IIRC, Kapil and Border were the fittest cricketers of their time. I think I read on cricinfo that he played every test match that India played in his career apart from one. That over 131 tests and 16 years is incredible considering the strains that a fast bowling all-rounder is put through which certainly took it's toll on his contemporaries such as Imran and Botham.Kapil was an amazing workhorse imo, in today's game he'd be breaking records all over the place
Yeah, thats just ****ing nutsIIRC, Kapil and Border were the fittest cricketers of their time. I think I read on cricinfo that he played every test match that India played in his career apart from one. That over 131 tests and 16 years is incredible considering the strains that a fast bowling all-rounder is put through which certainly took it's toll on his contemporaries such as Imran and Botham.
Just found it
Kapil Dev - 66 consecutive tests between 16 Oct 1978 and 12 Dec 1984 and then 65 consecutive tests between 13 jan 1985 and 19 march 1994
One test match over 16 years is iron man stuff.
haha....yeah.......remembering reading that one that Kapil just missed one of India's tests throughout his career. Was incredibly fit throughout his career. I don't know what has happened to India's fast bowlers fitness levels after him. Seem completely opposite to his.Yeah, thats just ****ing nuts
You have to imagine there'd have been plenty of games where he'd have had niggles etc, but just fought on through it. I guess he just really, really loved playing cricket, only explanation for an allrounder playing so much on the bounce
Shouldn't the word "disciplinary" be in inverted commas in your post?Kapil missed that one game because he was dropped for disciplinary reasons, IIRC.
Haha, yeah, it should. IIRC, Gavaskar had something to do with it.Shouldn't the word "disciplinary" be in inverted commas in your post?
Love this line: Bureaucrats in padded chairs only know the pain of piles.Kapil would have been one of the few cricketers who would have achieved the distinction of playing 100 test matches continuously had he not been dropped from the team. This happened after the second test match in Delhi. Kapil top scored in the first inns after things were extremely shaky for the Indians, but it was his second inns dismissal that put his head on the block.
He came into bat in the second inns when once again the Innings was in tatters. He smashed the first ball for six and tried to repeat the dose off the very next ball but was out bowled. India lost the test match and Kapil was held responsible for the defeat and he lost his place in the side for the next test match in Calcutta.
Kapil had this to say about the whole affair in his autobiography:
"Disciplinary reasons" the selectors stated tersely. Little did they know of the discipline required to come back after a knee operation and the torture one has to put the mind and body through. The endless pain barriers one crosses. Bureaucrats in padded chairs only know the pain of piles. They wanted a scapegoat and it was me. I was furious. I thought of giving it away. I had spent the last five years giving Indian cricket everything I had and then some more. I fought when we looked like losing.
Kapil was dropped from the Eden Gardens Test against England in 1984/85 apparently for playing a poor/irresponsible shot and getting out in the previous test. The guy who replaced him in that test was Md. Azharuddin, who made his debut @ Edens and scored a 100. There were rallies in Calcutta in support of Kapil, people came to the test match with banners like "No Kapil No Test". Gavaskar lost a lot of his fans on that day.IIRC, Kapil and Border were the fittest cricketers of their time. I think I read on cricinfo that he played every test match that India played in his career apart from one. That over 131 tests and 16 years is incredible considering the strains that a fast bowling all-rounder is put through which certainly took it's toll on his contemporaries such as Imran and Botham.
Just found it
Kapil Dev - 66 consecutive tests between 16 Oct 1978 and 12 Dec 1984 and then 65 consecutive tests between 13 jan 1985 and 19 march 1994
One test match over 16 years is iron man stuff.
Haha.Haha, yeah, it should. IIRC, Gavaskar had something to do with it.
EDIT: Googled it:
Love this line: Bureaucrats in padded chairs only know the pain of piles.
Who else other than Border has achieved that feat?Haha, yeah, it should. IIRC, Gavaskar had something to do with it.
EDIT: Googled it:
Love this line: Bureaucrats in padded chairs only know the pain of piles.
Of those that have played at least 50 Tests, in addition to Border, Gilchrist (96), AB DeVilliers (68*), Hussey (65*), McCullum (59*), John Reid (58) and Tony Greig (58) have played all the Tests their country has played over their career.Who else other than Border has achieved that feat?
So Border's the only one to have played 100+ consecutively?Of those that have played at least 50 Tests, in addition to Border, Gilchrist (96), AB DeVilliers (68*), Hussey (65*), McCullum (59*), John Reid (58) and Tony Greig (58) have played all the Tests their country has played over their career.
Nah, Waugh(107) and Gavaskar(106) too.So Border's the only one to have played 100+ consecutively?
Laughed very hard at this.Which means Kapil had nothing on Sir Beefy when it came to number of Tests missed for disciplinary reasons - another example of his allround superiority
Srinath didn't miss too many tests either iirc. Khan is only an exception to the rule and Ishant doesn't count because lets face it, he look like a punk who smokes weed in a cave all the time.I don't know what has happened to India's fast bowlers fitness levels after him. Seem completely opposite to his.
I thought you'd meant playing out the entire career in one go.So Border's the only one to have played 100+ consecutively?