cricinfo.com About cricinfoblogs
Blogs home
First Class, first person Blues Brothers Rob's Lobs Tour Diaries Pak Spin Girls Aloud
Beyond The Test World On The Circuit What's New The Surfer It Figures The IPL Buzz


Cricinfo Blogs Home

« As far above rivals as Bradman | | India's billion-dollar Twenty20 revolution »

Gilly changed the way one looked at keepers

Posted on 01/27/2008 in India in Australia, 2007-08





"Once he started playing for Australia, he forced cricket boards across the globe to have a rethink on how they wanted their keepers to be" © Getty Images

Adam Gilchrist's retirement has got many emotional, some relieved, and plenty more appreciating just what the explosive wicketkeeper-batsman brought to the game. Anil Kumble, who has played against Gilchrist on numerous occasions, and who shares a mutual friendship with him, writes in the Hindustan Times that he was a different kind of opposition played and that it all boiled down to the fact that Gilchrist was a nice man, humble, straightforward, quite down to earth.

He also came across as someone who cared and made that extra effort to show it. I remember getting a surprise call from Gilly when I crossed 500 Test wickets. We weren’t playing after that and I was home when I got this call and the voice announced, ‘this is Adam Gilchrist’. Australia were touring Bangladesh at the time and he told me that he had been trying to get in touch with me for the last 10 days and that it had been really tough getting through from there. It was really nice of him, but he is that kind of guy.

Meanwhile, Sharda Ugra, who has covered cricket for years, acutely observes Kumble himself, noting a calm demeanor and pointing out how a scientific temper has been of more use than tempers of other kinds.


Over 18 years, he has only ever made news on the field and, on his day, he is a looming, fearsome adversary. But to an India punch-drunk on shortterm heroes, usually younger and younger batsmen in increasingly brief forms of the game, Kumble has virtually been invisible.

Read on in India Today.

Categories
Ashes (172) Australian cricket (538) Bangladesh cricket (16) Betting/Corruption (1) Bob Woolmer (8) Bowling actions (3) Champions Trophy (16) Charity (4) Commentary (54) Corruption (1) Cricinfo (2) Cricket books (4) DLF Cup (2) English cricket (481) Falkland Islands (1) France (1) ICC (56) ICC World Twenty20 (18) IPL (7) India in Australia, 2007-08 (64) Indian Cricket (356) Indian Cricket League (14) Indian Premier League (79) Irish cricket (3) Miscellaneous (114) New Zealand cricket (130) Obituaries (13) Offbeat (102) Pakistan cricket (62) Pakistan in England (55) Racism (1) South African cricket (56) Sri Lankan cricket (36) Stats (2) Technology (5) Television (18) Twenty20 (30) Umpires (36) West Indies cricket (81) Women's cricket (7) World Cup 2007 (133) Zimbabwe cricket (27)
Recent Posts
CMJ gets the giggles Ganguly's unfinished dream All sorts at Lord's Trumper about to stand test of time What's happened to the Bleak Caps? Playing a Broad bat A tale of two Sidebottoms The downfall of Marlon Samuels Leave team-building to the captain Why Noffke should face West Indies
Archives
May 2008April 2008March 2008February 2008January 2008December 2007November 2007October 2007September 2007August 2007July 2007June 2007May 2007April 2007March 2007February 2007January 2007December 2006November 2006October 2006September 2006August 2006July 2006June 2006May 2006April 2006March 2006February 2006January 2006December 2005November 2005October 2005September 2005
cricinfo picks

'Cricket should talk'

Anil Kumble on what it's like to be India's Test captain


'I didn't go out and bat as captain'

Talking Cricket - 2: Mark Taylor on Allan Border's legacy


Beware the football threat

Jayaditya Gupta on the IPL v EPL battle


'Why would you want to play five days for a draw?'

Talking Cricket: Mark Taylor on the art of captaincy


Rearguard to the rescue

The Numbers Game looks at the best lower-order pairs



cricket links
The Guardian The Daily Telegraph The Times The Independent The Age Sydney Morning Herald The Australian NZ Herald SuperSport BBC Rediff
© Cricinfo 2008
website stats