Azharuddin's unique feat
Partab Ramchand - 21 December 2001
Scoring a century on Test debut is an outstanding feat, even if the list
does keep growing. But getting a hundred in the first two Tests is
extremely rare. Until 1984-85, only three players - Bill Ponsford, Doug
Walters and Alvin Kallicharran - had achieved this. But in the same
season, a young stylist from Hyderabad went one step further and
accomplished a feat that is unique in the annals of Test cricket even
today - he got a hundred in each of his first three Tests.
The talent of Mohammed Azharuddin was spotted early by imaginative state
and zone selectors, who pushed him into the Hyderabad side at 18 and the
South Zone team at 20. A double century on debut in the Duleep Trophy in
1983-84 was his way of repaying their confidence. Playing for the
under-25 side against the English team the next year, Azharuddin hit
151. His elevation to the India cap was now only a matter of time. For
the third Test at Calcutta, Sunil Gavaskar was in favour of Krish
Srikkanth, but the selectors overruled the captain and opted for
Azharuddin; their will prevailed.
Azharuddin walked in at number five late on the first evening with the
score on 126 for three. A fourth wicket fell a run later, but Azharuddin
and Ravi Shastri then proceeded to initiate a recovery process that
culminated in a record Indian fifth-wicket partnership of 214 runs.
Azharuddin was fifth out at 341 after scoring 110, compiled in 382
minutes. He faced 288 balls in becoming the seventh Indian to score a
century in his first Test for India.
In the next Test at Madras, Azharuddin scored 48 in the first innings
and made it two in two by getting 105 in the second. This was a stroke-
filled knock, taking no more than 225 minutes, despite the grim
situation that India was in. He faced 175 balls, hit 18 fours, and the
105 was compiled off just 40 scoring strokes.
Could Azhar make it three in three was the question on the eve of the
final Test at Kanpur. It did not seem possible, considering that the
feat had never been performed in over 1000 Tests over a 108-year period.
But a week before his 22nd birthday, Azharuddin did achieve the
impossible, only to be hailed with descriptions of "an absolute diamond"
and a "cricket prophet." This time, he was promoted to number three and
walked in with the score on 19 for one. He shared the spotlight with
Srikkanth as the two put on 150 runs for the second wicket. Srikkanth
was out for 84 and then Mohinder Amarnath for 15. But Azharuddin carried
on and, at close on the first day, was unbeaten on 98 in a total of 228
for three.
The next morning, Azharuddin kept his date with cricketing history. He
first guided a ball from Cowans to third man for a single and then
turned a ball from Foster behind square-leg for a brace to go from 99 to
101. He was fourth out at 277 for 122. He had batted 374 minutes and
faced 270 balls, hitting 16 of them to the ropes. He added an unbeaten
54 in the second innings before Gavaskar declared. Till today, though
more than 550 further Tests have been played, no batsman has come
anywhere near emulating Azharuddin, further highlighting out uniqueness
of the feat.
© CricInfo