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Bapu Nadkarni

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Bapu Nadkarni
Personal information
Full name
Rameshchandra Gangaram Nadkarni
Born(1933-04-04)4 April 1933
Nashik, Bombay Presidency, British India
Died17 January 2020(2020-01-17) (aged 86)
Pune, Maharashtra, India
BattingLeft-handed
BowlingSlow left arm orthodox
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 80)16 December 1955 v New Zealand
Last Test12 March 1968 v New Zealand
Career statistics
Competition Test First-class
Matches 41 191
Runs scored 1,414 8,880
Batting average 25.70 40.36
100s/50s 1/7 14/46
Top score 122* 283*
Balls bowled 9,165 38,193
Wickets 88 500
Bowling average 29.07 21.37
5 wickets in innings 4 19
10 wickets in match 1 1
Best bowling 6/43 6/17
Catches/stumpings 22/– 140/–
Source: CricketArchive, 11 February 2020

Rameshchandra Gangaram "Bapu" Nadkarni pronunciation (4 April 1933 – 17 January 2020) was an Indian international cricketer, mainly known for being an economical bowler. The chances of scoring against him was either nil, or negligible.[1]

Nadkarni bowled a record 21.5 consecutive overs (131 balls) without conceding a run against England in Madras on 12 January 1964.

Career

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Nadkarni was famous for bowling an unerring line to batsmen which made it nearly impossible to score. It is often told that he used to put a coin on the pitch when he practiced in the nets, and would practice hitting the coin with every delivery.[2] He had a career economy rate of less than 2.00 runs per over.

Nadkarni was perhaps best known for his bowling in the Madras Test against England in 1963–64. His figures at the end of third day of the match, bowling mostly against Brian Bolus and Ken Barrington, read 29 overs, 26 maidens, and no wickets for three runs. He finished with figures of 32-27-5-0 and bowled a record twenty one consecutive maiden overs (131 dot balls in a row) in a 114-minute bowling spell.[3] In the final Test of that series, Nadkarni hit 52* and 122*. It remained his only hundred in Test cricket.

Nadkarni took 5/31 and 6/91 against Australia in Madras in 1964–65, but with the emergence of Bishen Bedi as a left arm spinner, his chances became scarce. He was dropped from the tour of England in 1967 but, in New Zealand that winter, he bowled India to a win at Wellington with career best figures of 6/43. On return from this trip, he announced his retirement from first-class cricket.

Nadkarni represented Maharashtra in Ranji Trophy from 1951–52 to 1959-60 and Bombay thereafter until 1967–68. He scored 201* and took 6/17 and 3/38 against Saurashtra in 1957-58 and 167 and seven wickets in the match against Gujarat in 1958–59. His highest score was the six hour innings of 283* against Delhi in the 1960-61 semifinal.

He went on to work as the national team's assistant manager, and was a mentor to Sunil Gavaskar. "His favourite term from where we all learned from was ‘chhodo mat’,” Gavaskar said following his death. It means hang in there. “Chhodo mat. You are playing for India. That thing we learned from him".[2]

Notes

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  • Nadkarni bowled 21 maiden overs,[4] or 131 scoreless balls, in succession. The record for most consecutive balls without conceding a run is held by Hugh Tayfield of South Africa, who bowled 137 dot balls, or 16 eight-ball overs, across two innings against England at Durban, in 1956–57.[5] In first-class cricket, Nadkarni comes third after Tayfield and Manish Majithia of Madhya Pradesh, who bowled 136 dot balls in a row against Railways in 1999–00.[1] [2]
  • The records for maidens in succession with different balls-per-over are : [3]
4 ball overs : 23 – Alfred Shaw, North v South, Nottingham, 1876 [4]
5 ball overs : 10 – Ernie Robson, Somerset v Sussex, Hove, 1897 [5]
6 ball overs : 21 – Bapu Nadkarni, India v England, Madras, 1963-64
8 ball overs : 14 – Hugh Tayfield, South Africa v England, Durban, 1956-57

References

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  1. ^ "Former India allrounder Bapu Nadkarni dies aged 86". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  2. ^ a b Bull, Andy (21 January 2020). "Nadkarni's maiden epic was cricket at its dullest but boredom is part of pleasure. Andy Bull". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 22 January 2020.
  3. ^ Frindall, Bill (2009). Ask Bearders. BBC Books. pp. 124–125. ISBN 978-1-84607-880-4.
  4. ^ "Captain calypso". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  5. ^ CricketArchive
  • Sujit Mukherjee, Matched winners, Orient Longman (1996), p. 120-132
  • ^ Mihir Bose, A History of Indian cricket (1990)
  • ^ Maiden over statistics
  • ^ Dot ball statistics
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