Former India cricket captain Ajit Wadekar dead

He had led India to historic series wins in WI and England.

August 15, 2018 11:51 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 08:28 am IST

Former India captain Ajit Wadekar  at a fuction in Bengaluru in 2012.

Former India captain Ajit Wadekar at a fuction in Bengaluru in 2012.

Ajit Wadekar, who deployed his famous spinners to devastating effect and recorded historic series wins in the West Indies and England in 1971, passed away here on Wednesday. He was 77.

Failing health had restricted his movement and Wadekar was hospitalised in July too.

An official statement issued by Jaslok Hospital said: “Mr. Ajit Wadekar was declared dead on arrival at the Jaslok Hospital and Research Centre. He had been critically unwell for some time and was seeking treatment for the same.”

India’s greatest ever

Milind Rege, who played for many years under Wadekar in the Ranji Trophy, said: “Wadekar was India’s greatest ever captain. He showed the Indian team and Indian cricket how to win a Test series overseas. That’s why he is the best skipper.”

 

Dramatic happenings at the selection committee meeting to pick the captain for the 1971 tour of the West Indies resulted in him being named skipper ahead of Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi.

One of the five selectors did not turn up and the chairman of the then selection committee, Vijay Merchant, who had picked young players like Gundappa Viswanath and Sunil Gavaskar, used his casting vote to choose Wadekar.

He will always be known for the way he marshalled his spin resources, especially the likes of Bishen Singh Bedi, Erapalli Prasanna and S. Venkatraghavan who, between them, captured 48 wickets on the 1971 West Indies tour.

It was his tactical move to introduce left-arm spinner Salim Durrani which paved the way for the dismissals of Gary Sobers and Clive Lloyd in the second innings of the Port of Spain Test and eventually an Indian victory.

Tactical acumen

In the English summer of 1971, Wadekar employed leg-spinner Bhagwat Chandrasekhar and a strong close-in field, led by the sharp Eknath Solkar, astutely as India stunned the hosts for the first time at The Oval.

Wadekar also led India to a 2-1 win against England at home in the 1972-73 series.

The strokeful southpaw also starred in many victories for Bombay in the Ranji Trophy.

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