Three also could tango!

Kumble, Raju and Chauhan re-live a fruitful union

March 27, 2019 10:46 pm | Updated 10:46 pm IST - NEW DELHI

Memorable reunion: Anil Kumble, Venkatapathy Raju and Rajesh Chauhan celebrate a ‘silver jubilee’.

Memorable reunion: Anil Kumble, Venkatapathy Raju and Rajesh Chauhan celebrate a ‘silver jubilee’.

It was a belated silver jubilee reunion for Anil Kumble, Venkatapathy Raju and Rajesh Chauhan last week. They met in Mumbai when Chauhan dropped in to meet his former spin-mates busy with commentary assignments.

“It was a pleasant surprise. We had a good time re-living our exploits,” said Kumble, the leader of the trio which came together for the first time in the 1993 Kolkata Test against England.

The match also saw S. Venkatraghavan make his umpiring Test debut.

Guiding light

“Anil was our captain. He would decide the plan of action. Raju and I gave him support from the other end because Anil was the match-winner,” recalled Chauhan, who finished with 47 wickets from 21 Tests. Kumble's haul was 619 wickets from 132 Tests.

For Raju, who finished with 93 wickets in 28 Tests, the approach was simple.

“I was the senior but Anil was the guide. He was the strike bowler and our job was to strengthen the process of winning the match. We had the backing of the captain (Mohammad Azharuddin) who always gave us the field we asked for,” he said.

Kumble, Raju and Chauhan were critical to India winning the 1993 Test series 3-0.

The team had returned from a disappointing tour of South Africa and Azharuddin was under pressure to retain his captaincy.

He responded with a breathtaking 182 and never looked back.

Ajit Wadekar, as cricket manager, had looked to India's strength in spin bowling and the trio of Chauhan, Raju and Kumble, who figured in 14 Tests together, did not let him down.

“We complemented each other. Raju and I would dry up runs at our end and Anil would explore angles to make dents. Anil was a champion in reading the situation and pitch. We were also helped by Manoj Prabhakar, who was a wily bowler,” remembered Chauhan, who played his final Test also at the Eden Gardens.

Camaraderie

“We loved each other's success. There was no competition amongst us,” said Raju, quite similar to the days when Bedi, Prasanna, Chandra and Venkatraghavan routed the opposition with some splendid teamwork.

The re-union was “fun” as Kumble noted.

They parted with a pleasant reminder from Chauhan, “India never lost a Test I played in.”

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