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On the morning of June 25, Lord's was bathed in
bright sunlight. England, by contrast, was bathed in gloom -- none in the host
country thought much of an India versus West Indies final, which they deemed so
one-sided that Englishmen who had bought their tickets in advance stood outside
the gates, hoping to sell them to West Indian and Indian supporters, for reduced
rates if need be.
Apparently, few if any were willing to listen to
India's inspirational skipper Kapil Dev, who the evening before the match
responded to questions about his team's underdog status against the two-time
champions with a curt "Don't write us off!"
24,609 spectators watched as Clive Lloyd won the
toss and, looking to exploit early life on the track, opted to bowl. The
decision proved right -- Joel Garner (12-4-24-1) kept making the ball rear chest
high off a length while at the other end, Andy Roberts (10-3-24-3) raced in to
bowl flat, and very fast. Sunny Gavaskar (2 off 12) went cheap, edging Marshall
to wicket-keeper Jeffrey Dujon in the third over.
More drama was provided by Krish Srikkanth, who
hooked Roberts savagely for four. The television commentators of the time nodded
sagely. "Roberts is setting him up," one said. "He normally bowls a slower
bouncer, then a faster one." Sure enough, the man was out on the fence, and
Roberts hurled down his faster bouncer -- which Srikkanth pulled off his
eyebrows for 6. He then added insult to injury by going down on one knee and
smashing the bowler to the square boundary for four, in course of what proved to
be the eventual top score of 38 off 57, with seven fours besides the six.
Such moments of derring-do, however, were rare.
India struggled against quality pace on a helpful track, and went in to lunch at
100/4, with Michael Holding accounting for Mohinder Amarnath and Larry Gomes
with his innocuous spin taking out Yashpal Sharma through a mishit drive in
successive overs after the two had taken India to a respectable 90/2.
Sandeep Patil (27/29) and Kapil Dev (15/8) both
looked good but fell cheap, and only stubborn resistance by the tail with number
9 Madan Lal (17 off 27), number 10 Syed Kirmani (14 off 43) and number 11
Balwinder Sandhu (11 off 30) made the eventual total of 183 possible. Extras,
again, performed creditably, weighing in as fourth highest scorer with 20.
With no runs on the board to play with, Kapil Dev
decided to attack, setting a field that would not have disgraced a Test match.
Balwinder Sandhu produced his biggest banana inswinger yet -- a ball that
started out about a foot-and-a-half outside off, to which Greenidge covered up
and raised his bat high only to see it curve back and hit the top of off stump.
Des Haynes, however, held one end steady and Viv Richards, batting with evident
contempt, swept, drove and pulled his way to 33 off 28 deliveries before Kapil
Dev imposed himself on the match. Richards pulled at Madan Lal and, thanks to
some seam movement, got the ball high on the bat. Kapil, fielding at orthodox
midwicket, ran back in seemingly lazy fashion, head turned to see the ball
coming from behind him, and plucked off a catch that only he could make appear
so simple.
That wicket, at 50, caused panic in the West
Indies ranks. The Indians, who had looked dejected while Richards was on the
rampage, rediscovered their fielding form, and Madan Lal and Roger Binny teamed
up to throttle the Caribbean cavaliers. The combination of tight bowling, alert
fielding and their own nerves triggered a collapse of 3 wickets for 19 runs,
with Haynes (13 off 33) mis-driving Madan Lal to Binny, Gomes (5 off 16) edging
Lal to Gavaskar at slip, and Lloyd (8 off 17) driving Binny to Kapil at mid off.
When Bacchus edged Sandhu to Kirmani behind the stumps immediately after tea,
Windies found themselves 76/6, and out for the count.
At this point Jeffrey Dujon (25 off 73) steadied
the innings with calm, sensible batting, ticking the runs off and steadying his
partner Malcolm Marshall (18 off 51) in a partnership that took the score to
119. Just when the game seemed to be getting away from India, however, Jimmy
Amarnath struck -- a gentle in-ducker had Dujon chopping onto his stumps, and
his disgusted reaction immediately thereafter indicated that he knew he had just
blown the match for his side. From that point on, it was no contest -- India
wrapped up the last three wickets for a further 21 runs, ending the West Indies
innings on 140 (52 overs) to seal an incredible 43 run win.
The result saw scenes of indescribable
pandemonium in the hitherto staid environs of Lord's. Kapil Dev couldn't seem to
stop grinning and sloshing everyone in sight with champagne; Srikkanth threw
convention to the winds and puffed merrily on a cigarette from the Lord's
balcony; Mohinder Amarnath, whose loping run to the wicket with a 'lucky' red
kerchief poking out of his trouser pocket had made him a figure of fun before
two successive man-of-the-match-winning performances in the semi-final and final
gave him the last laugh, finally took the red kerchief out and waved it like a
banner and board president N K P Salve, who appeared to have been the main
beneficiary of Kapil's champagne largesse, tipsily waved a Tricolour in
everyone's face...
It
was, as everyone acknowledged, a team performance par excellence. Kapil Dev led
from the front, topping the batting with 303 runs with an average of 60.6
besides taking 12 wickets at 20.42 and 7 catches including the match-winning one
of Richards in the final. But the real scene stealers were the medium pacers:
Roger Binny with 18 wickets at 18.67 was the highest wicket-taker in the
tournament, but even he was outdone by Madan Lal with 17 wickets at a mere
16.76. The economy rates were as remarkable: Kapil 2.92; Sandhu 3.58, Madan Lal
3.43, Amarnath 3.63 and Binny 3.82 made up five bowlers none of whom could be
taken for four runs an over; an outstanding performance by any yardstick. And oh
yes, one Syed Kirmani hauled in 12 catches and two stumpings, many of them
standing up to the seamers, to give the bowling teeth.
The win was to have other, more far-reaching
consequences. For the first time, Indian cricketers were to feel the taste of
money. The win was worth 20,000 pounds, for starters. Industrialist Swaraj Paul
added 2,500 pounds to the kitty. Amarnath hauled in 1000 pounds for his two man
of the match awards in the last two games. The board gave each player Rs 5 lakh,
to which Salve (perhaps it was the champagne talking) decided, impromptu, to add
Rs 100,000 apiece, all of it tax-free.
Salve's promise of extra largesse was also to
underline the abilities of two people who would influence Indian cricket to a
considerable extent in later years. While the board chief worried over how to
raise the money, Inderjit Singh Bindra came up with the idea of a Star Nite
headlined by Lata Mangeshkar. And the organization of the event was left to none
other than Jagmohan Dalmiya. It was perfect pairing -- Bindra the ideas man, and
Dalmiya the enforcer, were some years down the line to join their talents as
president and secretary, respectively, of the BCCI.
And oh yes, there was one final fall-out.
Humiliated by officials of Lord's who denied them extra pavilion passes, board
officials led by Salve vowed to snatch the World Cup from England and bring it
to the sub-continent.
As it turned out, that was no idle threat.
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