Everything about Dilip Sardesai totally explained
Dilip Narayan Sardesai (
August 8,
1940,
Margao,
Goa -
July 2,
2007,
Mumbai) was a former
Indian Test cricketer. He was the only
Goan-born cricketer to play for
India, and was often regarded as India's best batsman against spin bowling.
Early career
Sardesai made his first mark in cricket in the inter-university Rohinton Baria trophy in 1959-60 where he made 435 runs at an average of 87. He made his first-class cricket debut for the Indian Universities against the touring
Pakistan team at Pune in 1960-1, scoring 87 in 194 minutes. His immediate success led to selection for the Board President's XI against the same team at Bangalore, where he scored 106*, and then as a standby in the final match of the Test series. He scored 202 against the Madras university at about the same time, and was then selected to represent
Bombay in the
Ranji Trophy. He was one of the five
Indian Cricket Cricketers of the Year in 1960-1.
Test career
Sardesai had little to show in first class cricket in 1961-62, except for a 281 against Gujarat in a university match, but made his Test debut in the 2nd Test against
England at
Kanpur in December 1961. He toured West Indies later in the season, playing in three of the five Tests. He was the batsman at the other end when
Nari Contractor was seriously injured by
Charlie Griffith in match against
Barbados. Contractor's injury created a place for Sardesai in the team. He scored 31 and 60 in the Test at
Bridgetown, opening the batting, but was dropped after a pair in the following match. Sardesai scored 449 runs in the five Test series against England in 1963-64 with 79 and 87 in the 5th and final Test as the most notable performances, helping India to secure a draw after being made to follow on.
Against
New Zealand in 1964-65, Sardesai scored a double century at
Bombay and a very fast hundred that set up a win at
Delhi. New Zealand had forced India to follow on at Bombay, but Sardesai's 200* nearly won the match for India. He played against West Indies in 1966-7, and then toured England in 1967, where he injured himself on a staircase in the pavilion at
Lord's and missed the 1st Test at Headingley. He recovered to appear in the 2nd Test back at Lord's, but a broken finger sustained during that match ended his tour. He was dropped after two Tests in Australia in 1967-68 due to injury and a series of failures.
Sardesai's career had seemed over when he was picked for the Indian tour of West Indies in 1970-71. In the 1st Test at
Kingston, India lost the first five wickets for 75, before Sardesai hit 212 runs and took the total to 387. His 112 in the next Test at
Port of Spain led to India's first victory over
West Indies. He hit another 150 in the 4th Test after India were 70 for 6. His 642 runs in the series stood as an Indian record for five days before
Sunil Gavaskar went past it. It was India's first victory over West Indies in a series and
Vijay Merchant, the chairman of selectors, called Sardesai the "renaissance man of Indian cricket". Sardesai scored 54 and 40 in the Indian win over England at
the Oval in
1971, which led to another series win. His career ended one Test later, and he retired from all cricket at the end of the 1972-3 season.
Sardesai played for
Bombay in the Ranji Trophy in 13 seasons, including 10 finals, and never finished in a losing side. He scored 199 against Rajasthan in the 1967 final. In the semi-final against the same team two years later, he was
Mankaded by
Kailash Ghattani. Sardesai's final first-class match was the famous Ranji final against
Madras in 1972-73, which ended on the first ball of the third day. He scored over 1,000 first-class runs in three domestic seasons, with a career best of 1,429 runs in 1964-65, which included his highest first-class score, 222, for Associated Cement Company against Indian Starlets in the final of the Moin-ud-Dowlah Gold Cup Tournament.
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Life after cricket
Sardesai used to split his time between his flat in Bombay and house in Goa. He died on July 2, 2007 at 9:15 PM (IST), after he'd been admitted to Bombay Hospital on June 23rd following a chest infection.
He is survived by his wife, Nandini, who is a sociologist and a member of the Indian Censor Board for motion pictures. His son
Rajdeep earned a blue for Oxford University in cricket. He is now the CEO of the channel
CNN-IBN. His daughter, Shonali, is a senior social scientist at the World Bank in Washington DC.
Miscellaneous
, Sardesai was popularly known as 'Sardee-man'. During his successful 1970-71 tour there, Sardesai was asked at the airport whether he'd anything to declare. 'I have come here with runs', he replied, 'and I'll go back with more'.
Further Information
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