Dhoni's men deserve their success every bit. But what Kapil's Devils achieved was a pioneering triumph that can never be matched, writes Nirmal Shekar
John McEnroe was running into trouble with Wimbledon officials for verbal abuse, the U.S. dollar was quoting at Rs. 10.12 and the British pound was Rs. 15.15, Ronald Reagan was writing to Indira Gandhi about “security concerns,” the only Tendulkar who was part of popular culture was Priya — the late TV actress — and Munuswamy, a rickshaw puller who couldn't tell Kapil Dev from McEnroe, was dancing on the Marina beach with a few inebriated young men who were bursting balloons.
You got back small change if you paid Rs. 12 for a bottle of beer, the air fare from Madras to Bangalore was Rs. 201, you didn't need a visa to travel to London, Mahendra Singh Dhoni was just getting into play school, television was still a luxury, and, yes, and the gap-toothed old Munuswamy was dancing with the boys on the beach.
Oh, forgive me, something's been left out, a tiny little detail of the time, of that day: India won the Prudential World Cup!
Etched in memory
Before the readers get ready to kill me, here is a confession: every little detail listed out above is etched in memory simply because of that stupendous victory which turned the cricketing world upside down. It was that kind of day, where-were-you-when-Kennedy-was-shot kind of day, where-were-you-when-the-WTC-towers-came-down kind of day, where-were-you-when-Ali-beat-Foreman kind of day.
Ah, what a wonderful day, and night, that was! June 25, 1983 — few days in the entire history of Indian sport can match that.
It was a great triumph for cricket itself on that day. In the larger picture, the Indian success was secondary. It was a triumph of faith, faith in the fact that everything great about the great game would be vindicated on the big stage, a triumph of faith in teamwork, a triumph of the age-old belief that David can always conquer Goliath with self-belief and commitment.
A few of us had gathered in a friend's place, hoping against hope that India would be able to defend a small total. “Get here in time. The match could be over quickly,” warned the friend.
When a batting line-up reads Greenidge, Haynes, Richards, Lloyd and Gomes, you hardly need to be warned. But, yes, many of us did believe it would be over in quick time and our intention was to ‘celebrate' India's participation in the final. Yes, participation and not victory.
Such fools we were. But ecstatic fools at the end of the day, pinching each other to check if it was all real, if we had our feet on the ground.
In hindsight, you can see it more clearly, look at it as a situation where anything was possible, understand that in sport there is no such thing as a sure thing.
No great record
But when a team with no great record to speak of in the limited-over game goes up against the finest one-day side in history, one that was seeking a hat-trick of Cup victories, there seems an absolute limit to what is possible.
But, then, that's the charm of sport. That's the charm of the great game. It makes way for the unsung to stretch the limits of the possible, it makes room for the midget to put on inches and match the giant.
So, hope sneaked in through the drawing room window when Balwinder Sandhu, enjoying his 15 minutes of fame as an international cricketer, dismissed Greenidge with five on the board. Perhaps the only time the great opener lost his wicket shouldering arms!
Then again, instead of hope, what we got next was destruction. As a connoisseur, this writer moved to seat edge. But almost all my friends turned their gaze away from the TV screen as superman with a bat in hand — read that Viv Richards — got down to business. But Kapil took a magnificent running catch off a Richards top-edge at mid-wicket and the West Indies slide had begun
While an Indian victory had looked impossible earlier in the evening, now it was a West Indian triumph that seemed highly unlikely. And when Holding aimed an extravagant pull off Amarnath and was trapped in front, it was all over.
My friends blew balloons and burst them because crackers couldn't be found. Driving to the Marina to celebrate, we met a handful of revellers. But those were days when the game was not yet the religion that it is now.
Munuswamy, the gap-toothed drunk rickshaw puller, was handed a half empty bottle of beer by a friend and he was all too ready for a ‘Rajni' (actor Rajnikant) style dance with my friends. He was told India had won. To this day, I believe that he thought India had won a war. He knew nothing about cricket. But, it was that kind of day really. June 25, 1983 was that kind of day.
Tonight's (Saturday's) famous triumph, achieved at home and in front of a television audience of hundreds of millions, will be celebrated with much greater passion by many, many more millions in this country as well as among the Indian diaspora abroad.
Dhoni's men deserve their success every bit. But they started the tournament as the favourites and beat a side that was their equal. What Kapil's men did 28 years ago was something else.
(This column is adapted from a Comment that appeared in these pages on the day of the 2003 World Cup final between India and Australia in Johannesburg).

Comments:
What was forgotten to be written was that three successive fours were despatched by Richards and then the fourth one was the catch. We were young and Kapil was our god. He could do miracles. With sometimes broken Hindi and English, he is god sent for us to reach moon by his results. His advice to Indian team to do the best and why not win the match. Only Kapil and his devils could decide it. I was telling my friend today that Kapil was not given enough chapatis because he was not a star. Dhoni embodies patience and perseverance. Inspite of poor performance today, Sreesanth would be a match winner in future. This is my confirmed prediction.
We need to admit that Kapil and his boys victory paved way for any person in India to start recognising the game as seen today. One thing is that in those days they had nothing called PRESSURE but only to go and do their job.But Dhoni's boys had taken this almost as an assignment--dedicating the game to Sachin..firstly and dedicating the win to the the 1.21 billion souls.These guys had PRESSURE truly .
The environment is different and surely this one is hard to win ,because Sri Lankans were adjudged more balanced side than Indians; not only on media but we ourselves felt that silently -which we individuals never showed off.So never compare this win with the 1983s. Both form different genre and they are not meant for mixing..the 1983 one is CLASS and this one is MASS...next is WHAT?
A narration par excellence!
same, i also thought after yesterday,s post match hype. 1983 is more, more more.......... & MORE bigger than yesterdays, in every aspect. Kapils Devils just beat every body, the unbeatable WI Jaggernauts( with Loyd, Greenidge, Hynes, Richards, Dujon, and the most fearsome Pace quartets you can imagine), Kangaroos, England etc. i dont think presnt team can match that feat. Still i remember, pooling money to erect antenna to recieve TV almost 200Kms away from then Madras up to Vellore.
The first win is always the most important win as it gives the recognition which even many upcoming wins may not. But in addition to that I feel most of us who were not privileged to be born to watch THAT NIGHT will be able to appreciate THIS NIGHT in much better way. We were elated at this win (which happens in our young days). In fact we also couldn't believe the WIN and ended up in pinching each other ...... took laps like mad on the roads and all the craze was on. For us (youngsters) THIS WIN is what matters the most. (Obviously, we do have respect and appreciation for THAT WIN but we fail to connect much with that while present one is a part of us now and 20 years down the line who knows may be one of us will be sharing about 2nd April Night is a article of this kind in similar lines).
A vivid picture of the time when such thing was achieved which we youngster always missed out. now, this victory would sure close down the highly used video clip(1983 winning moment clip) and new video clip took birth where Dhoni hitting six and Yuvraj grabbed Dhoni in emotion....a special thanx for such beautiful narration.
Truly some of the best writing I have come across. across genres. EVER. Thanks!
An excellent piece of writing,something that comes straight from the heart and touches your soul!
An excellant narration and evaluation. Without Kapil Devil's Pruduntial Cup Victory, The game Cricket would not have become so passionate in this Country. All prise to Dhoni and Team India. Both victories are to be evaluated separately. As Mr. Subramanian commented Sreesanth is surely a match winning factor. In T20 also we have seen it.
I was 19 years old when Kapil and his team won the world cup. I somehow felt that when Greenidge shouldered arms to Sandu's inswinger, he was giving way to India to get to into the path of victory. I was listening to the commentary due to the power cut in T. Nagar, Chennai when Richards was blasting every bowler. When the power came,
I was lucky enough to see that magnificient catch which Kapil took and the rest was history. In fact, yesterday our provision stores guy happened to see the 1983 video clips and he was astonished on seeing that kind of a crowd and he was asking whether this cricket craze is there from 1983 and i replied much much before that.Credit should not be taken away from Dhoni's men and it was a planned and well executed and a deserving victory for Team India.
I disagree with the author.I think we are mixing up the state of the nation in 1983 with the pure sporting quality of the performance. As a sporting achievement, the true battle against all possible odds has to be the achievements of Milkha Singh or PT Usha - poor equipment, poor training, no money, questions of what if you even win and only the family to support you??1983 was a truly great moment but it was not achieved at these odds. Cricketers were definitely in better shape than our athletes.1983 was played without any pressure and an underdog usually has an advantage to remain positive till the end.
Indian grit was supplemented by an unprofessional performance and over confidence by the west indies. No modern team of that strength would play as stupidly as WI did.1983 was a Kapil Dev starrer with 10 supporting cast others whereas in 2011, it was a real team win.
2011 WC was purely a battle on the cricket field. India had everything to lose. The way they bowled and fielded except for last 4 overs of the final was a professional performance that would have made the any champion team proud. then to recover from 31/2 and chase down 274 with such level of confidence ( There was pressure but Never did it look like India were on the backfoot).
This is one team that doesnt worry about the result of a toss and will win it again if the match was replayed. That is the kind of victory we must cherish.
Nirmal, i have to thank you for remembering the Kapils Devils. Perhaps nothing is going to match the feat they achieved. Lot of people now are either not born or been toddlers when it was achieved so they cannot comprehend. That victory brought the world cup out of England. I heard that Chandu Borde was denied a VIP seat in England so he swore to bring the WC to India. If that is true Borde also deserves a thank you. He was olden day Lalit Modi sans the alleged scandal part.
@Vinoth: Who said there was no pressure those days? Have you seen the menacing pace of the West Indies comprising of Garner, Holding, Marshall, Roberts, Holder etc ? In those days every team that went to West Indies came back with bruises. It was more than pressure. Did Kapils Devils have mental conditioning coaches, Vinoth? They didnt
Every rich cricketer today owes a thank you to 83 team. Without them cricket wouldnt be so commercialized because World Cup would have come to India. Probably they would have thought World Cup as a bad format.
What a beautiful article Mr. Shekar. Lovely. I wasn't even born then, but you made me feel like I was there. It's not everyday that I get to read the sports page and enjoy the sheer brilliance of the written word.