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Mission Three to Zimbabwe
A DRAW on debut (1992) was indeed an impressive one by Zimbabwe.
A handful of spectators turned up at the Harare Sports Club to
watch their team take on a mighty opposition which boasted of
some great names in the game.
Six years later, lesser number of supporters watched Zimbabwe
attain glory on an eventful afternoon when India faced
humiliation at the hands of a team which had just about begun to
realise its potential. The home team won the Test in a
sensational manner, opening a new chapter in Zimbabwean cricket
history.
In 1992-93, not many were sure of Zimbabwe's calibre of playing a
five-day contest even though one had known the team to be an
unpredictable combination in limited overs cricket. The contest
at Tunbridge Wells in the 1983 World Cup when Zimbabwe had India
on the mat at 17 for five was a reminder of the potential of the
African nation.
When the Indians arrived at Harare, enroute to South Africa, in
October 1992, there was a sense of complacency among Mohammed
Azharuddin and his men. The setting was pleasant, weather ideal
and the home team very keen to make an impression. It did make an
impression.
It was a brave decision by Dave Houghton to bat first. He knew
the playing conditions suited his batsmen but he also had high
regard for an attack which included Kapil Dev, Manoj Prabhakar,
Javagal Srinath, Venkatapathy Raju, Anil Kumble and Ravi Shastri.
Houghton led from the front even as almost every recognised
batsman who walked up to the crease helped himself to runs,
barring Mark Burmester. Grant Flower and Andy Flower hit half-
centuries, Kevin Arnott, Andy Pycroft and Alistair Campbell came
up with pleasing contributions but the stage was dominated by
Houghton, a thorough professional. A total of 456 in its first
Test innings was a splendid achievement for Zimbabwe indeed.
The century by Houghton was the inspiration for Zimbabwe which
shone in the field by almost forcing India to a follow-on. If the
embarrassment was avoided from a position of 101 for five, it was
essentially due to the partnership between Sanjay Manjrekar and
Kapil and a gutsy knock by Kiran More. The highlight of India's
innings was the century by Manjrekar even as Sachin Tendulkar
failed to open his account. For Zimbabwe, the star bowler was
veteran off-spinner John Traicos, who finished with five wickets
to mark a memorable debut.
Zimbabwe was the better team in that match while India showed
that even against weak opponents, it did not have the firepower
to excel on foreign soil. The Indians did not make any mistake in
the one-day match and won comfortably but it was the fact that it
conceded the first innings lead in the one-off Test that rankled.
No lessons were learnt when India returned to play three one-day
internationals and a Test. Once again Azharuddin was the captain
and this time the team suffered an ignominous defeat which left
the Zimbabweans of Indian origin livid. ``What a let down,'' they
screamed even as the Indian cricketers left the Harare Sports
Club in a sorry state.
The Indians began the tour with a win in the first one-dayer at
Bulawayo and then wrapped it up with another victory the next day
at the same venue. The third one-dayer at Harare was won by the
home team but it hardly mattered since the series had been
decided.What did matter was the result in the one-off Test, which
India lost on a true pitch. Of course the ball was seaming a
little but not enough to snare some of the finest batsmen in
business into submission.
Zimbabwe had two cricketers who had been drafted into the rank a
few days before the Test. Murray Goodwin and Neil Johnson
returned to their country of birth from Australia and South
Africa respectively. Houghton may have called his side a ``club
class'' combination but then it was this very combination which
stunned the Indians.
The Zimbaweans made a modest start with not one batsman reaching
half century. A century by Rahul Dravid earned India a first
innings lead of 59 runs despite some excellent bowling by Henry
Olonga who finished with five wickets. The target for India was
235 as Harbhajan Singh and Anil Kumble ran through the opposition
which at one point was very well placed at 209 for one.
India failed to make 235 to win and suffered a 61-run defeat as
the batting came apart with the exception of Dravid and Ganguly.
The cheap dismissal of Tendulkar in both the innings was a big
blow, as was the poor form of Azharuddin. With openers Nayan
Mongia and Navjot Singh Sidhu too failing miserably, India's
problems multiplied.
For Zimbabwe, Johnson had a memorable debut. He scalped Tendulkar
in both the innings and that was a crucial contribution.
``Incredible,'' he said in reaction as champagne flowed in the
Zimbabwean dressing room. The Indians had paid a dear price for
trying to get the runs in a hurry, and also for complacency.
India in Zimbabwe (Tests):
1992:
Zimbabwe 456 (Dave Houghton 121, Grant Flower 82, Andy Flower 59,
Alistair Campbell 45, Kevin Arnott 40, Andy Pycroft 39, Manoj
Prabhakar three for 66, Anil Kumble three for 79, J. Srinath
three for 89) and 146 for four (Pycroft 46, Houghton 41 not out,
Arnott 32) drew with India 307 (Sanjay Manjrekar 104, Kapil Dev
60, W. V. Raman 43, Kiran More 41, John Traicos five for 86, Mark
Burmester three for 78).
1998:
Zimbabwe 221 (Gavin Rennie 47, Murray Goodwin 42, Andy Flower 30,
J. Srinath three for 59, Anil Kumble three for 42) and 293 (Gavin
Rennie 84, Craig Wishart 63, Murray Goodwin 44, Andy Flower 41
not out, Kumble four for 87, Harbhajan Singh three for 64) beat
India 280 (Rahul Dravid 118, Sourav Ganguly 47, Henry Olonga five
for 70, Heath Streak three for 62) and 173 (Dravid 44, Ganguly
36, Neil Johnson three for 41).
One-dayers:
1992:
India 239 in 49.4 overs (Manjrekar 70, Tendulkar 39, Pravin Amre
36, Gary Crocker four for 26) beat Zimbabwe 209 in 49.1 overs
(Andy Flower 62, Crocker 50, Grant Flower 34, Srinath three for
35).
1998:
Zimbabwe 213 in 50 overs (Alistair Campbell 53, Craig Evans 34,
Andy Flower 30, Harbhajan Singh three for 36, Ajit Agarkar three
for 42) lost to India 216 for two in 42.3 overs (Tendulkar 127
not out, Dravid 64).
Zimbabwe 235 (Campbell 74, Goodwin 66) lost to India 236 for two
in 41.5 overs (Ganguly 107 not out, Azharuddin 72).
Zimbabwe 259 (Craig Wishart 102, Andy Flower 55, Evans 31) beat
India 222 (Robin Singh 57, Ganguly 40).
VIJAY LOKAPALLY
New Delhi
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