Kapil Dev Ramlal Nikhanj better known
as Kapil Dev is a former Indian cricketer. He captained the Indian
cricket team which won the 1983 Cricket World Cup. Named by Wisden as the Indian Cricketer of the
Century in 2002, Kapil Dev was also India's national cricket coach for
10 months between October 1999 and August 2000.
Kapil
Dev was the greatest pace bowler India has produced, and their greatest
fast-bowling allrounder. If he had played at any other time - not when Imran
Khan, Ian Botham and Richard Hadlee were contemporaries - he would surely have
been recognised as the best allrounder in the world. In any case he did enough
to be voted India's Cricketer of the Century during 2002, ahead of Sunil
Gavaskar and Sachin Tendulkar. His greatest feats were to lead India almost
jauntily, and by his all-round example, to the 1983 World Cup, and to take the
world-record aggregate of Test wickets from Hadlee. It was the stamina of the
marathon runner that took him finally to 431 wickets and only a yard beyond. He
might not have been quite the bowling equal of Imran, Hadlee or Botham at his
best, and his strike rate was less than four wickets per Test, but he was still
outstanding in his accuracy and ability to swing the ball, usually away from
right-handers. And he could hit a ball even more brilliantly than he bowled it,
with uncomplicated flair.
Kapil was a
right-arm pace bowler noted for his graceful action and
potent out swinger,
and was India's main strike bowler for most of his career. He also developed a
fine in swinging
yorker
during the 1980s, which he used very effectively against tail-enders. As a batsman,
he was a natural striker of the ball who could hook and drive effectively. A
naturally aggressive player, he often helped India in difficult situations by
taking the attack to the opposition. Nicknamed The Haryana Hurricane, he represented the Haryana cricket team in domestic cricket.
He retired in 1994, holding the world record for the most number of wickets
taken in Test cricket, a record subsequently broken by Courtney
Walsh in 2000. At the time, he was also India's highest wicket taker
in both major forms of cricket, Tests and ODIs. He is the only player in the history
of cricket to have taken more than 400 wickets and scored more than 5,000 runs
in Tests, making him one of the greatest all-rounders
to have played the game. On 8 March 2010, Kapil Dev was inducted into the ICC Cricket Hall of Fame.
Kapil
had a rather ordinary stint as India's coach for 10 months between October 1999
and August 2000. Att the height of the match-fixing allegation by Manoj
Prabhakar - a charge that was subsequently dismissed - Kapil resigned as coach.
Hurt by the betting controversy, he announced that he was leaving the game.
However, he returned from a significantly quiet period when Wisden named him their Indian
Cricketer of the Century.
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