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World Cricket Feature

My Favourite Cricketer…. VVS Laxman

1 Comment 12 April 2012

lead image: (c) guardian.co.uk

Balanced Sports and World Cricket Watch are inviting cricket writers from around the globe to wax lyrical on who they consider their “favourite cricketer”. This week, Minal of Granger Gab and The Sight Screen writes of the most stylish Indian of them all, a man whose nickname was the ultimate compliment: VVS Laxman.  Minal tweets @granger_gab, and we really suggest you follow her.

As much as we love to deny it, we all have a secret crush – the one we adore but won’t admit because it would mean sharing loyalties with our one true love. My favourite cricketer has always been and will always be Rahul Dravid. When the World Cricket Watch team asked me to pen a piece for this series, I saw that Rahul was already spoken about and hence thought it was best to write about my secret cricketing crush – the Very Very Very Special Laxman.

In fact VVS Laxman is the secret crush of every Indian fan. He is the guy that unites the Tendulkar, Dravid and Dada fans alike. VVS the last of the Fab Four to hit the scene – his batting – exquisite, beautiful , elegant – a delight to watch; one that could tempt many a staunch supporters of any other cricketer to commit infidelity when it came to this man.
After witnessing the birth of two future batting stalwarts at Lords 1996, India wasn’t quite prepared for the sublime batting that would put her in a trance for the next 16 years.

November, 1996 Motera – Ahmedabad Vs South Africa

On a devilish pitch, probably one of the worst test wickets, a young man of 22 held fort in the second innings to get 51 after India has conceded a small lead of 21 runs. No Indian batsmen had got a 50 in that match barring this young lad. When I was watching him bat, the teenage me turned to my dad and asked “Papa since when did the rules allow a batsman to bat twice in the same innings, why is Azhar playing again?” Laxman reminded me of Azhar then– still does; the silken grace, the wristy shots on the on-side, the gift of impeccable timing. These batsmen from Hyderabad seemed to be blessed with a batting style as delectable as the Biryaani from that land.
But sadly as has been the case with Indian cricket, a permanent place in the packed middle order was always going to be tough. Ganguly came back from his injury and VVS found himself out of the side in the 3rd test of that series. VVS was later asked to open and he never really succeeded in that position; but his affair with Australia started at that very position. In the 99-00 tour VVS wove his first spell of magic on the Aussies at Sydney. He decimated the Aussie attack single-handedly. His 167 in a team total of 261 was intoxication at its best – even today while revisiting the innings you will drown in the beauty and wide array of strokes on display – the ease in his batting, the delicacy of his wrist play. As a friend once said, “Sachin is God, but there are strokes that Laxman plays at times, which Sachin would only dream of.” I have never dared to debate with him on this point.

Post this series and the one at home against South Africa, Laxman put his foot down and refused to open. He went back to the domestic grind, scored big hundreds and forced the selectors to consider him as a middle-order bat. After a year, Laxman came back to the Indian side and the rest as they say is history. VVS’s 281 Vs Aus in 2001 still gives me goosebumps when I watch the VCD of the match. He was the only one who put his hand up in the first innings – getting 59 in a team total of 171 and the last man to be out. Trailing by 274 with the test and series loss looming large, VVS walked in at number 3 and scripted a miracle along with Rahul Dravid. What he achieved with that knock did not merely amount to an Indian victory to be stored in cricket’s record books, with it he restored the shaken belief of a billion Indian fans. In that one knock, he truly reflected the attitude that John Wright and Ganguly were trying to build into this team – to make them world beaters; he showed that his team was not the one to give up, had the courage to conquer all demons and withstand all attacks. That knock laid the first brick to India’s success in test cricket – of achieving the Numero Uno position. In that one knock – Laxman weaved his magic forever on us.

Of the numerous shots he played that day – one remains stuck in my head forever – replayed a million times, in awe of this man. Warne bowled a delivery leaving the leg stump, Laxman got behind the delivery, his bat almost facing the on-side and hit the ball in the extra-cover region. That was as classy an extra-cover drive you will ever see but mind you it came against a ball wide of the leg-stump. Not a single soul moved on the field – Warne stood still wondering what had just happened. VVS had the ability to play the ball when he wanted and where he wanted.

Post that knock Laxman became India’s crisis man. His 75 in Brisbane ’03 after India had lost 4 wickets – his partnership with Ganguly set the tone for that series. The sublime 148 at Adelaide was an able aid to Dravid’s 233 when India were down in the dumps at 85/4 after Aus had got 500+ in the first innings. The 73 against South Africa ’06 in the 2nd innings – along with Sreesanth’s 5-40 in the first innings took India to her first win in South Africa. The SCG 109 in ’08 – VVS and Dravid came together to script another fight back on day 2 after the shambolic performance in the first test at Melbourne. VVS followed this knock with a 79 in Perth to play an important role in India’s first win at the venue after the Sydney horrors.

In 2010 he probably re-wrote his own fairy-tale – being part of India’s finest test wins – 2 of them chasing in tough situations on 5th day. His 103* Vs Sri Lanka at P Sara Oval sealed a victory and helped us draw the series after 3 wickets had fallen in quick succession the previous evening. His 96 at Durban ’10 which was the sole reason behind India’s win to level the series; and finally the nail-biting Mohali chase Vs Australia. Fighting back spasms VVS had only Ishaant and Ojha for company when India were reeling at 124-8 chasing 216 , that 81 run partnership that followed with Ishaant turned out to be among Australia’s worst nightmares. Laxman had yet again been there when it had mattered the most for his team. In away wins, Laxman’s contribution with the bat stands at 3rd position behind Rahul and Sachin.

Statistics don’t do justice to his potential. In 134 matches, he has 8781 runs with an average of 46 and 17 hundreds. That last number should’ve been much higher. His modest performances against South Africa and England on away tours will always remain a mystery to me; but I think Laxman chose his love affairs well – with Australia and Eden. Among his contemporaries he stands at #3 with most runs against Australia; only Sachin and Lara are ahead of him. Probably the reason why Brett Lee said this of Laxman:

If you get Dravid, great. If you get Sachin, brilliant. If you get Laxman, it’s a miracle.”

Of his 17 100s, 6 have come against Australia, 4 in Australia – 3 of them at SCG. Of the modern era Laxman’s 281 is the highest score against Australia, he is preceded by Hutton(364) and Foster(287)
Back home like his look-alike Azhar, Laxman loves Eden and Eden loves him, just like she loved Azhar. Both players have 5 100s there. Laxman is the only player to get 1000 plus runs at Eden. Hyderabadis and Eden – it is a divine connection. There is a common word that goes around – If it is Eden, no matter where he bats, Laxman will get a 100.

I would be doing grave injustice to Laxman the slip fielder if I did not mention his 135 catches. He stands among the top 10 in the world today among players with most catches as non-wicketkeeper. He has kept Dravid fine company during the last decade and helped build a strong close-in field for his team’s bowlers.

VVS Laxman – the quiet performer among the Fab Four, his shy demeanor and no -nonsense batting. Come to the crease, get to the hundred in no time, boost the team score and quietly fade away in the background – in that period on the crease, cast a spell and leave us in a trance. Rarely have I seen him play an ugly stroke, no slogging for him. A species so rare, in this cruel world of fast-food cricket today we have no space to preserve this species of batsmen. He may be the last to come by – so savor all that is left of his batting.
Vangipurapu Venkata Sai Laxman aptly rechristened to “Very Very Special Laxman” by Ian Chappell  – the universal, non-debated favorite player of all.

As I end my post on my secret crush – I leave you with these lines I penned down a few months back

Have you watched…

The raindrops fall on your window sill

The dewdrops slide down from a leaf

The flowers blossom in the morning sunshine

The sun set into the ocean wide

The moonlight on a pitch dark night

The snowflakes rest into your palm

The river find her way gently through the rocks

The rainbow spread far into the sky

Have you watched these marvels of nature and then…..

Have You Watched VVS Laxman Bat?

Previous Favourite Cricketers

Brian Lara by David Siddall

Allan Border by Ben Roberts

Douglas Jardine by David Green

Curtly Ambrose by Matthew Wood

Sachin Tendulkar by Subash Jayaraman

Ian Botham by Jonathan Kilroy

Shane Warne by Murray Middleton

Rahul Dravid by Sujith Krishnan

Wasim Akram by Blaise Murphet

Glenn McGrath by Gary Naylor

Ed Giddins by Nick Harrison

Adam Gilchrist by Will Atkins

Angus Fraser by James Marsh

Paul Allott by Jonathan Howcroft

Tim Bresnan by Yorkshire Len

Sourav Ganguly by Christopher David

David Boon by Jimi Stephens

Herschelle Gibbs by Justin Lawrence

Bob Woolmer by Nigel Henderson

Darren Lehmann by Daniel Gray

Kumar Sangakkara by Nishant Joshi

Justin Langer by Sarah C Robinson

Andy Bichel by Nicko Hancock

Chris Tavare by Gideon Haigh

Gavin Larsen by Ken Miller

Ray Bright by Dan Lonergan

Chris Pringle by Michael Wagener

Anil Kumble by Rishabh Bablani

Shoaib Akhtar by Assad Hasanain

Stuart MacGill by Kristian Gough

Michael Vaughan by Max Benson

Graham Dilley by James Morgan

Podcasts

One Hand One Bounce Cricket Podcast 67 – Rahul Dravid Retires

No Comments 14 March 2012

Listen to the Cricket Podcast that Plays by Backyard Rules

Audio, 13th March 2012: 37 minutes

DAVID SIDDALL, MURRAY MIDDLETON and JONATHAN HOWCROFT reflect on the biggest news of the week – Rahul Dravid’s retirement from the game after facing way over 30,000 deliveries in Test cricket. Plus we review the cricket action this week and dish out those coveted Don and Tuffers awards.

NB: Please allow a moment while it buffers/loads

Don’t miss a single episode of the One Hand One Bounce Podcast. Automatically get each new episode by subscribing via iTunes or subscribing to the RSS feed.

 

Become the Podcast Hero of the Week

Special Thanks to this week’s podcast hero of the week – BALAKRISHN PRABHU.

Tell us why you deserve to be next week’s hero by….

1. Emailing the team at worldcricketwatch@gmail(dot)com

2. Tweeting @worldcricketw

3. Leaving an illuminating comment on worldcricketwatch.com

About One Hand One Bounce

World Cricket Watch has assembled a crackpot team in the desperate hope of creating the greatest cricket podcast on the web. When we first came up with the idea for the show it was based on the notion that great podcasts rely on great conversations, and that cricket, more than any other sport, provides the perfect backdrop for conversation that can reach beyond the specificities of sport to culture and society. We all know that the best cricket writing is also a great way of finding out about the particularities of a given time or place, and we hoped that a podcast could do the same.

Podcasts

One Hand One Bounce Weekly Cricket Podcast 65

No Comments 28 February 2012

Listen to the Cricket Podcast that Plays by Backyard Rules

Audio, 27th February 2012: 29 minutes

NICKO HANCOCK and DAVID SIDDALL  discuss a busy week in cricket, make a few predictions regarding the Allan Border Medal, and of course give out those coveted weekly awards.

NB: Please allow a moment while it buffers/loads

Don’t miss a single episode of the One Hand One Bounce Podcast. Automatically get each new episode by subscribing via iTunes or subscribing to the RSS feed.

Check out The Sledge

Check out NIcko Hancock’s lovechild The Sledge

Become the Podcast Hero of the Week

Special Thanks to this week’s podcast hero of the week – SUBASH JAYARAMAN.

Tell us why you deserve to be next week’s hero by….

1. Emailing the team at worldcricketwatch@gmail(dot)com

2. Tweeting @worldcricketw

3. Leaving an illuminating comment on worldcricketwatch.com

Continue Reading

Videos

Watch These Friday Funnies

No Comments 24 February 2012

Each week we’ll be sharing with you some of the most extraordinary cricket videos on the web.

Today we feature a clip that had it taken a wicket would have been called the ball of the century. We also pay homage to an umpire that surely would have not spent to much time on the ICC elite panel in the modern era.

Shane Warne bowls a turner to Marcus Trescothick that would have got Tony Greig purring and perhaps might have broken the Channel 9 protractor.

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Former West Indian umpire Steve Bucknor gives one of the most dubious  lbw decisions against Sachin Tendulkar in the controversial series in 2003

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Steve Bucknor again…

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Steve Bucknor again…

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Please share your thoughts in the comments section below. If you have seen some cricket videos that you just have to share, let us know…..

 


Podcast

Audio: 33 mins

OHOB Cricket Podcast Episode 73

The OHOB team preview England vs West Indies.

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