What's new

"When Imran Khan was captain, he didn’t bother about selectors" : Bishen Singh Bedi

MenInG

PakPassion Administrator
Staff member
Joined
Oct 2, 2004
Runs
217,977
SANDEEP DWIVEDI: The West Indies series is on. You were part of the team that won the first Test against West Indies, in 1971. How do you see the change in cricket since then, both from the perspective of India and the West Indies?

I feel very sorry for the West Indians. The kind of cricket that they played, ‘calypso’ cricket… Recently, I read in your paper, ‘collapso’ cricket. It’s very sad, unfortunate. When I made my debut against the West Indians… I had many friends among them as well… I used to revere some of them… If you really want to know how things have changed… The perception of cricket today amongst the players and spectators has changed. But the game is still the same. I suppose the actors, directors and producers have changed.


SANDEEP DWIVEDI: Their fast bowling was quite impressive then. In the current series, the pace of Indian bowlers is being appreciated. How has our bowling changed over the years?

We are looking very good as a side. Let’s not forget that the opposition that India is facing now — Sri Lanka, West Indies or South Africa — is not up to the mark. Indians have done a magnificent job, capitalised on every opportunity. They have shown remarkable commitment. I may not be a great fan of Virat Kohli’s captaincy or his behaviour on the field, but I have enormous respect for his commitment and intensity. I can’t think of any other Indian today, in any walk of life, who is as intense as Virat Kohli.

SANDEEP DWIVEDI: How do you rate him as a leader?

I think he is a great individual player and it would be awfully difficult to expect the rest of the guys to reach to his standard of commitment and intensity. There are guys who are reasonably laid back and for them to reach to his level of fitness, eating habits… Not everybody can do it.

SANDEEP DWIVEDI: It seems that Virat Kohli can get the coach he wants, the team he wants, the playing 11 he wants. Is that good for Indian cricket?

The captain is supposed to be a co-opted member of the selection committee. I can’t think of another captain who has enjoyed so many perks, in the sense, so much freedom to do and get what he wants. Not even Tiger Pataudi (Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi, former Indian captain).

SANDEEP DWIVEDI: Has any other captain enjoyed such power?… Maybe in Pakistan?

Pakistan, yes, Imran (Khan). When he was captain, he didn’t bother about selectors. But he was a totally different leader. I can’t imagine Virat Kohli jumping into politics and becoming prime minister. That won’t happen. Imran could do it.

SANDEEP DWIVEDI: How tough is it to be India captain? Has it become more difficult now?

It appears so. Virat is taking everything in his stride, and he is doing a wonderful job. He seems to be in control of just about every situation. He is backed up very nicely by the head coach. He is himself delivering as a player.

SANDEEP DWIVEDI: In 1978, you went to Pakistan on a friendship tour. Can you tell us about your experience?

It was goodwill tour. The then prime minister, Morarji Desai, tried to fire the gun from the cricketers’ shoulders. We didn’t know what lay ahead of us until we got there and discovered for ourselves how tough it was. They were a better side; much better prepared than us. We lost to a better team, but we also lost in a very, very hostile atmosphere, terribly hostile. The crowd, the media, everybody.

This game we played in Rawalpindi, a three-day match. I remember I had taken the day off. Sunil Gavaskar was captain. On the third day, something happened on the field between him and Sarfraz Nawaz (Pakistani cricketer). Sunil just killed the game, he decided not to declare. In the evening we had a meeting with the then Pakistan president General Zia-ul-Haq. It was our first meeting. We had lined up in the presidential palace. He had been briefed that Indians are spoilsports, rondu hain, they have not come here to play but only to cry.

Zia was a very grim man. He came walking, it was a wooden floor. Tak, tak, tak (the sound of his walk). From a distance he yelled to me, ‘Bedi sahab, why didn’t you declare? No, No, No… If I was captain I would have declared at 12 o’clock.’ I told him, ‘General, I wasn’t even playing the game.’ Then we shook hands and he moved on. I called him back again. I said, “General, excuse me, I don’t know how I could have declared at 12 o’clock… Terribly delicate timing for me.’ He had a massive laugh. The whole hall couldn’t believe that this man had a sense of humour. After that, the media got after me. They wanted to know what I had said to him that made him laugh so much. I said nothing. But then they pestered me, I said, I just asked the General, ‘Sardar banana hai (Do you want to become a Sardar)?’

From then onwards, we became decently good friends. After that tour got over, when I went to Pakistan again, I got an opportunity to read the Dawn newspaper in Karachi. There I read a small story about somebody asking for blood. It was my blood group. I rang him up. I told him if you do not have any problem with taking blood from an Indian, you can take my blood. The doctors came and asked me if I wanted to tell the media about it. I said no, I am a donor, you can just take my blood. But the news was flashed all over Pakistan.

General Zia was very impressed… Just by donating one pint of blood, I had the entire Pakistan at my feet, literally. The taxi guys didn’t take money from me. People did not let me pay when I bought things from their shops. Somebody told me, you are so popular here, if you fight an election, you will win. I asked, do elections happen here (laughs)?

On one occasion, when India was playing Pakistan in a Test match in Jaipur, General Zia decided to come and watch the game. Rajiv Gandhi wasn’t prepared to receive him, but he came. He sat in a small VIP box. He got to know that I was in the press box. I was writing then, I think, for The Indian Express. He met me and hugged me. He told me, ‘Arre Bedi sahab, you have greyed.’ I said it was a very natural phenomenon that when you grow old you grey, unless you are president of India. At the time, Giani Zail Singh was the president of India. He wanted to laugh but stopped because of protocol.

SANDEEP DWIVEDI: You also had a good equation with Indira Gandhi. You sent her a telegram after she won an election…

When we beat Australia for the first time, in Melbourne, the first telegram I got was from Mrs Indira Gandhi. She was very alert. The whole team was very happy. Then when we were in Pakistan, we got the news that she had won in Chikmagalur. I sent a telegram. It backfired. We sent it without any political inclination. But we lost (the match in Pakistan)… When we landed in Bombay, there was no welcome, no salaam-dua… I was asked why did you need to send the telegram? I said which telegram? Then I was told that since I had sent the telegram, I had been removed from the captaincy.

SANDEEP DWIVEDI: What do you make of politicians being involved in cricket? Are they important for the ecosystem?

Politicians in sport, not just cricket, are a necessary evil. By and large, they have created such a situation that everybody, cricketer, badminton player, footballer, everybody has to come to their door. Earlier we were slaves of the British, now we are slaves of our own hukmaran (rulers). This slavery is not leaving us.

SANDEEP DWIVEDI: Should there be a line drawn somewhere when it comes to politicians in sports?

How do you decide the line? Who decides? Justice (retd) R M Lodha tried. How many years has it been since those recommendations? It’s stagnating. For all the recommendations that Justice Lodha made, he deserved the highest civilian award in the country. He went into great depth, studied the constitution of all cricket boards in the world.

What was the result?…

I feel for the country at times. We are so helplessly hopeless, or hopelessly helpless… kya kare insaan (What does one do)? Then, there is this chalta hai (everything goes) concept which allows us to go with the tide instead of stepping up. We allow that to happen.

MIHIR VASAVDA: What do you have to say about sportsmen, not just cricketers, often toeing the government’s line, not raising questions?

I don’t think they are pro-establishment, but they give the impression that they are. They will say something in front of you, another thing behind your back. When they are playing, they are looking up to officials, and even when they are done playing, they are looking for some crumbs to be thrown at them by the officials.

I am not terribly enamoured with my own fraternity. In fact, when I was called to meet Justice Lodha, my opening sentence to him was, ‘Your field is judiciary, my field is cricket. I see you guys are trespassing into my territory.’ Justice Lodha said, ‘No, Mr Bedi, No.’ I said, ‘Hang on sir, I haven’t finished. My fraternity has given you sufficient reason to do so. I am ashamed.’

DAKSH PANWAR: What is your view on the proposal to rename the Feroz Shah Kotla stadium in Delhi after the late Arun Jaitley?

I haven’t seen anything more preposterous — the ground will be called Kotla and the stadium Jaitley? What is Jaitley’s contribution to Delhi cricket? I don’t wish to be unkind to a person who is no more. But since you have asked me… This is so stupid.

Not too long ago, I was a member of the selection committee that declares the Arjuna Awards. That particular year, we were told that there is also going to be a Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award. I had raised my dissent at the meeting then. Rajiv Gandhi may have been a good human being, I knew him on first-name basis. He was a good pilot, might have been a good politician also, but what was his contribution to Indian sport, and why should the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna Award be over and above the highest sports award, the Arjuna Award? When I registered my dissent, I was removed from the selection committee. They had the right to do it, but I didn’t lose anything. I didn’t have to compromise on the issue…

Wankhede Stadium, Chinnaswamy Stadium, Chidambaram Stadium… none of them is (named after) cricketers. Maybe a stand will be named after a cricketer. It is very unfortunate.

DAKSH PANWAR: But, like you said, this is not the first time that a stadium is being named after a politician. Why is there an outcry now?

When are we going to face the reality head on? Today, this stadium will be made, then there will be a stand named after Virat Kohli, and the announcement will be made at Nehru Stadium. And at the function, the Home Minister will come…

SANDEEP DWIVEDI: You have played with some of the biggest names in Indian cricket, including Tiger Pataudi. Can you tell us about your experience?

I was very fortunate to play cricket with Tiger Pataudi. He was by far the best leader we have had. He gave us a lot of national pride, lot of Indianness. We now hear of togetherness in the Indian dressing room — it is Tiger Pataudi’s legacy. He would tell us in our team meetings that we are not playing for Maharashtra, Punjab or Delhi, we are playing for India, so think India. He was the first captain to do it… I don’t think he got his due.

PRAVEEN DOGRA: Recently, questions were raised over the cricketing experience of chief selector M S K Prasad. Do you think selectors should have extensive cricket experience?

I think it definitely matters… I have had a word with the present selection committee and the previous one as well. I asked them how do you select a side? Are you looking at the score book only? What other factors are you taking into
consideration?… There are five members in the selection committee. If three members agree, the player under consideration is in the team. And if three disagree, the player is out. There is no debate about why someone is dropped or selected. When Chandu Borde was the chairman, Hanumant (Singh), Kripal (Singh) and I were in the selection committee, we used to debate why a player was chosen or dropped…

SANDEEP DWIVEDI: There was also the nationalism debate when M S Dhoni wore the Army insignia on his gloves.
You can wear nationalism on your sleeve with your deeds, not literally with your attire.

PRAVEEN DOGRA: Recently, when Navdeep Saini debuted, Gautam Gambhir tweeted, tagging you and Chetan Chauhan, for writing him off. What were your reservations about Saini?

I had no reservations. I am not obliged to react to any nonsense. If he (Gambhir) wants to say something, he can say it. If I am reacting, I am giving importance to that statement. In any case, I have stopped reacting. I respond.


RAVISH TIWARI: In all these years, how do you think the Indian cricket team has evolved in terms of its mental strength?

It is a very individual (matter). (During our time), nobody could talk to Sunil Gavaskar. He would go into a cocoon. He used to shut himself off. That is preparing yourself to do what you want to do… You can excel but you cannot be perfect. If you become perfect, no one can get you out. So we can excel, and excellence involves mental strength in any walk of life… Not all Indian players have evolved over the years… There are two or three players who excel and carry the others along. There are average cricketers also. We have such cricketers in the Indian team as well. They are enjoying the fruits by being in the shadow of two or three excellent players.

https://www.financialexpress.com/op...e-a-necessary-evil-bishan-singh-bedi/1692466/
 
Most useless position in Cricket set-up. Even a circus clown has some accountability that he has to offer comic reliefs.
 
Imran's way of working with the selection committee cannot be emulated by others - Imran was simply Imran!
 
He’s always come across as a crybaby to me but to be honest this was an interesting read

Thanks for the share
 
Imran's way of working with the selection committee cannot be emulated by others - Imran was simply Imran!
Nine times out of ten he was correct.

But having said that he made a catastrophic error in throwing out Qasim Omar, which weakened the middle order terribly from 1986-1990. Leading to lots of fluffing around with Mansoor Akhtar, Aamer Malik and even prematurely with Ijaz Ahmed. And he even recalled the 146 year old Younis Ahmed in 86-87 to try to fill the gap he created.

He probably also started to get a little slower than his usual self in bringing though very youthful players from around 1990 onwards.

Moin Khan and Ataur Rehman were called up 6-12 months later in their development than Mushtaq Ahmed and Aaqib Javid and Zahid Fazal and Waqar Younis had been previously and Naeem Khan never was.
 
Imran Khan was charismatic and once in a generation leader. Not everyone can be Imran Khan and that is why not every captain can replicate him.
 
While he may be right about Imran Khan, that only works with a once in a generation player like Imran and his larger than life persona. That cannot be the standard operating procedure for other times though.
 
IK always wanted his own team. He'd resign from the captaincy in the event of not getting that!
 
Taking selection matters in his own hands was no big deal for a person who sat out of Australia’s 1988-89 tour of Pakistan because the weather was too hot.

Only Imran Khan could have pulled off a stunt like that and get away with it. All PCB did was bow their heads in obedience and appoint Miandad to lead the team, while Imran was chilling in his London apartment.

Pakistan has a very strong culture of hero-worshipping and believing in messiah figures. That is what Imran was and is, and it is very hard to find a cricketer with the following assortment of qualities and attributes:

One of the greatest players of all time + a huge superstar + great leadership qualities + narcissistic personality with a huge ego + show symptoms of high-degree Messiah complex.

You add all of the above and you get Imran Khan, and that is why he practically owned Pakistan cricket during his time. Plus, you also need a weak board that you can bully around, and PCB has always been spineless except during the Ijaz Butt regime.

Imran leading the team with Ijaz Butt as chairman would have been fascinating.

Of course, Imran would have eventually won the power struggle because he is a populist and the nation would have rallied behind him, but surely, Ijaz Butt wouldn’t have made life easy for him and wouldn’t have bent over backwards to accommodate his totalitarian attitude.
 
Last edited:
Taking selection matters in his own hands was no big deal for a person who sat out of Australia’s 1988-89 tour of Pakistan because the weather was too hot.

Only Imran Khan could have pulled off a stunt like that and get away with it. All PCB did was bow their heads in obedience and appoint Miandad to lead the team, while Imran was chilling in his London apartment.

Pakistan has a very strong culture of hero-worshipping and believing in messiah figures. That is what Imran was and is, and it is very hard to find a cricketer with the following assortment of qualities and attributes:

One of the greatest players of all time + a huge superstar + great leadership qualities + narcissistic personality with a huge ego + show symptoms of high-degree Messiah complex.

You add all of the above and you get Imran Khan, and that is why he practically owned Pakistan cricket during his time. Plus, you also need a weak board that you can bully around, and PCB has always been spineless except during the Ijaz Butt regime.

Imran leading the team with Ijaz Butt as chairman would have been fascinating.

Of course, Imran would have eventually won the power struggle because he is a populist and the nation would have rallied behind him, but surely, Ijaz Butt wouldn’t have made life easy for him and wouldn’t have bent over backwards to accommodate his totalitarian attitude.

Imran Khan was at the end of his career, aged 36-37, he can be excused for wanting a rest.
 
Imran Khan was at the end of his career, aged 36-37, he can be excused for wanting a rest.

Citing that it is too hot to play is the most arrogant and disrespectful excuse/justification anyone can come up with. Only Imran could have gotten away with it.
 
Citing that it is too hot to play is the most arrogant and disrespectful excuse/justification anyone can come up with. Only Imran could have gotten away with it.

Exactly. It's easy when you are a GOAT and the best ever from Asia.
 
Citing that it is too hot to play is the most arrogant and disrespectful excuse/justification anyone can come up with. Only Imran could have gotten away with it.

I think, reason is different (if so, never heard of this). Imran retired after 1987 WC only to come back on GZH’s request, but selectively. He wrote about it (probably in his book). Two years later, he didn’t play against NZ either when the temperature was much cooler. I don’t think Imran was someone who would sit out for heat - particularly, 5 years back against same opponent, he bowled 25+ overs in a day at Karachi/Lahore heat of October.

He must had felt that he couldn’t perform expectedly with his fitness level, hence opted to sit out (if so). I am a bit of his fan, you know - and the reason is not his charisma or playing skills, rather the guy was the fiercest competitor I had even seen in any sports - really surprised to know that the man choked away for heat!!!!!
 
I think, reason is different (if so, never heard of this). Imran retired after 1987 WC only to come back on GZH’s request, but selectively. He wrote about it (probably in his book). Two years later, he didn’t play against NZ either when the temperature was much cooler. I don’t think Imran was someone who would sit out for heat - particularly, 5 years back against same opponent, he bowled 25+ overs in a day at Karachi/Lahore heat of October.

He must had felt that he couldn’t perform expectedly with his fitness level, hence opted to sit out (if so). I am a bit of his fan, you know - and the reason is not his charisma or playing skills, rather the guy was the fiercest competitor I had even seen in any sports - really surprised to know that the man choked away for heat!!!!!

Bro. No reason to explain anything to him related to Imran. He hates him with passion. Watch him blame imran for global warming soon and write essays about how he's responsible.
 
Also just because it worked for Imran, it may not work for everybody. I know a certain somebody in a Top team whose decision is final not just in team selection but even coach selection. But his teams' performance remain inconsistent, top performers get overlooked and the team chokes in high pressure games
 
74 years old today.

Happy Birthday to Bedi Sahib.
 
Legendary spinner Bishan Singh Bedi has undergone a surgery to remove a blood clot in his brain at a city hospital a few days back and is recovering well.

The 74-year-old former India captain had undergone a bypass surgery at the hospital last month after he complained of heart problems. He underwent the procedure in his brain just after the bypass surgery.

"He had the blood clot (in his brain) removed six days back, just after the bypass surgery. He is recovering well and will be shifted to a private cabin by tomorrow," a source close to Bedi told PTI.

Bedi, a premier left-arm orthodox spinner in his playing days, represented India in 67 Tests and 10 ODIs between 1967 and 1979, scalping 266 and seven wickets respectively.

In December last year, Bedi had protested against the Delhi and District Cricket Association's (DDCA) decision to name the Feroz Shah Kotla stadium after its late ex president and former union minister Arun Jaitley.

He had threatened to take legal action against the DDCA if his name was not removed from a spectators' stand at the stadium.

https://www.outlookindia.com/websit...-surgery-to-remove-blood-clot-in-brain/376073
 
Bedi was a great spinner. Until he came to Pakistan and saw his career end before his very eyes.

In all honesty though, he is a great personality and speaks with a lot of candour. Wish him a long and happy life.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">A slow left-arm spinner full of guile, we look back at the career of Bishan Bedi on <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/ICCHallOfFame?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#ICCHallOfFame</a> &#55356;&#57119; <a href="https://t.co/PKCnRCMht3">pic.twitter.com/PKCnRCMht3</a></p>— ICC (@ICC) <a href="https://twitter.com/ICC/status/1401177092696444931?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">June 5, 2021</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
75th birthday today of Bishen Bedi-best Asian spinner of all time?

Today legendary Bishen Singh Bedi is 75.Without doubt one of the greatest spin bowlers or left arm bowlers of all time.There were bowlers who turned a cricket ball more but very few who were more artistic or as deceptive in flight.Bedi was part of the quartet that turrned a new epoch in Indian cricket from 1971.Bedi's bowling was sheer poetry in action,as rhythmic as a ballad dancer.Rarely did any bowler master left arm flight as Bishen.Very few spinners created such subtle variations of flight.Simply the epitome of grace.

Quoting Mike Brearley".A few easy rhythmic steps ,perfectly balanced,and he moved smoothly into the delivery stride.His run up was not too long There was no sense of striving,nothing rushed or snatched,no hiccups,just an essay flow.Like most great bowlers his variation was subtle.No slow bowler required you to commit yourself later,as Bedi."

Bedi made his debut for Northern Punjab in the Ranji troph y at the age of 15.He played in 67 tests ,capturing 266 wickers at an average of 28.71.He excelled representing Northamptonshire from 1972 to 1977,twice taking 100 or more wickets in a season.He led India in 22 tests from 1975 to 1977 ,always placing more emphasis on wining,than a drawing.Even though only 6 matches were won,Bedi was agression personified on the field.

Bedi was at his best when capturing a record 31 scalps in a five tests series in Australia,which all but won India the rubber.His turn and flight was tantalizing for the Aussie batsmen,winning 2 tests mathches for India by overwhelming margins.Although India lost 3-1 in 1976-77 at home agaisnt England,Bedi took 25 wickets.simply bowling like a workhorse.One must never forget Bedi's monumental contribution in India winning their 1st ever series in West Indies and England in 1971.

Bedi was involved in 2 major controversies n his lifetime.The first was when protesting against the West Indies bouncer barrage at Kingston,the 2nd was against the Englishman using vaseline.Morally,I feel he was correct on both occasions.In West Indies,India may well have won the series but for unfair West Indies tactics which injured the Indian batsmen.

Bishen Bedi,was arguably the best spin bowler of the 1970's ahead of Derek Underwood.Derek was unplayable on bad wickets,but not the same proposition or as effective as Bedi on unhelpful tracks.
Sadly the 1978 tour of Pakistan precipitated the decline of Bishen,after which he had to forfeit the captaincy,with India receiving a 2-0 thrashing.

Bedi has been rated amongst the 70 best cricketers of all time by John Woodcock and Cristopher Martin Jenkins or even Geoff Armstrong.Overall I rate Bedi only 2nd to Subash Gupte ,amongts Indian spinners,and above likes of Kumble,Chandrashekar.Harbhajan etc.I also feel she deserves a place amongst the 10 best spin bowlers of all time.Averaging under 30 with the ball speaks for itself. and capturing 266 scalps.

Above all one of cricket's great gentleman ,upholding sportsmanship at any cost.Few cricketers possessed such a philosophical touch.
 
Absolutely fantastic bowler.

And an absolutely charming man. He was the first Sikh that I ever met, around the time I started primary school, and he was just lovely to young cricket fans.

And I’ve always remained conscious that the teammate he was closest to was Mushtaq Muhammad. They were so close it was lovely to watch. And it’s left me with the clear opinion that Indians and Pakistanis are brothers.
 
Back
Top