Pandurang Salgaonkar

Pandurang Salgaonkar
Personal information
Full name Pandurang Mahadev Salgaonkar
Born (1949-10-15) 15 October 1949
Malvan, Maharashtra, India
Batting style Right-handed
Bowling style Right-arm fast-medium
Role Bowler
International information
National side
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1972–1981 Maharashtra
Career statistics
Competition First-class List A
Matches 63 6
Runs scored 1,039 4
Batting average 17.03 2.00
100s/50s 1/1 –/–
Top score 103 3
Balls bowled 10,242 321
Wickets 214 6
Bowling average 26.70 33.66
5 wickets in innings 11
10 wickets in match 1
Best bowling 7/72 2/23
Catches/stumpings 26/– 4/–
Source: Cricket Archive, 18 August 2013

Pandurang Mahadev Salgaonkar (sometimes spelled Salgaoncar) (born 15 October 1949, Malvan, Maharashtra, India) is a former Indian cricketer who played as a fast bowler for Maharashtra from 1971–72 to 1981–82.

Early career

In 1971–72, his debut season, Salgaonkar took 15 wickets at 23.33 in four Ranji Trophy matches,[1] immediately establishing a reputation as the fastest bowler in India.[2]

At the start of the 1972–73 season he played for Rest of India against Bombay in the Irani Cup, taking six wickets, including the Indian captain Ajit Wadekar twice.[3] In his next match, playing in the Ranji Trophy for Maharashtra against Bombay, he dismissed Sunil Gavaskar twice.

His next two matches were for West Zone in the Duleep Trophy. He took his best first-class match figures of 10 for 111 (5 for 55 and 5 for 56) against South Zone in the semi-final[4] and a few days later took his best innings figures of 7 for 72 in the final against Central Zone,[5] giving West Zone the trophy.

He took only one wicket when West Zone played the touring MCC in Ahmedabad in a match dominated by batsmen and spin bowlers, and finished the 1972–73 season with seven wickets in a narrow loss to Tamil Nadu in the semi-final of the Ranji Trophy. He took 54 wickets at 19.44 in the season. Wisden noted that "P.M. Salgoancar [sic] (Maharashtra), the country's new hope in medium-fast bowling, showed splendid improvement ..."[6]

Playing for India

He maintained good form in the early part of the 1973–74 season, and was selected to tour Sri Lanka with a strong Indian team in January and February 1974. Opening the bowling with Madan Lal, he took 5 for 42 and 2 for 79 against Sri Lanka in the second unofficial Test in Colombo, which India won after the first of the two matches was drawn.[7]

He was not included in the Indian team that toured England in the first half of the 1974 season. India lost all three Tests by large margins. Relying almost entirely on spin, the Indian attack was ineffective on pitches favouring pace and seam, and took only 24 English wickets. Wisden commented: "Probably the Indians would have benefited from including Salgoankar [sic], of Maharashtra, easily the quickest bowler in the country and who, as it happened, came to England later for coaching at A.R. Gover's school."[8] According to Vijay Lokapally, however, the coaching "tampered with his action and Salgaonkar could never do justice to his potential".[9]

Later career

In a semi-final of the Duleep Trophy in 1974–75, after the first two days had been washed out, Salgaonkar destroyed the East Zone batting, taking 6 for 39 and dismissing East Zone for 83. East Zone just managed to hold on for a draw.[10] He played without notable success for Rest of India against Karnataka in the Irani Cup, and then, in his last match for West Zone, he took three expensive wickets against the touring West Indies cricket team, dismissing Alvin Kallicharran twice. In a Ranji Trophy match in 1974–75 at Nasik he bowled a ball that broke Sunil Gavaskar's finger.[11]

After 1974–75 he played only for Maharashtra in the Ranji Trophy, never quite regaining the venom of his earlier years. The highlight of his later career was his only century, 103 against Baroda in 1980–81.[12]

The Indian cricket historian Sujit Mukherjee said Salgaonkar "gave promise of bowling at stroke-hastening pace and arming India with a weapon that had been wanting ever since Desai's decline. Though wayward in direction, he had the stamina to bowl lengthy spells without slackening speed and the ability to obtain awkward bounce" but when he was not selected to tour England in 1974 he became "disheartened". "His career must have put off many strong young men from trying to bowl fast."[13]

After retirement

Salgaonkar runs a cricket coaching academy in Pune[14] and is the chief pitch curator at the Maharashtra Cricket Association Cricket Stadium, Pune.[15] He has served as chief selector of the Maharashtra Ranji Trophy team. In 2009, 2010 and 2011 he refereed matches in the Maharashtra Premier League, a local Twenty20 competition.[16]

He has two sons and a daughter and lives in Pune.

References

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