Test Cricket Tours - India to England 1936
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Tour of
England 1936 Captain: Maharajkumar of Vizianagram |
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India’s second official Test tour Second Test-playing tour of England by India (April - September 1936) |
The Maharaja of Patiala sent
his agent Frank Tarrant to Australia in January 1935 to arrange for an
Australian side under Jack Ryder to play the Indian team in 1935-36, which
would help prepare the team
for the three-Test trip to England in 1936. India employed three captains in the four
unofficial Tests against the Australians: the Yuvraj
of Patiala in the first match, then CK Nayudu in
the second, and Wazir Ali in the last two. Under any of these captains,
the tour would have run more smoothly but Vizzy –
also one of the selectors – ensured that he led the side, including leading
India in the Test matches. Vizzy fell out with the natural
on-field leader C K Nayudu and team members split
into Nayudu’s or Vizzy’s
camp. Self-interest took precedence
over team spirit, and the machinations saw Lala Amarnath, arguably the best cricketer in the side, sent
home for indiscipline. India might have won the
first Test match at Lord’s after gaining a first innings lead, but succumbed
to the pace bowling of Allen and spin of Verity, being dismissed for only 93
runs. In the second Test match an opening stand of 203 between Merchant and Mushtaq Ali who both made centuries secured a creditable
draw, while the third Test was lost heavily. |
Other Indian tours Previous tour England 1932 Next tour England 1946 |
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Members of the Test tour party (17
+ 4) Opening batsmen: : Vijay Merchant, Mushtaq Ali, Wazir Ali Middle-order batsmen: Maharaja of Vizianagram, Cota Ramaswamy, Phiroze Palia, Mohammad
Hussain, Laxmidas Jai. All-rounders: CK Nayudu, Lala
Amarnath Wicket-keepers:Khershed Meherhomji, Dattaram
Hindlekar. Spinners: Amir Elahi Fast bowlers:Baqa Jilani, Shute Banerjee, Mohammad Nissar, Morappakkam Gopalan. |
Mohammad Hussain, Mohammad Nissar, Vizianagram and Wazir Ali did not take part in the
1935-36 Ranji Trophy |
Zonal representation C: Central (5), E: East (1), N: North (4), S: South (3), W: West
(4) Ranji Trophy teams Bn - Bengal (1) B -
Bombay (3) C Ind
- Central India (2) Hd - Hyderabad (1) Ms - Madras (2) N Ind
- Northern India (2) S Pj - South Punjab (3) U Pv
- United Provinces (2) W Ind
- Western India (1) Note The Ranji Trophy was launched in the 1934-35 season. Average age of team at time of
first Test match (27 June 1936) : 28
yrs 9
months. |
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Test Appearances made before the tour |
C K Nayudu
4, Wazir Ali 4, Amar Singh 4, Amarnath 3, Merchant 3,
Nissar 3,
Mushtaq Ali 2, C S Nayudu
2, Dilawar
2, Gopalan
1, Jai 1, Palia 1, Jahangir 1,
Amir Elahi 0, Banerjee 0,
Hindlekar 0,
Hussain 0, Jilani
0, Meherhomji
0, Ramaswamy
0, Maharajkumar
of Vizianagram 0. |
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Tour Officials |
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Selectors |
Dr H D Kanga resigned from
the selection panel because of princely interference and Sir Chunlal Mehta, Mr Justice Salamuddin
and S E West felt unable to accept the Board's invitation to join the
selection committee. The selectors were the Nawab of Bhopal (President of the Indian Board and
chairman of the selectors), the Nawab of Pataudi and K S Duleepsinhji,
whose place was taken by the Maharajkumar of Vizianagram. Duleepsinhji could not come to India to accept his
invitation to serve as a selector so Vizzy took his
place. |
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Selection |
On 29 October 1935 the Nawab of Pataudi, who had
accepted the 1936 tour captaincy, withdrew owing to poor health. The only
other realistic (that is, royal) candidate was the Yuvraj
of Patiala. That CK Nayudu, the best player in
India, refused to play at Lahore against the 1935-36 Australians implied that
he would not play under any captain other than Patiala. But the Maharaja of
Patiala withdrew his son's name, and that of his employee Wazir Ali, saying
"I cannot let the name of Patiala be associated with what is happening
now." Maharaj Kumar of Vizianagram
was then appointed and so achieved the captaincy over Nayudu. Vizzy won the
votes of 10 of the states to Nayudu's 4. "Ghulam Ahmed later had
the distinction of being the first Hyderabadi to play in the Test for India
in 1948-49 against West Indies. Though Nawab Mohd Hasan toured England in 1936 with the Indian team,
he did not play a Test match. On that tour Hadi,
who was an assistant manager, played a first class match".[Source:
The New Indian Express] Unavailable: Yuvraj
of Patiala. Not selected The following played in
the representative matches against the 1935-36 Australians Abdul Aziz,
J N Bhaya,
K Bose, S V T Chari, S M Hadi, Masood Salahuddin, Mian Mohammad
Saeed, S Mubarak Ali, J G Navle, M M Nayudu, D R Puri, A G Ram
Singh, Shahabuddin. Ram Singh missed selection, according to Edward Docker’s "History of Indian Cricket",
because of regional factionalism by the North against the South, particularly
Madras. Tour Party Announced
: 16 February 1936. Gopalan was called upon to play hockey for India in the 1936 Berlin Olympics,
but he chose the cricket tour to England instead. Gopalan, Hindlekar, Jai, Merchant, Ramaswamy
and Maharajkumar of Vizianagram
had not played in the 1935-36 representative matches. |
Time between selection and departure from India 48 days (16 February - 4 April) |
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Travel Bombay T Tilbury ‘Viceroy of India’ |
The team assembled at Bhopal on 1 April as guests of the Nawab of Bhopal, except for S M Hussain who was delayed
caring for his sick mother. Hussain
left Hyderabad by train on 2 April and joined the squad at Bombay. The tour began with sailing from Bombay on Saturday 4 April 1936
on the "Viceroy of India". The ship reached Tilbury on 20
April and the team took the train to St Pancras Station, London. Vizzy had left
the ship at Marseilles to travel overland and arrived in England four days
previously. |
Time spent in England 166 days (20 April - 17 September) |
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On-tour selection committee |
None. Vizzy
and the manager made all the decisions. There was no vice-captain. |
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Reinforcements |
The Indian Board had made
prior arrangements to call upon Amar
Singh, a professional with Lancashire club Colne ; and with Jahangir Khan and Dilawar Hussain, who were both studying at Cambridge University.
When Lala Amarnath was sent home, Nayudu’s younger brother, Subbanna,
was brought over to replace him. S M Hadi, the tour treasurer, and a
brother of S M Hussain, played in two matches. |
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Fixtures/Results |
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† not first-class . Time spent in England
before First Test: 68 days (20
April - 27 June) |
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Test appearances on tour |
3 - Amar Singh, Jahangir Khan, Merchant,
Mushtaq Ali,
Nissar,
C K Nayudu,
Maharajkumar of Vizianagram, Wazir Ali. 2 - C S Nayudu, Ramaswamy. 1 - Dilawar, Gopalan, Hindlekar, Jai,
Palia. 0 - Amarnath, Amir Elahi,
Banerjee, Baqa
Jilani,
Hussain, Meherhomji. |
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Highlights |
• Opening the bowling in
the first Test at Lord’s, Amar Singh took six wickets for 35 runs. • Faced with a first
innings deficit of 368 runs at Old Trafford, Merchant (114) and Mushtaq Ali (112) put on a first wicket partnership of
203 runs in only 150 minutes. • Merchant and Mushtaq,
opening the batting again at The Oval, each scored 52 in the first innings. • Nayudu,
struck by a ball from Allen, refused to retire hurt and saved an innings
defeat at The Oval. • At Old Trafford Cota Ramaswamy aged 40 years and 37 days was, and still is,
India’s oldest debutant. |
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Tour Summary |
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Return to India London t Marseilles Marseilles T Bombay ’Elysia' |
Vizzy returned to India on the 'Strathmore'.
C S Nayudu remained in England to study
law. Jahangir Khan and Dilawar Hussain returned to Cambridge University. Brittain-Jones
also stayed in England. The team left on the boat train from Victoria Station, London, on
Thursday 17 September and caught their ship home at Marseilles. They arrived at Bombay on the 'Elysia' on 1 October 1936. |
Time away from India 180 days (4 April to 1 October 1936) |
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Finances |
The tour made an overall loss of £1000. |
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Published accounts of the tour |
"Lala Amarnath
Life and Times: The Making of a Legend" by Rajinder
Amarnath [Sportsbooks, 2007] |
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Postscript |
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