Looking
back, it had to be divine intervention or a completely benign arrangement of
the stars in my favour that must have helped my cricket along, when there was
no conscious effort to make a career of it, on the part of my parents or self.
The first time I held a bat was around 1952, in the backyard of our Quilon (now
Kollam) home, in the company of my brother Nagan, a left handed, more talented
and stylish novitiate into the game at which so many in the family were good. I
was barely five and for the next three years, the only cricket action we saw
was provided by my father’s exploits in the game.
PN
Venkatraman, Ramani to his siblings, cousins, and cricket mates, was Appa to
us, his children—by then four of us,
with the latest adddition Krishnan arriving on 13 May 1952. Appa had been a
stalwart of Mylapore Recreation Club, albeit a reclusive, even reluctant one,
mainly because he was a bit of a hypochondriac and feared he would collapse on
the cricket field, thanks to an imaginary heart condition a mischievous uncle
or elder cousin had led him to believe afflicted him. (When I saw the Adoor
Gopalakrishnan film Anantaram in the
1980s, a scene in it reminded me of my father’s unhappy experiences with elders
in the extended family, who casually planted in him fears and anxieties with
far reaching consequences, preventing the full flowering of this gentle, shy,
unusually talented young lad).
We must have come
back to Madras during 1955 or 1956, for I clearly remember listening to the
radio commentary in our first floor house on Murrays Gate Road when Jim Laker
took 19 for 137 against the Australians at Old Trafford, the second time the
off spinner claimed all ten wickets in an innings that season, having performed
the feat for Surrey against the touring Aussies. I remember twiddling the knobs
of our old Murphy valve radio to find the exact spot where the BBC commentary
was at least half way audible. I was not yet ten and went to a Tamil medium
school, so much of the commentary must have gone way above my head, even if I
did manage to hear the voices of Swanton and Co. amidst all the static. I don't
think John Arlott was as yet a member of the team, nor Brian Johnston or
Christopher Martin Jenkins. It wasn't much later that I began to recognize
these much beloved voices as I did Rex Alston and Trevor Bailey. Still, there
wasn't a single cricketing point that I—or my teeming army of brothers and
cousins—missed. The explanation is simple: we belonged to a completely
cricket-crazy extended family.
We lived on Murrays
Gate Road, a quiet enough street then, extending east-west from Alwarpet Corner
to Teynampet, the whole stretch a long straight line from the Santhome Church,
via Luz Church Road, almost all the way to Mount Road. 'Suprabha' was our home,
a two-storeyed bungalow facing north. We lived on the first floor, my father
now the agent of the Mylapore branch of Indian Overseas Bank, and downstairs
lived my father's elder brother PN Sundaresan, Raja to family and friends, at
the time a struggling reporter in the Indian Express, but soon to join the
Hindu.
Raja was an
attacking batsman who opened the innings for Mylapore Recreation Club 'A', one
of the top sides in the Madras cricket league, whose clashes with arch rival
Triplicane Cricket Club starring MJ Gopalan, CR Rangachari and the like, were
known as the War of the Roses. MRC had many of its own stars, with most of
Buchi Babu Nayudu's sons, nephews and grandsons turning out for the club at one
time or another. The well known diplomat G Parthasarathi or GP, an aggressive
leg spinner-batsman, CR Pattabhiraman, son of Sir CP Ramaswami Ayyar and the
founder of the club, and opening batsman M Swaminathan were some of the MRC
regulars.
My father's uncle
PS Ramachandran or 'Pattu', the tall, wiry fast bowler who took 10 for 18 for
MRC vs. TCC, was overlooked by the selectors who met the same evening to pick
the 'Indians' for that season's Presidency Match. Pattu, like quite a few other
cricketers of his time, was an orthodox brahmin, whose hairstyle consisted of a
shaven head with a tuft of hair tied in a kudumi or chignon at the back. As he
ran up to bowl his fast medium seamers, his knotted hair came off and fluttered
in the breeze, and he almost instinctively reached for it to tie it back in
place even as he was completing his follow through. In group photographs, he is
seen wearing a black cap more like a Gandhi topi than a cricket cap.
Though he missed
out on the Pongal match after that splendid burst in the Roses battle, he
managed to impress the selectors enough to be included in a tour game for
Madras against the visiting MCC team under the captaincy of Douglas Jardine.
Pattu bowled well in both innings, picking up a couple of wickets. He was
probably in his late forties when I first heard him describe the cricket he
played in his youth. “Jardine said ‘Well bowled’ to me at the end of the match.
He even patted me on my back.” When Pattu came home that evening, his mother,
whose word was law in family circles, told him to wash even harder than usual,
as he had made physical contact with a mlechha or outcaste!
Pattu lived and
practised law in a gracious old bungalow in a sprawling compound on Eldams
Road, parallel to and behind Murrays Gate Road, and his elder brother PS
Venkatraman, a building contractor and leading tennis player of his time, was
his next door neighbour. Their two houses were named Sundar (after my great
grandfather Justice PR Sundara Iyer) and Parvati (after my great grandmother).
Pattu's three sons Kalyanam, Dorai and Thambi took after their father and
became more than useful medium pace bowlers, two of them making it to the Ranji
Trophy team and Dorai almost getting there. My uncle Raja's sons Kannan and
Raman were both fine all rounders. While Kannan played Ranji Trophy, Raman
again just failed to make it. Add to these five, my brothers Nagan and Krishnan
(V Sivaramakrishnan) and yours truly and we needed just three more for a
complete eleven, though Kalyanam was far too senior to play with all of us.
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