Vinod Ganpat Kambli

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(Running himself out)
(Running himself out)
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But even though he was still playing international one-day cricket in 2000, and indeed Indian first-class cricket until 2004, it was his lax attitude, not a susceptibility to the short ball, that scuppered his career.
 
But even though he was still playing international one-day cricket in 2000, and indeed Indian first-class cricket until 2004, it was his lax attitude, not a susceptibility to the short ball, that scuppered his career.
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=International career=
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NDTV writes:
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Kambli had a flamboyant style of batting and the left-hander soon became the fastest Indian  to complete 1000 Test runs. Such was his rise that he even breached the 200-run barrier well before Tendulkar, hitting 227 against Zimbabwe in 1993. In fact, Kambli hit two double-centuries and two hundreds in his first eight Test innings! The fact that he also had a safe pair of hands increased his value.
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Interestingly though, Kambli played all his 17 Tests before the age of 24 but loss of form in the last few outings meant that he could never make a comeback and finished with 1084 runs at an average of 54.20.
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His journey in ODIs though was longer with 104 appearances in which he hit two centuries and 14 fifties. As in Tests though, his form began eluding him in the 50-over format as well towards the turn of the millennium. There was emphasis on youngsters and Kambli began to get overshadowed by the likes of Yuvraj Singh and Mohammad Kaif. The year 2000 spelled doom for the batsman as he played in what became his final ODI against Sri Lanka, scoring just three.
 
=Running himself out =
 
=Running himself out =
 
Derek Pringle on Kambli:
 
Derek Pringle on Kambli:
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Kambli continues to play cricket for Mumbai, though an acting career in Bollywood - he once played a mechanic in a film called Annarth - appears to have stalled. India was still a conservative place when he first announced himself all gilt and flash in the early Nineties. Fifteen years on and the country, with its burgeoning economy, has caught him up and attitudes have changed, though too late to salvage his cricket career.
 
Kambli continues to play cricket for Mumbai, though an acting career in Bollywood - he once played a mechanic in a film called Annarth - appears to have stalled. India was still a conservative place when he first announced himself all gilt and flash in the early Nineties. Fifteen years on and the country, with its burgeoning economy, has caught him up and attitudes have changed, though too late to salvage his cricket career.
 +
 
=The bias against Kambli=
 
=The bias against Kambli=
 
That there was a strong bias against Kambli is certain. Had it been because of his somewhat backward (but NOT scheduled) caste it would have been evident much before.  
 
That there was a strong bias against Kambli is certain. Had it been because of his somewhat backward (but NOT scheduled) caste it would have been evident much before.  

Revision as of 23:22, 24 February 2015

Vinod Kambli with second wife, the model Andrea Hewitt
Vinod Kambli with first wife, Noella, an Anglo-Indian

This is a collection of articles archived for the excellence of their content.

Contents

The authors of this page…

i) Former India batsman Sachin Tendulkar takes different path to old team-mate Vinod Kambli

Sachin Tendulkar and his school friend Vinod Kambli burst onto the scene together in India but then went their separate ways

Steve James Telegraph.co.uk 02 Dec 2013

ii) Kambli the rising star who ran himself out

Fallen idol: Vinod Kambli had all the promise of a cricketing great

Derek Pringle Telegraph.co.uk 08 Aug 2007

iii) Linus Fernandes, Analyst, Bleacher Report, Nov 20, 2011

Shardashram Vidyamandir School against St Xavier's College in 1988

Steve James recalls:

The best batsmen just want to bat and bat. And schoolboys are hardly known for their obedience. These two schoolboy batsmen were going rather well. So well in fact that they had both passed their double centuries.

On the boundary’s edge their assistant coach was waving his arms furiously. He was demanding their attention. It was time to declare. The team total had surpassed 500 after all.

But the batsmen were having none of it. This was too much fun. They carried on batting. And batting a bit more.

By lunch of what was the second day of this three-day Harris Shield semi-final in Mumbai in 1988, one had 349 not out and his friend 326 not out.

But they knew they had disobeyed instructions. Their coach, Ramakant Achrekar, a man they both respected hugely, was not present, as he had to work that day. Instead it was his assistant, Laxman Chavan, whose instructions had been disregarded.

At the interval Chavan told the pair of youngsters that they should phone Achrekar. Their coach asked the score. Over 700 came the reply. “Declare!” screamed Achrekar, according to Vaibhav Purandare, an Indian author. [Vaibhav Purandare was part of the opposite team (St Xavier's School)]

“Sir, I’m batting on 349,” said the one young man by the name of Vinod Kambli, before the phone was passed to the other, the captain.

Sachin Tendulkar was his name. You may have heard of him. “Sir, Vinod needs one run to complete his 350, we’ll declare as soon as he gets out,” he said.

“Declare!” shouted Achrekar, and for once Tendulkar was in trouble.

But he and Kambli had already put on an unbeaten 664 for the third wicket for Shardashram School against St Xavier’s College, and two stars of Indian cricket had been born.

A world-beating initial career

In 1989, England had a warm-up game for the Nehru Cup in Delhi, and both played. So did Angus Fraser, Phil DeFreitas, Eddie Hemmings and me. Thankfully, it was a 50-over match and we managed to win, but if memory serves both made unbeaten half-centuries - remarkable given Tendulkar was just 16 and Kambli 17.

Within a month, Tendulkar was making his Test debut against Pakistan, a rough baptism that saw him struck on the head. Kambli had to wait another three years to join him in the Test team, a gap that caused him to later quip that "while Sachin had taken the elevator, he'd taken the stairs." It seemed a neat soundbite, though some saw it as a coded barb over the way caste dictates opportunity in India - Tendulkar coming from lofty stock, Kambli from lower-middle.

Kambli soon made up for lost time, carving England's confused bowling attack for a double hundred in his third Test. In the team meeting beforehand, one of England's pace bowlers had piped up that he could get him out with an orange. When Kambli reached 200 in front of an ecstatic home crowd in Mumbai, Robin Smith turned to the bowler in question and said - "don't you think it's time you pulled out that bloody orange."

After seven Tests, Kambli had scored 773 runs at an average of 113.2, including a washed-out match in which he did not bat. Only cricketing icons Don Bradman, Sunil Gavaskar, Everton Weekes, George Headley and Frank Worrell have scored more. Suddenly Little Lord Sachin was not the only deity in town.

Kambli makes 224, then 227

Steve James adds:

By 1993 Kambli and Tendulkar were on the top floor together in the Indian Test team, with Kambli at three and Tendulkar at four in a series at home to England. In the third Test in Mumbai, Kambli made 224, still the highest Test score by an Indian against England.

In his next Test against Zimbabwe, the left-handed Kambli made 227. Tendulkar was not to score his first Test double-hundred for another six years.

In his next two Tests against Sri Lanka Kambli made two centuries. But after another 10 Tests he was dropped. That was in 1995, and he was aged just 23. Despite averaging 54.2, he never played another Test.

But even though he was still playing international one-day cricket in 2000, and indeed Indian first-class cricket until 2004, it was his lax attitude, not a susceptibility to the short ball, that scuppered his career.

International career

NDTV writes:

Kambli had a flamboyant style of batting and the left-hander soon became the fastest Indian to complete 1000 Test runs. Such was his rise that he even breached the 200-run barrier well before Tendulkar, hitting 227 against Zimbabwe in 1993. In fact, Kambli hit two double-centuries and two hundreds in his first eight Test innings! The fact that he also had a safe pair of hands increased his value.

Interestingly though, Kambli played all his 17 Tests before the age of 24 but loss of form in the last few outings meant that he could never make a comeback and finished with 1084 runs at an average of 54.20.

His journey in ODIs though was longer with 104 appearances in which he hit two centuries and 14 fifties. As in Tests though, his form began eluding him in the 50-over format as well towards the turn of the millennium. There was emphasis on youngsters and Kambli began to get overshadowed by the likes of Yuvraj Singh and Mohammad Kaif. The year 2000 spelled doom for the batsman as he played in what became his final ODI against Sri Lanka, scoring just three.

Running himself out

Derek Pringle on Kambli:

A rough diamond called Vinod Kambli was a batsman who started out every bit as gifted as the little master Sachin Tendulkar.

Sport is littered with tales of what might have been, of talent flushed down the gurgler. But Kambli's story, particularly when placed beside that of his childhood friend, Tendulkar, is a modern tale of how quickly sport's shining paths can lead to a dead end once the small details are ignored.

A year older than Tendulkar, Kambli was every bit as much the schoolboy prodigy as his fluffy-haired chum. When the pair played for Shardashram Vidyamandir School against St Xavier's College in 1988, they shared an unbeaten stand of 664.

In terms of run-making talent, there wasn't much between them, though Kambli's left-handedness suggested a flashiness of which the right-handed and right-minded Tendulkar could never be accused.

Tendulkar was always the model professional; Kambli was always the classic larrikin, with his golden earrings, funky haircuts (although the pate is now bald) and extravagant lifestyle.

Maybe Kambli was before his time because he might have fitted in nicely in the indulgent excesses of the Indian Premier League now. He has a fashion model wife [having had another glamorous wife before that]

Success and the adoration that breeds can bring unimaginable riches in India. But you can play the game two ways. Be aloof but businesslike and watch the money roll in, as Tendulkar has, or get sucked into the fame game, something Kambli, with his sudden passion for bling and booze, did rather too enthusiastically for those running Indian cricket.

When it came, his fall was sudden and permanent. A weakness against short-pitched fast bowling (he kept flashing catches to gully), played its part, but his off-the-field lifestyle clearly irked those in charge. Most batsmen sporting an average of 54.2 - especially ones good enough to cane Shane Warne for 22 in an over - are given the chance to iron out any flaws. Not Kambli, and while his one-day career stuttered on until the 2000 ICC Trophy in Nairobi, he never played another Test.

Kambli continues to play cricket for Mumbai, though an acting career in Bollywood - he once played a mechanic in a film called Annarth - appears to have stalled. India was still a conservative place when he first announced himself all gilt and flash in the early Nineties. Fifteen years on and the country, with its burgeoning economy, has caught him up and attitudes have changed, though too late to salvage his cricket career.

The bias against Kambli

That there was a strong bias against Kambli is certain. Had it been because of his somewhat backward (but NOT scheduled) caste it would have been evident much before.

Linus Fernandes, Analyst, correctly argued in Bleacher Report, Nov 20, 2011 that India Cricket: Vinod Kambli's Allegations Make Him a Pariah.

That it were his allegations rather than his caste is obvious from the fact that Kambli rattled more Pakistanis and India’s Azharuddin than ‘caste-Hindus.’ Kambli, then 24 or 25 had a hunch that the 1996 semifinal could have been fixed. He expressed this view fifteen years later.

Mohammad Azharuddin hit back with a snide remark about Kambli’s ‘lack of background.' ICC President Sharad Pawar and BCCI Vice-President Rajiv Shukla heaped scorn on the southpaw. Mazhar Majeed’s "links" to Yuvraj Singh and Harbhajan Singh were rubbished by both parties.

However, on both sides of the border there also were decent people who rallied in support of Kambli.

Vaibhav Purandare [a Deshastha Brahmin], in a hard-hitting article for the Hindustan Times, wrote, “To point to his ‘lack of background' is to ridicule his poverty and his struggle against the odds.”

Former Pakistan skipper, Rashid Latif and former BCCI vice president Sunil Dev supported Kambli.

Latif said: “I don’t see what’s wrong in holding a probe even if Kambli has come out with claims after 15 years. If there was no hanky panky, what has the BCCI or Pawar to fear?”

But this, rather than caste, made Kambli a pariah with the Indian cricketing establishment.

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