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On This Day in 1975: Sunil Gavaskar’s 36 off 174 Balls vs England Creates Slowest ODI Innings Record

Sunil Gavaskar drew attention for all the wrong reasons on this day in 1975, when India lost to England by a large margin in the first-ever World Cup match.

If there is one Indian batsman from the past who has revolutionized the landscape of Indian cricket, it is without a shadow of a doubt the famous Sunil Gavaskar. Sunil Gavaskar’s great cricketing lineage played a significant role in bringing India’s map into the world of cricket, from scoring more than 700 runs in his first series to becoming the first batter to score 10,000 runs in Test cricket.

These cricketing records do not only highlight his effect, but also his boldness and daring in facing the fearsome seamers without a helmet. However, an infamous knock occurred on this day in 1975, and the spirits of that long and continuous knock have yet to leave Gavaskar. His 174-ball 36* was heavily criticized, and Indian fans were outraged with his lethargic performance.

The renowned India opener was jeered throughout his innings by confused Indian fans in the stadium. As the innings came to a close, a few Indian fans went onto the field to confront Gavaskar.

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Cricket had achieved its pinnacle of success. The World Cup had finally arrived, and nations will compete for an elusive trophy, with the opening game taking place between hosts England and India. England put on a massive 334 runs after the first innings, and the odds were stacked in their favor. Back then, limited-overs cricket was played over 60 overs. The lack of playing One-Day cricket was the issue for India, not the run rate.

India’s slow-paced innings never really got going, and many cricket experts and analysts thought Gavaskar and co. were playing for their own average. Cricket does not tolerate mediocrity, and the English bowlers comprehensively outplayed the Indian batters.

Gundappa Vishwanath led the scoring with 37 runs off 59 balls. The Indians managed only 132 runs for the loss of three wickets after 60 overs, but it was Gavaskar’s knock that drew the most criticism. He only hit one boundary in his inning and never showed any positive purpose.

England’s 202-run victory was the largest ever scored by a team at the time. The record held for ten years before being broken by the Australian cricket team in 1985, with a ruthless victory of 232 runs over Sri Lanka.

1st Innings scorecard

Batting Scorecard

Batter Dismissal Runs Balls 4s 6s SR
John Jameson c Venkataraghavan b Amarnath 21 42 2 0 50
Dennis Amiss b Madan Lal 137 147 18 0 93.19
Keith Fletcher b Abid Ali 68 107 4 1 63.55
Tony Greig lbw b Abid Ali 4 8 0 0 50
Mike Denness (C) Not Out 37 31 2 1 119.35
Chris Old Not Out 51 30 4 2 170

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Extras: 16

Bowling Scorecard

Bowler Overs Runs Wickets Maidens Economy
Madan Lal 12 64 1 1 5.33
Mohinder Amarnath 12 60 1 2 5
Syed Abid Ali 12 58 2 0 4.83
Karsan Ghavri 11 83 0 1 7.54
Srinivas Venkataraghavan 12 41 0 0 3.41
Eknath Solkar 1 12 0 0 12

 

2nd Innings

Batting scorecard

Batter Dismissal Runs Balls 4s 6s SR
Sunil Gavaskar Not Out 36 174 1 0 20.68
Eknath Solkar c Lever b Arnold 8 34 0 0 23.52
Anshuman Gaekwad c Knott b lever 22 46 2 0 47.82
Gundappa Vishwanath c Fletcher b Old 37 59 5 0 62.71
Brijesth Patel Not Out 16 57 0 0 28.07

Extras: 13

Bowling scorecard

Bowler Overs Runs Wickets Maidens Economy
John Snow 12 24 0 2 2
Geoff Arnold 10 20 1 2 2
Chris Old 12 26 1 4 2.16
Tony Greig 9 26 0 1 2.88
Barry Wood 5 4 0 2 0.80
Peter Lever 10 16 1 0 1.60
John Jameson 2 3 0 1 1.50

 

Also Read: How Many Different Types of Deliveries Are There in Cricket Bowling? (cricfiles.com)

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