History of the Indian cricket
team
The Indian cricket team
made its Test cricket debut in
1932 and has since advanced to be among the top four test teams in the ICC rankings
in each of 2005 to 2008. The team won the Cricket World Cup in Jun'1983 and Apr'2011.
Pre-independence
A few Indians
played as members of the English cricket team
while India was under British rule,
including Ranjitsinhji and KS Duleepsinhji, but India made its debut as a
Test-cricket-playing-nation in England in 1932 led by CK Nayudu, well before Indian independence.
The team performed well, with Mohammad
Nassir taking 5-93 and 1-42 in the match against England. The match
was given test status despite being only 3 days in length. England, batting
first, scored 259 with Nissar cleaning up the openers and tailenders. However
the Indian team failed to capitalize on their bowling performance, all out for
189 with CK Nayudu the top scorer with 40 runs. England
went on to score 275 and set India a target of 346, which always seemed out of
the visitor's grasp. India were all out for 187 and lost by 158 runs.
The team's
first series as an independent country was in 1948 against Australia
at Brisbane. Australia were led by Sir Don Bradman while India was led by Lala Amarnath. Australia cruised home, winning
the 5 Test series 4-0.
Post Independence
India's first
ever Test victory came against England at Madras in 1952. India's first series victory was
against Pakistan
later the same year. In 1954, India drew a 5-Test series with Pakistan 0-0, the
batting strength from India had come from Polly Umrigar and Vijay Manjrekar while the prime bowler was Subhash Gupte with 21 wickets in the series.
India's first series against New Zealand
in 1956 created a comprehensive series victory for India, winning the 5-Test series
2-0. MH Mankad was excellent in his batting, averaging
105.2 in the series while scoring 526 runs. Once again, S.M. Gupte held India's
bowling together, with 34 wickets. The remainder of the 1950s did not show as
good results as the start: India lost a 3-Test series to Australia (2-0), lost
a 5-Test series against the West Indies
(3-0), took a 5-0 thrashing at the hands of England, and lost a second series
against a strong Australian side (2-1).
During the
1980s, other players like Mohammed Azharuddin,
Ravi Shastri, Laxman
Sivaramakrishnan, Sanjay Manjrekar, Krish Srikkanth and Maninder Singh
emerged. India won the Cricket World Cup
in 1983, defeating West Indies
in an exciting final. In 1985, India won the World Championship of Cricket in
Australia. The Test series victory in 1986 in England remained, for nearly 19
years, the last Test series win outside subcontinent.
Then came the emergence of Mohinder Amarnath and "Mr. Dependable" Dilip Vengsarkar who was the undisputed No. 1
batsman in 1986-87. Sunil Gavaskar became the first batsman to accumulate 10,000
runs in Test cricket, and went on to register a record 34 centuries, surpassed
only recently by Sachin Tendulkar. Kapil Dev, a genuine all-rounder, became the
highest wicket taker in Test cricket, surpassing Richard Hadlee to take a total of 434 wickets, a
record which has since been broken by Courtney Walsh, Shane Warne and Muttiah Muralitharan
and has also been surpassed by fellow Indian Anil Kumble.
The emergence
of Sachin Tendulkar and Anil Kumble in 1989 and
1990 was to herald an era of Indian cricket that was dominated by stars and
individual brilliance. Sachin Tendulkar became arguably the best batsman in the
world, along with Brian Lara of the West Indies
and in 1998, Sir Donald Bradman himself remarked that Tendulkar batting style
was similar to his. Mohammed Azharuddin,
who captained India for most of the 1990s, proved a captain whose main
strength, if not his motivational skills, was an ability to stay cool under
pressure. Azharuddin's artistic batting however declined during the later years
of his captaincy, and his best innings during this time were mostly when
playing at home. The Hyderabadi
stylist's career ended after 99 Tests when he was banned for life after being
implicated in the match-fixing scandal.
Under his captaincy, the Indian team became virtually unbeatable at home, with
big wins coming against teams like England, New Zealand and Australia, but
their performances abroad left a lot to be desired. Also, there was a tendency
for Towards the end of 1999, the Indian team was in flux. Although they had
performed well in the 1999 World Cup,
the winter was marked by a disastrous tour to Australia which exposed the
Indian team's weaknesses when playing abroad, marked with a loss of form of
most of the batsmen, except Tendulkar and the newly emerged VVS Laxman. After Tendulkar quit captaincy and
Azharuddin was banned for match-fixing, Saurav Ganguly took over as captain,
and the New Zealander John Wright
became coach.
Ganguly's
captaincy heralded a new era in Indian cricket. It began, perhaps, in the
famous series against Australia in 2001, when Steve Waugh's strong team was defeated 2-1 in a
Test series after having taken a 1-0 lead at Mumbai. The series is best known for a remarkable turnaround
by the Indian team in the Kolkata Test, when VVS
Laxman, Rahul Dravid and Harbhajan Singh's
performance took India to victory after they had followed on. This series marked a turning point
in the Indian team's fortunes, and provided the team with the boost they dearly
needed. This was followed by stellar performances by the team when playing
abroad, with Test victories coming in Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka, West Indies,
England, Australia, and a famous series victory against arch-rivals Pakistan in
2004. The series in England in 2002 is billed as Rahul Dravid's series, as he
became the top scorer for the Indians, with centuries coming at Trent Bridge in Nottingham, Headingley in Leeds
and a famous 217 at the Oval in London. This was followed by a sensational win in Australia at
Adelaide in 2003, where Dravid, VVS Laxman and Ajit Agarkar scripted a come-from-behind victory
after the team had conceded 556 runs in the first innings. The series win in
Pakistan that followed was marked by Virender Sehwag becoming the first Indian to
score a triple century in Test cricket. Along with Sehwag, players like Yuvraj Singh and Mohammed Kaif emerged, making the Indian batting
order one of the strongest in the world in both forms of the game*. Their
performances helped reduced India's dependence on their top guns in one-day
cricket, and a 7-batsman policy contributed to India's successes in the
limited-overs game, culminating in their reaching the final of the 2003 Cricket World Cup.
In the bowling department, India unearthed a plethora of fast-bowling talent,
with Zaheer Khan, Ashish Nehra, and later Irfan Pathan and L Balaji leading the pack. The veteran Anil
Kumble became the highest wicket-taker for India after surpassing Kapil Dev,
and also passed the 500-mark in March 2006. His bowling performances abroad
improved considerably, and he played a major part in India's overseas
performances in England, Australia and Pakistan. Harbhajan Singh also provided
him great company in the spin department, and at home the two bowling in tandem
became a familiar sight.
- Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag were selected to play for the ICC World XI in the 2005 "SuperTest" against Australia.
In 2005, Indian
cricket was again shrouded in controversy. After a somewhat slow season marked
by a dip in team performance following the famous Pakistan series ended, the
coaching job passed from John Wright to the Australian Greg Chappell. Saurav Ganguly, whose batting form
had taken a beating in that year, was involved in a spat with Chappell over
whether he should be continuing as captain to reduce pressure on him. This was
followed by Ganguly being dropped from the team and Rahul Dravid taking over as
captain. Dravid's captaincy, which has now finished a year, has been successful
so far. Although there was a disappointing loss in Pakistan at Karachi, a
series of comfortable one-day victories followed by the recent Test series win
in the West Indies after 35 years have been the high points of the last season.
While Tendulkar, Sehwag and Dravid form the mainstay of the Indian batting, the
coming of age of players like Yuvraj Singh and Mohammad Kaif has also led to
the emergence of younger stars like Suresh Raina and MS Dhoni. In the bowling department, Irfan Pathan has become the spearhead of the pace
attack following the inconsistent performances of Zaheer Khan. New fast bowlers
like R. P. Singh, Munaf Patel and S Sreesanth have also emerged. With more away
series round the corner, it remains to be seen whether India under Rahul
Dravid, who is now one of the top players in the world, can maintain their
place in the top four of world cricket.
International Tournaments
Since advancing
to full Test Status and the creation of more and more international cricket tournaments,
India has slowly become involved in a number of Cricketing tournament's
including the Cricket World Cup,
ICC Champions Trophy
and Asia Cup. India's first two Cricket World Cups were largely failures, and the
team failed to progress beyond the first round. But India upset the West Indies
in the final of the 1983 Cricket World Cup
to claim the Prudential Cricket World Cup for the first time, captained by
Kapil Dev. India and the West Indies had cruised through the preliminary rounds
in Group B, while England and Pakistan emerged the victors from Group A. Most
considered India to be the underdogs in the group stages, and their win against
West Indies was categorized as similar to Zimbabwe's win over Australia in the
same World Cup. They were, in fact, quoted as having odds of 66 to 1 before the
beginning of the tournament.
India's performance
in the remaining world cups has been considerably consistent. In the 1987 Cricket World Cup,
the team advanced to the semi-finals as favourites, they did the same in 1996,
both times they suffered upset defeats in the semi-finals. India was less
strong in the 1999 Cricket World Cup,
and did not make it past the Super Six section. However they impressed all in
the 2003 Cup,
only losing two games (both against reigning champions Australia) and advancing to the finals before
taking a loss.
In the year
after their World Cup victory, (1984) India continued its new-found dominance
over One Day Cricket with a comprehensive win over arch-rivals Pakistan in
the final. They went on to secure more victories over their Asian rivals,
winning the 1984 Asia Cup with a victory
over Sri Lanka
in the finals. It won its third consecutive Asia Cup with a victory over Sri
Lanka in 1990. It continued its strong streak in 1995, again beating Sri Lanka
in the final. However, in 1997, a confident Sri Lanka riding on their
first-ever World Cup victory swept past a weaker Indian side, breaking the
4-tournament winning streak. India's performance dipped lower from there, with
India not advancing to the finals in 2000 and coming runners-up against Sri
Lanka in 2004.
India has also
participated in three Australasia Cups.
However, they have never won this tournament, but have come runners-up twice
ailed to make it into the finChampions in 2002 and were eliminated in the first
round of the 2004 ICC Champions
Trophy.
Recent history
India's
traditional strengths have always been its line-up of spin bowlers and batsmen.[2] Currently, it has a very strong batting
lineup with Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar and Virender Sehwag all being selected to play for
the ICC World XI in the 2005 "SuperTest" against Australia. In previous
times, India was unique in that it was the only country to regularly field
three spinners in one team, whereas one is the norm, and of the fifteen players
to have taken more than 100 wickets, only four were pace bowlers from the last
20 years.[3] However in recent years, Indian pace
bowling has improved, with the emerging talents of Irfan Pathan, Munaf Patel and Sreesanth and many more playing in the national
team.
Historically,
the Indian team has not performed as well overseas as it has in India. Since
the year 2000, the Indian team underwent major improvements under the guidance
of coach John Wright
and captain Saurav Ganguly. The
team drew a Test series with Australia in Australia, which is usually considered a tough
tour. It was followed by a historic Test and ODI series win against arch-rivals
Pakistan while playing in Pakistan.
India has had a
very good record against Australia and, before the 2004/05 tour, never being
defeated by Australia in a Test Series in India since 1969. This was the reason
for Australian
captain Steve Waugh labelling
India as the "Final Frontier".[4] The famous 2001 Australian tour of
India saw Harbhajan Singh
become the first Indian to take a Test hat-trick and started a good run for the
team, as India beat Australia 2-1. India also came runners up to Australia in
the final of the 2003 Cricket World Cup.
Since 2004,
India had not been doing as well in One-day Internationals. The players who
took India to great heights over the past ten years such as Sachin Tendulkar,
Sourav Ganguly and Anil Kumble grew older and did not maintain their form and
fitness. Following the series loss to Australia, India collapsed on the final
day in the Third Test in Bangalore in early 2005
against Pakistan to squander a series victory, and then lost four consecutive
ODIs against Pakistan. This was exacerbated by the suspension handed to captain
Ganguly for slow over-rates. Greg Chappell took over from John Wright as the
new coach of the Indian cricket team following the series, and replaced Kumble
and V. V. S. Laxman
from the ODI team with younger players. India's unconvincing ODI form
continued, scraping past a West Indian team depleted by industrial action in
the 2005 Indian Oil Cup
and a similarly depleted Zimbabwean team only to be defeated twice in the
finals by New Zealand, continuing a poor ODI finals record.
The tension
resulted in a fallout between Chappell and Ganguly lead to a confidential email
sent by Chappell to the BCCI being leaked, in which he condemned the leadership
and performance of Ganguly. After a series of high profile board meetings and
public jousting including some players, Rahul Dravid was installed as the captain,
triggering a revival in the team's fortunes. The Indians subsequently defeated
Sri Lanka 6-1 in a home series. An important part about this series was the
discovery of the young talent of the team, including Mahendra Singh Dhoni,
Suresh Raina, Gautam Gambhir and Irfan Pathan. The team also beat the Sri Lankans
in the Test series 2-0 to displace England from its position in second place in
the ICC Test rankings, but India slipped back by losing the high-profile[5] series to Pakistan. Indian team continued its good form in
ODIs, beating Pakistan 4-1 in Pakistan. India achieved the
world-record of winning 17 successive matches chasing the total. India
convincingly won England's tour of India
winning the series 5-1. After leveling the DLF Cup series 1-1 in Abu Dhabi, India
travelled to West Indies where they
lost the ODI series 1-4 to a weak West Indies team which was ranked 8th in the
ICC ODI Ranking. The series loss again questioned the Indian team's ability to
play away from the Sub-continent and the chances of the Indian team to win the 2007 Cricket World Cup.[6] The Indian team later clinched the Test
series against West Indies 1-0, the first Indian series win in the Caribbean
since Ajit Malik
in 1989.For the statistics of Indian cricket
team after 2011 world cup,
watch Indian
cricket from 2011. Recently Australian Cricket Team beaten Indian
Cricket Team in Border-Gavaskar Series with 4-0.
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