Ajit Wadekar is one of the only three cricketers who represented India as a captain, coach, and national selector. The other two players are Chandu Borde and Lala Amarnath.
If
Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi brought princely demeanour to leadership in
the swinging 60's, Ajit
Wadekar added a dash of middle-class stubbornness during the
heady days of early 70's.
An
astute thinker of the game with copybook technique of the famed
'Bombay School of Batsmanship', Wadekar was more than just the
captain, who led India to twin series victories in England and the
West Indies in 1971.
The
man who breathed his last in Mumbai today played just 37 Tests and
had only one hundred against his name.
But
the numbers do not exactly tell the story of a cricketer, who
possibly made Indian
cricket captaincy a coveted job.
Wadekar
epitomised the 'khadoos' nature of Mumbai cricketers.
When
the late Vijay Merchant handed over the reins to Wadekar, little did
anyone expect that an Indian team would be able to compete and win in
alien conditions like England and the West Indies
He
was lucky that a genius called Sunil Gavaskar's arrival coincided
with his ascendancy to the hot seat, but he should get the credit for
throwing a 21-year-old to the deep end of the pool.
Add
to it, his decision to form a four-pronged spin quartet with Bishan
Singh Bedi, Bhagwat Chandrasekhar, Erapalli Prasanna and Srininvas
Venkatraghavan. That attack formed the backbone of the Indian team.
If
Gavaskar was the hero in the West Indies, Wadekar unleashed
Chandrasekhar on the Englishmen during a time which could be aptly
called 'That 70s show'.
Wadekar
was a product of times when education was paramount and University
cricket produced stalwarts.
His
triple hundred in Vizzy Trophy (for West Zone Universities) record
was incidentally broken by Gavaskar.
He
was perhaps the most elegant left-handed Indian batsman to have
graced the field before a certain Sourav Ganguly arrived on the
scene.
Call
it the game of glorious uncertainties, Wadekar lost his captaincy
after a disastrous England tour of 1974 when India lost 0-3 in Test
matches.
Such
was the irony that a giant bat erected in Indore commemorating the
'71 win was defaced and his house in Mumbai was stoned.
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