Kiwis fall and journalists flee (25th October 1999, Kanpur)
On the fourth day of the Kanpur Test illness claimed one
serious casualty. Coupled with the fact that he could not
score the match from the stadium, Duane could not muster
up enough energy to come to the stadium for the first half
of the day's play. The fact that New Zealand was staring
defeat in the face would probably also have added to
his inertia!
I reached the ground in time for the start and found my
place already taken. When I politely asked the chap
sitting at my place to move over he asked "Can you
prove that this is your place?" I was already weak
with over three days of flu. Still running a temperature
I had no desire to be polite or anything of the kind. The
fact that the desk had a sticker that bore the name
CricInfo on it in large bold capital letters made the
question even more ridiculous. In response I pointed
out to the sticker and said "Can you read?" That seemed
to satisfy the chap as he got up, went away and didn't return!
The stands were packed on the fourth day and though the
New Zealand captain Stephen Fleming batted well the
Indian spinners kept chipping away at the Kiwis. The wickets
fell at regular intervals and though Parore and McMillan
batted with spirit, the Indian spinners won the game easily.
With the Test match over a day early, most journalists
had fled from Kanpur. That should give you some idea about
how exciting Kanpur is. Even at the risk of reaching the
railway station without reservations, 30 odd journalists
left as soon as they could.
Meeting up at the unofficial press club of Kanpur - the
one browsing centre there is, we headed off to join
Rahul Bannerji (the Statesman) and Devnath
(Prajavani - a Kannada newspaper) at their hotel room.
Devnath is retiring from sports journalism in a few months
at the age of 58 and had enough stories about the various
exploits of former Indian 'playboy' cricketers like
ML Jaisimha and Salim Durrani. As the whiskeys went down
Rahul began to talk about cricket in the most mellow and
fuzzy terms. His analogy comparing the art of spin bowling
to seduction took the cake. Approaching 2 o'clock in the
morning we once again climbed aboard a cycle rickshaw
- our very own royal conveyance and headed back to our room.
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