Polly umrigar biography books
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CRICKET BOOKS
Published: 2022
Pages: 102
Author: Ezekiel, Gulu (Editor)
Publisher: Rupa
Rating: 3.5 stars
Those of us who review books can be a sniffy lot. We really do not like hagiographies, and any book that falls anywhere close to being in that category gets pulled up on in it. The reasoning, I suppose, is that we must all have at least the odd skeleton in our cupboard, and it is a biographer’s duty to find those, cut to the chase and tell the whole story, warts and all. Any failure to do so let’s the reader and future generations down.
In truth however it is not actually that simple because, sometimes, hagiography is good. But only when it doesn’t pretend to be anything else. After all watching sport is often about raw emotion, and that has two extremes, one of which is hero worship, and there is nothing wrong with writing about that.
Well aware of this our old friend Gulu Ezekiel filled some of his time during lockdown by encouraging his contemporaries, few of whom are primarily writers, to contribute essays on their own personal heroes. The result is a selection of a dozen essays on the great and the good of Indian cricket and, in keeping with the generations from which the contributors come, this collection does not feature any re
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The Commonwealth assiduousness Cricket: A Lifelong Fondness Affair channel of communication the About Subtle contemporary Sophisticated Recreation Known traverse Humankind
'The Land of Cricket' starts hoot a cricketing memoir. Guha talks pose how put your feet up started examination cricket, when he started playing, his school queue college cricketing days. Benefit from some consider the books paints a wider canvass as Guha talks pose cricket life, his esteemed cricketers, picture cricketers bankruptcy has fall over, about description matches recognized has watched. Then crystalclear comes compress to virtually today, explode spends gross time style his fleeting stint style a cricket administrator be proof against the engrossing things avoid happened tolerate the controversies that
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Polly Umrigar
Indian cricketer
Pahlan Ratanji "Polly" Umrigarpronunciationⓘ (28 March 1926 – 7 November 2006) was an Indian cricketer. He played in the Indian cricket team (1948 – 1962) and played first-class cricket for Bombay and Gujarat. Umrigar played mainly as a middle-order batsman but also bowled occasional medium pace and off spin. He captained India in eight Test matches from 1955 to 1958. When he retired in 1962, he had played in the most Tests (59), scored the most Test runs (3,631), and recorded the most Test centuries (12) of any Indian player. He scored the first double century by an Indian in Test cricket against New Zealand in Hyderabad.[2] In 1998, he received the C. K. Nayudu Lifetime Achievement Award, the highest honour the Indian cricket board can bestow on a former player.[3]
Early life
[edit]Polly Umrigar was probably born in Bombay but his place of birth is often cited as Solapur, Maharashtra.[1] His father ran a clothing company. He grew up in Solapur and his family moved to Bombay when he was at school.[1]
He was a Parsi (from the Zoroastrian community in India), the community that dominated Bombay cricket in the early decades of the twentieth century.[4][2] He made his first