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The stylist with a bat

The stylist with a bat

The Hindu11-05-2025
January is associated with fresh beginnings and cliched New Year resolutions. But as this year's January 2nd waned at the historic Sydney Cricket Ground, there was a sense of an ending.
The Indian cricket team was preparing for the fifth Test of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy series. Trailing 1-2, Rohit Sharma's men needed to stage a comeback. However, skipper Rohit himself was not a certainty in the playing eleven and coach Gautam Gambhir refused to offer any clarity.
Sports writers peered hard. Clues were gleaned from Rohit's body language. Is he glum? Is he laughing? When the Test commenced, Rohit had dropped himself and Jasprit Bumrah led. India lost that game. Meanwhile, the speculations over Rohit's career in cricket's longest format continued. Would this be his full stop in Test whites?
The answer to this question finally blew in the wind on May 7 when the Mumbaikar announced his Test retirement through an Instagram story. He did clarify, though, that he would continue to play ODIs. Rohit had earlier bowed out of T20Is too.
At 38, an extended ODI career may look a touch difficult but he has been his own man ever since whispers about his prodigal talent did the rounds in the Mumbai maidans almost two decades ago. Batting at its most elemental form is about lining up the delivery and responding. Rohit is one of those rare batters, who seemed to have that extra second while dealing with the red cherry in Tests and the white ball in limited overs cricket.
There was an ease to the manner in which he picked his runs. This was more poetry at work rather than dull prose, even if at times he could lash out those muscular sixes. 'He makes it look easy', was the general refrain but as David Gower, the aesthetic high-priest of batting, said once, there is a lot of hardwork lost in descriptive terms like 'lazy elegance'.
As a teenager, he had to grapple with crowded suburban trains while carrying his heavy cricket kitbag to the grounds in south Mumbai. He had to deal with the historical pressures that a batter has to cope with in a metropolis that has produced Sunil Gavaskar, Dilip Vengsarkar and Sachin Tendulkar.
There were cautionary tales too like the one involving Vinod Kambli, a glorious talent lost to the pitfalls of fame. Rohit, though, remained grounded, and by 2007, was part of the Indian limited-overs squad and was a member of the team that won the ICC World T20 the same year.
Test performance
If Rohit the batter in ODIs and T20s looked set for the long haul, the same individual seemed plagued with bad luck when it came to Tests. Set to make a Test debut in 2010, he picked up a freak injury. Eventually, he found his way back in 2013, and the West Indians felt the heat of his bat at Kolkata's Eden Gardens.
Rohit's 177 on debut seemed to be a promise about things to come. But as his career evolved, it was obvious that he was cut out for greatness in ODIs, where he scored double hundreds for fun, while in Tests, he had an identity crisis. Shuffled across slots, dropped at times, it took a while for him to stabilise while Virat Kohli, Cheteshwar Pujara and Ajinkya Rahane marched past him.
The tipping point was when coach Ravi Shastri and captain Kohli made him open in Tests. Rohit prospered despite reservations in many quarters over his flamboyant style not being suited to Tests. He coated his aggression with a strong defensive technique, and the runs flowed.
The twilight phase, though, was terrible. A poor yield against Bangladesh, New Zealand and Australia, meant that Rohit had to make a choice. For now, he is banking on ODIs, a format he dominates, both as a batter and as a captain.
Still, to make 4,301 runs in 67 Tests, while largely opening, is a good statistic. Having led India to titles in the 2024 ICC Twenty20 World Cup and this year's Champions Trophy, besides excelling for the Mumbai Indians, Rohit's legacy is set in stone. Yet, he could have flourished more in Tests.
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But why did a cricketer reckoned by Worrell and other experts to be hugely gifted, the "best exponent of the square cut in the country" and whose hook shot was crowned the Shot of the month in an English daily, not score more runs or have a longer stint in Tests? Discrimination played its part as revealed in a story told with little rancour, but with an abiding hurt that slips through. It happened when Gopinath was in England. The tour had begun on a disastrous note with India reduced for 0-4 in the first Test at Leeds. Seeing 000-4 on the scoreboard piqued the interest of the photographer in Gopi and in broad daylight, before the rest of the team, he snapped the "unique sight". Then came the incident that made matters worse and which he recounted. Vijay Hazare was the captain and ordered Gopi, who did not understand the language, to move in Hindi. Gopinath remembers, "I was the only one in the 16-member squad who did not know Hindi. They all spoke Hindi. I rarely knew what they were speaking about during the tour. In the match, the captain asked me in Hindi to shift my position to a certain spot. He knew I couldn't understand. I managed only by asking one of my teammates and getting to know what was needed. "But when we were back into the dressing room, Hazare was very angry at me. He told me to come and see him at the hotel. Once there, he asked me why I hadn't followed his instructions. I explained the difficulty I had and wondered why he couldn't have told me in English. His reply was that if he told me in English the batsman would know. I found his reasoning silly. "Remember I was just 22 then. A little worked up, I told the captain 'I thought we were playing cricket. What is wrong in the batsman knowing where the fielder is. He has the right, does he not?'. Hazare got back by telling me "This is not 'Madhraas cricket'. I told him I didn't know it as Madras cricket or Indian cricket. I only knew it as cricket and stomped out of his room. Naturally, the captain didn't like me from then on." This meant that for the duration of the England series, Gopi was forced to bat at No 8, and in one instance at No 9, despite being a specialist batsman. The only exception was when India encountered a wet wicket or sticky wicket as these were called. A razor-sharp and compelling raconteur, Gopinath shares what followed when that happened. "An exception was this match where it had rained and the wicket was wet. You must remember that those days the wickets were left uncovered and we also did not have helmets or the level of protective equipment that players now have. So, the captain told me to pad up to go in at No 4. He meant to offer me as one of the sacrificial wickets. But I was excited since I could at least bat up the order now. It was however not to be. By the time my turn came, the sun had come out and the wicket was drying up. I was told to wait. 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He applied and took up a position in the Chennai-based Gordon Woodroffe at his father's suggestion and would later rise to be the first Indian Chairman of the 100-year-old British company. But cricket wasn't about to leave him alone this early. He was "unexpectedly" named in the squad to the West Indies. Gopinath was delighted at the prospect of going there. But a call from Ghulam Ahmed asking if "You are going? Are you sure?", while saying he himself had decided not to after what happened in England and what was likely to happen in the West Indies, led to Gopi also dropping out. A wet patch in Pakistan and the 'patriotic umpires' there India's first tour of Pakistan though was an entirely different proposition. Vinoo Mankad had taken over as the captain and that was a relief. Ghulam Ahmed was also selected and would be Gopi's roommate. This meant that Ghulam's relatives in Pakistan were always around to shower them with hospitality except on one occasion when, with no houses for the players to be put up in, they had to stay in the train compartment for a few days! Gopi had a good overall tour ending up with an average of 58 in the first-class matches. But he got to bat in only three innings in the Test series. The one where he made his highest Test score of the tour, a 41, had a memorable story that would be passed down generations. A patch of the ground, a little ahead of the crease, was alone wet while the rest of the wicket and the ground was dry. "When we protested, we were told that it was because of the rain. 'How could it have rained only here,' we wondered. The umpires (both Pakistanis of course, since it was a home series) were to be the final adjudicators. They agreed to delay the start by 15 minutes to help the very wet patch dry! I was left to counter the wet area by stepping out and standing on it," Gopinath remembers. He talks of how the team was happy to have drawn the series against the Pakistan team, which had the original 'Little Master' Hanif Mohammad and bowling great Fazal Mahmood, among others, in its ranks. "The Pakistan umpires were patriotic. So, we were happy to return with the honours even," he recounts. Friend named Sir Frank Worrell, and Sachin and Dhoni memories Cricket gifted Gopinath many friendships. He remembers his comradeship with English great Denis Compton and with Ray Lindwall, the brief meeting with whom at Kolkata led to Gopi landing the Australian great's cap as a souvenir. But his abiding trans-sea friendship was with Sir Frank Worrell, the West Indies captain in the first-ever tied Test, as recalled earlier. 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That quality sums up Gopinath too at 95 and underlines why, as his son-in-law the renowned Supreme Court lawyer Aryama Sundaram observes, he was a legend all those years ago and continues to remain a legend. A truly well-played century beckons...

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