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ENG vs IND, Golden Memories: When Ajit Wadekar's India Scripted History In England

As Virat Kohli's men gear up to take on England in a five-Test away series in England with a battery of fast bowlers putting them on equal footing with the home side, exactly 50 years ago an unfan

IANS News
By IANS News August 04, 2021 • 20:10 PM
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While South Africa were banned from international cricket due to apartheid policies, England were considered to be the best side in the world at the time, and at the end of the Manchester Test, they had an unbeaten run of 26 Tests.

In the third Test, Dilip Sardesai (54) and captain Ajit Wadekar (48) added 93 for the third wicket while Eknath Solkar (44) and Farokh Engineer (59) added 97 for the sixth wicket. But India still fell 71 runs short of England's first innings score of 355.

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It was then Venkat ran through England and help set a 173-run target for India. Wadekar (45), Sardesai (40), Viswanath (33) and Engineer (28 not out) saw India through to the tricky total on the final day.

India needed 97 on the last day and had eight wickets in hand. They lost Wadekar early without the addition of any run but the others rose to the occasion, overcoming relentless 74 overs from off-spinner Ray Illingworth and left-arm spinner Derek Underwood.

The victory ended England's 26-Test unbeaten streak and was India's first series win in England where they had travelled on six previous occasions. Venkataraghavan (13), Chandrasekhar (13) and Bedi (11) were the top wicket takers on either side, sharing 37 of the 53 English wickets to fall in the three Tests.

Although Wadekar's India were whitewashed 0-3 three years later in the 1974 series, quite brutally, the subsequent tours of England always saw India put up a fight. They lost the 1979 and 1982 series by just 0-1 margins and went on to win the 1986 series 2-0 under Kapil Dev's captaincy.

India lost 0-1 in 1990 and 1996 and drew the 2002 series 1-1 before winning the 2007 series 1-0. The last three series have been nightmares. India have won only two out of the 14 Test matches and Indian fans will hope that Kohli's men can draw some inspiration from the summer of 1971, half a century ago.



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