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Dry Rot
25-09-2007, 08:05 PM
While we're talking about Botham, let's not forget another fine allrounder in Kapil Dev.

http://www.memorabilia4u.com/data/items/19b653e2e1dcd8264c0bf676dae07998.jpg

Wisden overview
Kapil Dev was the greatest pace bowler India has produced, and their greatest fast-bowling allrounder. If he had played at any other time - not when Imran Khan, Ian Botham and Richard Hadlee were contemporaries - he would surely have been recognised as the best allrounder in the world. In any case he did enough to be voted India's Cricketer of the Century during 2002. His greatest feats were to lead India almost jauntily, and by his allround example, to the 1983 World Cup, and to take the world-record aggregate of Test wickets from Hadlee. It was the stamina of the marathon runner that took him finally to 431 wickets and only a yard beyond. He might not have been quite the bowling equal of Imran, Hadlee or Botham at his best, and his strike rate was less than four wickets per Test. But he was still outstanding in his accuracy and ability to swing the ball, usually away from right-handers. And he could hit a ball even more brilliantly than he bowled it, with uncomplicated flair. Scyld Berry

See http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/india/content/player/30028.html

The Doctor
25-09-2007, 08:17 PM
Good ordinary player

God I love Jack Dyer.

Griffen#16
25-09-2007, 08:55 PM
He played with my step dad in England for a while, we still have a Duncan Fernley bat that was made for Kapil that my step dad ended up being able to buy off Kapil quite cheaply. Good bat, but damn heavy.

Sockeye Salmon
25-09-2007, 10:03 PM
Anyone who could take that many wickets bowling quick(ish) on those pitches must have had something going for him.

Didn't he make 150 in a world cup game coming in at no. 8?

GVGjr
25-09-2007, 10:06 PM
It's not like he had another strike bowler at the other end either. Dev was a champion cricketer but he probably should have had a better batting average.

The Coon Dog
25-09-2007, 10:32 PM
Anyone who could take that many wickets bowling quick(ish) on those pitches must have had something going for him.

Didn't he make 150 in a world cup game coming in at no. 8?

India faced Zimbabwe at Nevill Ground, Tunbridge Wells on 18 June 1983

Under overcast conditions, India won the toss and elected to bat. Disaster struck as the top order started a procession back to the dressing room as Sunil Gavaskar (0), Kris Srikkanth (0), Mohinder Amarnath (5) and Sandeep Patil (1) leaving India at a precarious 9/4 that turned to 17/5 when Yashpal Sharma (9) was dismissed. Batting with the lower order batsmen, Kapil Dev stabilized the side with a 60-run partnership with Roger Binny (22 runs) and a 62-run partnership with Madan Lal. When Syed Kirmani walked in at 140/8, Kapil Dev had scored his half-century and went on to score his century off just 72 balls - establishing the then record for fastest ODI century. Together with Kirmani (22 runs), Kapil put on an unbeaten 126 runs for the 9th wicket - a current world record. Kapil Dev finished not out with 175 runs off 138 balls, an innings that included 16 boundaries and 6 sixes.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kapil_Dev

Sunshine
26-09-2007, 08:27 PM
Gee he could swing a ball and a bat for that manner.
The last time I saw him he was blubbering and trying to ensure the world that he had no part in any match fixing. Not sure what the outcome was of that but I doubt he would have been involved. The thing is he would just about bowl all day at pace if his captain asked him to.

Twodogs
26-09-2007, 08:52 PM
Didn't he make 150 in a world cup game coming in at no. 8?



That innings was the first time I saw a batsmen take a ball that pitched outside off stump and plonk it over the square leg boundary. It's pretty common place now.