25 years since his record on Test debut, left-arm spinner Nilesh Kulkarni relives the experience
25 years since his record on Test debut, left-arm spinner Nilesh Kulkarni relives the experience
The highest total in Test cricket history.
The then highest partnership in Test cricket.
Sri Lanka’s highest individual score in a Test match.
Still, for an Indian cricket fan, the run-feast in Colombo during the first Test match of the series that started on August 2, 1997 is remembered for a unique bowling record. Left-arm spinner Nilesh Kulkarni became India’s first bowler to pick a wicket off his first ball in Test cricket.
Ironically, despite dismissing opener Marvan Atapattu off his first ball, Kulkarni went wicketless for the next 419 balls he bowled in the match as Sri Lanka piled on a record 952 for six. Sanath Jayasuriya (340) and Roshan Mahanama shared a 576-run partnership as India couldn’t pick a wicket on the third and fourth day of the match.
Kulkarni, now founder-director of a sports management institute here, recalls “one of the biggest life-lessons” he learnt during that week in Colombo.
It’s been 25 years since that week. Do you look at it as a memorable or forgettable week?
You always look at whether the glass is half full or half empty. I have always looked at it as a glass half full. For me, it’s a wonderful memory because I got the best opportunity to represent my country. I am grateful that I got the opportunity to represent my country and wear the cap with utmost satisfaction.
Former India spinner Nilesh Kulkarni recalls his unique Test debut on its 25th anniversary
| Photo Credit: Emmanual Yogini
Surely there wasn’t a capping ceremony around toss time during those days?
Definitely not. The cap was given to us before the tour started as part of the kit that was provided to us. There was no formal capping ceremony as such. Things have changed now, but in those days, the kit came to my house and we carried that.
Mumbai’s Nilesh Kulkarni seen in action in the Ranji Trophy final match against Tamil Nadu at the M.A. Chidambaram stadium in Chennai, on March 29, 2004.
Photo: N. Balaji
| Photo Credit: BALAJI N
Did you expect to bowl when India declared a few minutes before stumps on the second evening?
Marvan (Atapattu) and Sanath (Jayasuriya) were going great guns at the start. We had to bowl around an hour or so and the focus was to get a couple of wickets. I was not hoping to bowl. Rajesh Chauhan was to bowl the last over but Marvan took a single in the last couple of balls of the previous over, which made Sachin (Tendulkar, the captain) change his mind and get a left-arm spinner bowling to a right-hander.
While I was changing my fielding position, suddenly he called and asked me to bowl. Since I hadn’t had time to prepare, I wasn’t really ready. As I was handing the cap to the umpire, he told me I had less than two minutes to bowl the first ball. It was a blessing in disguise that I didn’t get enough time to bowl the debut over.
All I was thinking of was “don’t embarrass yourself, make sure you bowl the right ball and hit the right length so that the debut would be memorable”. I just did it. Luckily for me, Marvan was playing a bit of an aggressive innings so he wanted to go after the bowlers and dominate. He went for that cover drive and Nayan Mongia completed the catch.
Mumbai bowler Nilesh Kulkarni appeals unsuccessfully for an lbw against Delhi batsman Varun Kumar during the Ranji Trophy Elite Group cricket match at the Ferozeshah Kotla in New Delhi on November 24, 2005.
Photo: V.V. Krishnan
| Photo Credit: KRISHNAN VV
So what happened after stumps?
In fact, I didn’t know it was a record. All of us were happy. The day was called off. We were coming back and I was giving throwdowns to a few batters. I was completely in a casual mood till a few press reporters came down and told me it was a world record and I was the first from India. That’s when it hit me that something different had happened in my life. Incidentally, after the day’s play, I met Muralitharan at the hotel and he told me: “Well done, good luck for the next three days”. Little did I realise that I was not going to get a wicket for the next three days.
Wasn’t that one of the greatest life-lessons?
Absolutely. The vagaries of life. The extremities of life, I experienced them in my debut match. I got a wicket off the first ball, was feeling at the top of the world. The next three days, I struggled to get another wicket. Fortunately for me, just before that series, I had bowled a marathon spell for Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy final at Gwalior. Even in the semifinal against Madhya Pradesh, I had a fairly long spell.
Mumbai’s Nilesh Kulkarni, dismissing Syed Zakaria Zuffri
of the Railways, was impressive with 25 scalps.
So fortunately for me, I knew how to manage bowling 50-70 overs. You need to condition yourself mentally but you don’t expect that, especially in the first match. To get a taste of Test cricket in such a manner, having come in as the highest wicket-taker in the Ranji season. You go in with that confidence, you start with a real high and then you hit a low for the next three days. I share the same with my students.
Does Atapattu still hold a grudge against you for having entered his name in record-books for the wrong reasons?
Every time I meet Marvan, we joke about it and he always pulls my leg. In fact, Neluni, his wife — either they were just married or engaged — had come to watch him play for the first time that day and I got him out in the last over of the day. We always joke about it.
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