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Rohan Kanhai the most compelling genius of them all.

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09 Jul 2010 19:48 #1669 by chairman
I speak of Rohan Kanhai, of course, whom of all the sportsmen in all the many sports I have watched in my life I judge to have possessed the most compelling genius of them all.
When Kanhai came out to bat there was that sudden, expectant, almost fearful, silence that tells you that you are in the presence of some extraordinary phenomenon. Of course you could look forward to his technical brilliance. Was there ever a more perfect square cover drive? And has anyone in the history of the game made a thing of such great technical beauty out of a simple forward defensive stroke?

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23 Dec 2010 08:06 #13466 by chairman
When Kanhai was batting, every stroke he played one felt as one feels reading the best poetry of Derek Walcott or WB Yeats or listening to Mozart or contemplating a painting by Turner or Van Gogh or trying to follow Paul Dirac’s concept of quantum mechanics – one felt that somehow what you were experiencing was coming from “out there”: a gift, infinitely valuable and infinitely dangerous, a gift given to only the chosen few in all creation.

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25 Dec 2010 10:46 #13796 by chairman
happy birthday to the great man

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27 Dec 2010 16:00 #13937 by The Unity Tiger
For many Guyanese who followed his career from the mid-1950s to the mid-1970s, he was the closest thing we had to a non-political national hero. For cricket enthusiasts the world over, he was one of the most thrilling, inventive and accomplished batsmen of his generation. Sunil Gavaskar, India’s original Little Master before the phenomenon also known as Sachin Tendulkar, named his son, Rohan, in honour of “the greatest batsman” he had ever seen. Thirty-five years since his retirement from international cricket, he is still regarded by those who had the privilege and joy of seeing him bat as one of the all-time greats.
Rohan Bholalall Kanhai – for a long time he was mistakenly and mysteriously called Baboolall, or more popularly ‘de Baboo’ – will be 75 on Boxing Day. Along with, in alphabetical order, Shivnarine Chanderpaul, Lance Gibbs and Clive Lloyd, he is a contender for the imaginary title of Guyana’s Greatest Cricketer. But this is not another fantasy exercise to try to anoint any one of these living heroes as such. Rather, it is a tribute to a special man, who through a happy coincidence of genius, temperament and circumstance, helped to entrench Guyana on the cricketing map and served notice of an emerging nation brimming with talent and self-confidence.
The record will show that Rohan Kanhai first played for West Indies against England at Edgbaston in May 1957. He opened the batting and kept wicket, scoring 42 and 1 and taking one catch. In truth, he did not do much to distinguish himself in his maiden series. But this was just the calm before the storm and, in the words of CLR James, the greatest of all writers on West Indies cricket, “the future batsman was there to be discerned.”
Rohan Kanhai did not score a century until his 13th Test against India, one-and-a-half years later, when he hit his highest Test score of 256 at Calcutta. Fourteen more centuries were to follow and by the time he played his 79th and last Test in 1974, he had scored 6,227 runs at an average of 47.53. But mere statistics do not tell the story of Rohan Kanhai.
Discovered and nurtured by the legendary Clyde Walcott, after he had been recruited to develop cricket on the sugar estates, at a time of colonial disgruntlement and political ferment, Rohan Kanhai was very much a man of his times, who managed to transcend his humble origins and the history of Guyana, to become one of the most universally admired and best loved of West Indian batsmen. His rise to the top ran parallel to and, in many respects, mirrored the emergence of the new Guyana and the challenges it faced, from the clumsy attempts to quell the nascent spirit of anti-colonial defiance, through civil strife and the birth pains of Independence, to the optimism and brash confidence of the new nation and the sobering reality of responsibility and self-sufficiency.
Indeed, for CLR James, Rohan Kanhai was not only one of the most remarkable and individual of contemporary batsmen, but also represented in his batting, “a unique pointer of the West Indian quest for identity, for ways of expressing our potential bursting at every seam.” James, that most astute of social historians, was, quite simply, fascinated by Rohan Kanhai, and his seminal essay, Kanhai, A Study in Confidence, should be compulsory reading for all serious students of West Indian nationhood and the West Indian psyche and all aspiring batsmen. Of his dashing innings of 77 at the Oval, which helped West Indies to victory over England in the final Test of the 1963 tour, this is what CLR had to say:
“Perhaps I should have seen its national significance, its relation to our quest for national identity. Here was a West Indian proving to himself that there was one field in which the West Indian not only was second to no one, but was the creator of his own destiny. However, swept away by the brilliance and its dramatic circumstances, I floated with the stream.”
In trying to capture “the deep and indeed awed respect” of Learie Constantine – another cricket legend and authentic West Indian hero – for Rohan Kanhai and what he meant by saying that Kanhai had a tendency to go “crazy” at times, this is how James relates the conversation:
“Some batsmen play brilliantly sometimes and at ordinary times they go ahead as usual. That one,” nodding at Kanhai, “is different from all of them. On certain days, before he goes into the wicket he makes up his mind to let them have it. And once he is that way nothing on earth can stop him. Some of his colleagues in the pavilion who have played with him for years see strokes that they have never seen before; from him or anybody else. He carries on that way for 60 or 70 or 100 runs and then he comes back with a great innings behind him.”
Many will recall Ian McDonald’s story of love at first sight, of his being so enraptured by Rohan Kanhai’s batting – his timing, his elegance, his artistry – that he felt compelled to write immediately to his father to tell of this new prodigy from the cane fields of British Guiana. Even now, more than five decades later, he still waxes lyrical about the man who he maintains has to be included in “any list of the greatest West Indian batsmen”:
“I speak of Rohan Kanhai, of course, whom of all the sportsmen in all the many sports I have watched in my life I judge to have possessed the most compelling genius of them all.
“When Kanhai came out to bat there was that sudden, expectant, almost fearful, silence that tells you that you are in the presence of some extraordinary phenomenon. Of course you could look forward to his technical brilliance. Was there ever a more perfect square cover drive? And has anyone in the history of the game made a thing of such great technical beauty out of a simple forward defensive stroke?
“And, more than just technical accomplishment, there was the craft and art of Kanhai’s batting – no mighty hammer blows or crude destruction of a bowler, simply the sweetest exercise of the art of batting in the world.”
And our Sunday scribe harks back to James and Constantine when he writes: “You could feel it charge the air around him as he walked to the wicket. I do not know quite how to describe it. It was something that kept the heart beating hard with a special sort of excited fear all through a Kanhai innings as if something marvellous or terrible or even sacred was about to happen. I have thought a lot about it. I think it is something to do with the vulnerability, the near madness, there is in all real genius.” (‘Judging the greatest’ SN, July 4, 2010)
There really is nothing more to add except to wish this Guyanese icon a happy 75th birthday. Bat on, Maestro, bat on….

FROM STABROEK NEWS

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27 Dec 2010 16:22 #13941 by Kwami
when is clive loyd birthday? greatest captain of the windies 

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30 Jan 2011 20:19 #18792 by chairman
Dazzling - Rohan Kanhai rated among the best Dapper right hander dominated fast bowlingBy Nasser KhanPublished: 18 Apr 2010 Trinidad and Tobago Guardian
Batting sensation Rohan Kanhai

The Rohan Kanhai pub in Ashington, England

Rohan Kanhai was simply one of the greatest and exciting batsmen, West Indian or otherwise, the cricketing world has ever seen. From the time of his first first-class match in 1954/5 to the end of his active playing days in 1977, well over 20 years later, the dapper right hander had played a total of 421 games, amassing 29,250 runs at an average of 49.40 with 86 centuries and 120 fifties. He also held 325 catches during that time which included seven stumpings. For all these years his batting was most times described as stroke-filled with a penchant for the unorthodox…exhilarating, incomparable, dazzling, yet elegant. For his ability to dominate bowling combined with technical excellence and graceful elegant stroke play, Kanhai is widely acknowledged to be among the best. Never in the history of the game during his prime had a batsman so dominated fast bowling especially, pre helmet and all, with equal grace, power and elegance.
After quickly rising through the ranks of school and inter-territorial cricket he made his Test debut at the age of 22 against England in June of 1957 ending his Test career in March 1974 at the Queen’s Park Oval. The Queen’s Park Oval was the scene of many of his great Test innings. His first Test innings on our hallowed ground was a scintillating match top score of 96 in February 1958 when we defeated Pakistan, one of the many close-to-100-innings in his career. In February 1960 he returned to blaze 110 against England; in April 1962, 139 against India; in May 1965, 121 against Australia; in January 1968, 85 against England; and in March 1968 in the famous loss to England after Sobers’ double declarations, he plundered 153.
There are some cricketing images/photos/clips that are timeless and at least three of these involve Rohan Kanhai. The first is the infamous celebratory ‘hands in the air-leap of joy’ photo at the end of the first ever Tied Test match between Australia and the West Indies in 1960/61 after the last ball run-out (other legends in this photo are Garry Sobers, Frank Worrell and Wes Hall). The second is of Kanhai’s inimitable famous flamboyant falling hook-sweep shot ending up on his backside. The third is of a grey haired, almost 40-year-old Kanhai at Lords in 1975 winning the World Cup hitting a sedate, calculated 55 in a winning 149 partnership with Clive Lloyd the captain who succeeded him. This in an era in which the ODI format of the game was only beginning to take hold.
Superlatives have been unabashedly spoken and written about him by the world’s greatest players and commentators:
• CLR James: “Kanhai would hit Test bowlers in Australia as if they were league bowlers in Scotland… spasms of alternate toughness and brilliance…”
• Sir Learie Constantine: “… On certain days, before he goes into the wicket, he makes up his mind to let them have it. And once he is that way nothing on earth can stop him.”
• Sir Garfield Sobers: “Rohan Kanhai was a great player…—and he was rated one of the tops,” “a good cricket brain….earned the respect of his players.”
• Sunil Gavaskar who named his son Rohan after “his idol” rates Kanhai as the best batsman he ever saw during his playing days. “Rohan Kanhai is quite simply the greatest batsman I have ever seen.”
• Michael Manley: “…No more technically correct batsman ever came out of the West Indies than Rohan Kanhai…..” On his captaincy: “During Kanhai’s short tenure, he established himself as a sound tactician on the field and a firm disciplinarian off it.”
• Clive Lloyd: “...he was always such a big figure in my life, Guyana and the West Indies.”
• Jimmy Adams: “Rohan came to Jamaica and assumed the role of coach for both our senior and junior teams in the early 80s and continued in both roles for almost two decades….He maintained and demanded very high standards both on and off the field, and was instrumental for a lot of the individual and team successes that both Jamaica and a lot of us as players experienced during his stint here.”
Following a couple of strong domestic seasons he was selected in the British Guiana team in 1955 when nineteen, scoring 51 and 27 in the match with the Australian touring side. In 1956 he distinguished himself by hitting 129 from the Jamaica bowling and 195 against Barbados in the Quadrangular Tournament, followed with innings of 62 and 90 in the first of two trials which helped in the selection of the party to tour England. In his early days Kanhai was a wicketkeeper as well as a belligerent middle-order batsman. Indeed, in his first three Tests he kept wicket before Franz Alexander took over behind the stumps but still deputized as keeper on several other occasions. His best Test score of 256 came against India at Calcutta in 1958/59 followed by another double century against Pakistan on a further leg of that tour.
He played county cricket with much success for Warwickshire from 1968 to 1977. For Warwickshire he scored 1,000 runs in a season on ten occasions, his best year being 1970 when he plundered 1,894 at an average of 57.39. His highest score for Warwickshire was 253 against Nottinghamshire in 1968 at Trent Bridge. In 1971 during the Rest of the World series versus Australia Kanhai scored a superb 115 against Dennis Lillee at Perth. In brilliant style he combated Dennis Lillee bowling at his fastest on the fastest and bounciest of wickets at Perth. He captained the West Indies, succeeding Garry Sobers, on 13 occasions including to a 2-0 test series victory in England in 1973. After retirement the West Indies called on Kanhai as their in charge of coaching the under-19s before being assigned to the Test team a role he held from 1992-1995.
FACT FILE
Full name: Rohan Bholalall Kanhai, Height: 5’ 7”
Born: December 26, 1935, Port Mourant, Berbice, then British Guiana.
Batting: Right-hand batsman and wicketkeeper
More Info
• 256 at Calcutta, India 1959;
• Indian Cricketer of the year 1958/9; --Wisden Cricketer of the Year: 1964.
• One of Guyana’s top five cricketers ever: 2004 (West Indian Jubilee Cricketers).
• First captain of the West Indies of East Indian descent (a West Indian East Indian captain).
• After T&T’s Sonny Ramadhin, second of eats Indian descent to play for the Windies.
• In his first three Tests he kept wicket before Franz Alexander took over behind the stumps. He deputised as keeper on other occasions.
• He was West Indies coach between 1992 and 1995.
• ICC Hall of fame inductee.
• Pub named after him in Ashington, Northumberland, England
teams
West Indies (Test: 1957-1973/74);
West Indies (ODI: 1973-1975);
British Guiana (1954/55-1965/66);
Western Australia (1961/62);
Trinidad and Tobago (1964/65);
Guyana (1966/67-1973/74);
Warwickshire (1968-1977);
Tasmania (1969/70);
Transvaal (1974/75;
Rest of the World (1970-1971)

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31 Jan 2011 09:45 #18817 by chairman
• Clive Lloyd: “...he was always such a big figure in my life, Guyana and the West Indies.”

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01 Feb 2011 10:51 #19131 by chairman
CLR James: “Kanhai would hit Test bowlers in Australia as if they were league bowlers in Scotland… spasms of alternate toughness and brilliance…

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01 Feb 2011 12:45 #19198 by Googley
would WI won the 75 WC without him? :azn:

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03 Oct 2011 12:52 #51836 by chairman
will there ever be another like him?

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