Gupte in the eyes of those who played with and against him
Madhav Mantri - Good support from the other spinners from the other end and the poor quality of India's close in fielders - Pakistan 1954-55
Originally when the fixtures were arranged, they had decided to play on four turf wickets and one matting wicket. But just before the tour a team from there [Pakistan Services and Bahawalpur Cricket Association] visited India. In the festival game against the Bombay Cricket Association, they had no clue on the turf wicket, as Subash Gupte picked up all ten wickets in an innings. They immediately changed their plans and decided to play three Tests on matting and only two on turf.
Gupte still finished as the highest wicket-taker for India, but he was bowling so well that on turf wickets he might have been unplayable. He never took any time to settle into his length and would bowl the first ball on the spot where he intended. The Pakistanis tried everything to upset his rhythm.
In the first Test at Dacca, Gupte came on to bowl first-change on the first day. Idris Beg, the famous umpire, called the very first ball a no-ball even before Gupte finished his delivery stride. Gupte was completely stunned, as he had never bowled a no-ball in his career before that. In fact, he did not bowl no-balls even in practice. I went to the umpire and told him, "You are going to appear in the Wisden record books, for being the only umpire to have ever no-balled Gupte". It worked out well for us. He didn't call a single no-ball after that!
Ghulam Ahmed began the series very well, and, along with Gupte and Vinoo Mankad, formed a great trio. The main problem that all the three spinners faced was lack of catching support. In those days, the senior players stood in the close cordon, and the youngsters were made to run around the boundaries. The lack of agility of the senior players cost these spinners many wickets.
GS Ramchand - Good support, good fielders and great batting opposition on perfect batting tracks - West Indies 1953-53
In contrast to Ramadhin, our legspinner Subhash Gupte did very well on that tour. He got 27 of the 62 wickets that we picked up in the series. What made Gupte so effective was that he deceived batsmen with his flight, and had a good wrong'un. He got fine support at the other end from Vinoo Mankad, and the two of them were backed up by brilliant fielding. It was said that the 1952-53 team was the best Indian fielding side to visit the West Indies, with JM Ghorpade, CV Gadkari, Polly Umrigar, DK Gaekwad, Madhav Apte and myself......
Bowling to the Three Ws was no joke. They were merciless. You got one out and another W emerged. Our only hope was to keep them relatively quiet. Gupte and Mankad both bowled their hearts out; Gupte bowled 65 overs and Mankad 82 in the first innings of the final Test, in which all the Three Ws got hundreds.....
Gupte commanded greater respect than Vinoo.
To this generation, I would say that Gupte was as good as Shane Warne.
Erappalli Prasanna - playing Gupte in his final first class game in India at the age of 45
I was fortunate enough to be part of the South Zone side that played the Duleep Trophy semi-final against Central Zone in 1963. Subhash Gupte was in the Central team. It was his final first-class match in India, and it was in that game that I felt the effect of his genius.
On a turning final-day wicket in Bangalore, he was close to unplayable. I still remember how he flighted the ball and teased as I tried to bat out time to force a draw. We were lucky that he got just one wicket in that game. The way he was bowling, he could have wrapped us all up easily.
In my estimation Gupte is the greatest spinner the game has produced.
Despite his greatness he was a very simple man. Talking to him was an education like none other. Ask Sir Garfield Sobers about him, he'll tell you he was the greatest spinner he's seen. He had flight, control, spin ... everything.
Sir Garfield Sobers
Warne was also a Cricketer of the Century, but Sobers picked Subhash Gupte as his all-time favourite slow bowler.
"Warne's a great, but the best legspinner I've ever seen is still Gupte," he said.
"He could do things that I still don't believe all these years later."
Chandu Borde : Fellow cricketer and leg spinner - writing on Gupte's death in 2002
easily the finest leg-spinner I have ever come across. In fact I would go as far as saying that he was one of the greatest bowlers India has ever produced.....You should have been there in Kanpur in 1958, then you would understand what I mean. His guile and flight were second to none. Very few batsmen in the world picked his googly," said Borde. "On a placid wicket in Kanpur, against a very strong West Indian side, he made the batsmen dance. Nine for 102 he picked up; I'll never forget that day.