australia’s leg-spinner Clarrie Grimmett. After scoring twin hundreds in the 1948 Adelaide Test, Hazare received a gold watch from the South Australian Cricket Association and PM Robert Menzies congratulated him. But for him the greatest thrill was the praise he received from ‘Guru’ Grimmett who said, “Vijay, I am a very proud man today.” Hazare had fond memories of Australia. “I wish it was possible for me to revisit Australia where I had such a delightful time,” he wrote to me in 1977.

In Hazare’s words...
“I remember the SCG because it was here that I scored my first century in Australia, against NSW. But for me the ground par excellence is the Adelaide Oval. It made a vivid spectacle with the St Peter’s Cathedral bestowing blessings on me.” A Catholic, Vijay Samuel Hazare passed away on December 18, 2004 aged 89.

When some Indian players’ involvement in match-fixing was confirmed in 2000, it affected him greatly. His daughter-in-law said he cried uncontrollably that day. Keith Miller paid him the ultimate tribute: “Vijay Hazare, one of the most gentlemanly cricket giants of all time, has had his fair share of bumpers hurled at his head in his heyday. And how brilliantly and viciously he hammered this none-too-easy delivery to master. He was a cricketing giant by any yardstick.”

Hazare's record
Tests 30
Runs 2192
Highest 164*
Average 47.65
Hundreds 7

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