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Cricketer of the Year
This is a democratic award based on the performances of Indian Cricketers in International Cricket. This Award has a unique two -stage selection process. Min. Qualifications: The players to be in contention for the award at the end of the Castrol Year should have played a mininmum of 3 Tests Or 5 One day Internationals.
Stage-I: The performances of all Indian international cricketers are monitored in the International matches. The points are given to the cricketers for the runs scored, batting average, wickets taken, bowling average and catches held in descending order from ten points to one point for both Tests and One-Day Internationals. At the end of the Castrol Year, the top five players on the points table are nominated as the finalists for the Award.
Stage-II: The judges then evaluate the five finalists. The judges comprise of all the past and contemporary cricketers who have represented India Internationally. They vote for the winner considering the finalists' overall performance, contribution to the team and to Indian cricket in that particular year. The cricketer who receives maximum votes will be the 'Castrol Indian Cricketer of the Year'.
The 'Castrol Indian Cricketer of the Year' Award comprises of a Trophy plus an award of Rs. 5.00 lacs in cash or kind. The other four finalists each receive Rs. 50,000.
Winners
1997-98 |
1998-99 |
1999-2000 |
Sachin Tendulkar |
Rahul Dravid |
Sachin Tendulkar |
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Junior Cricketer of the Year
This award will recognise and highlight the performances of budding cricketers who
are exceptionally talented and who have performed dynamically in that particular
domestic season. It will be the first Award of its kind in Indian cricket. This Award
will not just encourage and announce the emergence of a new generation of Indian
cricketers, but will also offer a platform for the winners and nominees to be spotted
by the public, media and of course the national selectors. Cricketers of under-22
years of age and who are yet to represent India will be considered for this Award.
Their performances in the Indian cricket's first class season comprising of Ranji,
Deodhar, Duleep, & Irani Trophy and also in the India 'A' and Under-19 tournaments
like Cooch Behar, M.A. Chidambaram, C.K. Nayudu and Vinoo Mankad Trophy will
be taken into account.
Winners
1997-98 |
1998-99 |
1999-2000 |
Jyoti Prasad Yadav |
Rajesh Pawar |
Yuvraj Singh |
Lifetime Achievement Award
Captain Vijay Hazare with an outstanding career record in cricket, was awarded the first Castrol Lifetime Achievement Award instituted in Year 2000, to honour an Indian individual or institution that has made a significant contribution to the game, on or off the field.
His long-time colleague Vijay Merchant called him 'a disciplined soldier'. It was a description both literal and
figurative. For Vijay Hazare was a soldier, having served as a Captain in the state army of his adopted place of
stay, Baroda. But it was more as a cricketer, that Hazare 'soldiered' his teams; be it Maharashtra, Central India,
Baroda, or the national team, in an age of conflict and transition in Indian cricket, as indeed, in India.
Indian cricket’s first triple centurion. The first Indian to achieve the 1000 and 2000 run-mark in Test cricket.
The first Indian to score a century in each innings of a Test. The first Indian to score 6000 runs in the Ranji Trophy.
Hazare made his Test debut on the Nawab of Pataudi's tour of England in 1946. He stood second in the batting and
bowling averages on the tour, but felt that he had not done enough justice to his abilities. He continued to shine at
home, adding a world-record 577 with Gul Mohammad against Holkar, led by his old mentor C.K. Nayudu, in the Ranji Trophy
final of 1946-47. A year later, the Indians embarked on a tour of Australia, their first official tour as an independent nation.
Up against a formidable side, led by 'the Don' himself, the Indians were routed 0-4. But the fourth Test of the series at
Adelaide marked a watershed for Vijay Hazare and for Indian cricket. The Indians were tottering at 69-3 in reply to Australia's
674 when Hazare walked out to bat. He made 116, and with the support of Dattu Phadkar, he took India to a total of 381.
Hazare was back at the crease in no time, the scoreboard reading 0-2 as the Indians were made to follow on. Watched by
'the Don' and a bowling attack that comprised of Miler, Lindwall, Johnson and Toshack, Hazare batted gloriously to make
145, his second hundred in the match, a gallant effort in a losing cause.
It was by far the most outstanding achievement by an Indian Test
cricketer till that point, and it established India’s credentials as a team with the potential to take on the best in world cricket.
The next three seasons belonged to Hazare Averages of 72.16, 101.50 and 80.33 in the Ranji Trophy,
coupled with his consistency against the touring West Indians in 1948-49 and the Commonwealth sides, brought Hazare
into the reckoning for the captaincy of the Indian team. He got the job, and had the honour of leading India in her
first-ever Test win, against England at Madras in 1951-52. As captain of a despondent Indian team in England in 1952,
Hazare’s was one reputation the rampaging Fred Trueman could not destroy. He lost the captaincy to Lala Amarnath for the
next series against Pakistan, but regained it for India’s maiden tour of the Caribbean.
In the twilight of a great career, Hazare bid adieu to Test cricket after this tour and returned to his Ranji roots.
He scored the 10th double hundred of his career as his adopted state, Baroda, defeated the Services in the Ranji
Trophy final in 1957-58. Hazare bowed out of competitive cricket a couple of seasons later, but his services to
Indian cricket didn’t there.
Hazare had led India to her first Test win in 1951-52. And exactly a decade later, in his new role as Chairman of the
Indian Selection Committee, he had the honour of presiding over India’s first-ever series win over the same team.
During the same series, Hazare was also responsible for the inclusion of a remarkable 21 year-old, who had hardly
played in India, but had in him all the qualities of a winner; Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi.
Hazare received the Padma Shri in 1960, and was also conferred an honorary life-member of cricket’s most revered
institution, the MCC. The role-model of an entire generation of Indians now leads a life of tranquility at his home
in Baroda.
VIJAY HAZARE: STATISTICS
Test cricket:
M |
I |
N.O |
H.S |
Runs |
100s |
Av |
Overs |
Maidens |
Runs |
Wkts |
Av |
30 |
52 |
6 |
164* |
2192 |
7 |
47.6 |
444.2 |
97 |
1220 |
20 |
61.00 |
Ranji Trophy:
I |
N.O |
H.S |
Runs |
100s |
Av |
Overs |
Maidens |
Runs |
Wkts |
Av |
104 |
12 |
316* |
6312 |
22 |
68.6 |
2836 |
897 |
5765 |
291 |
19.8 |
Pentangular:
I |
N.O |
H.S |
Runs |
100s |
Av |
Overs |
Maidens |
Runs |
Wkts |
Av |
14 |
2 |
309 |
1212 |
4 |
101.0 |
326 |
91 |
662 |
20 |
33.1 |
Yuvraj Singh
Yuvraj Singh is the Castrol Junior Indian Cricketer of
the Year 1999-2000. He beat out Reetinder Singh Sodhi,
Ravneet Ricky, Shalabh Srivastava and Niraj Patel.
Even before being announced as the Castrol Junior Cricketer
Yuvraj made a spectacular debut for India against the powerful
Aussies in the ICC Knockout tournament in Nairobi in 2000.
Since then he has captured the imagination of the Indian
cricket fans with his explosive batting and athletic fielding.
He is touted as one of the brightest prospects of the Indian
cricket scene. After his all round performances in the limited
overs version of the game in the last year he seems to be
justifying the honour bestowed upon him by Castrol.
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