Act of dissent in 1981 was a big mistake, admits Gavaskar

Published December 28, 2014
In this 1981 Melbourne Test file photo, Sunil Gavaskar and Dennis Lillee dispute the lbw decision.
In this 1981 Melbourne Test file photo, Sunil Gavaskar and Dennis Lillee dispute the lbw decision.

MELBOURNE: Almost three decades after the infamous walkout incident in the Melbourne Test which caused a huge controversy, former India captain Sunil Gavaskar on Saturday regretted his act of dissent and said that it was a big mistake on his part.

In the 1981 series that had been dogged by some inconsistent umpiring, a Dennis Lillee in-cutter caught Gavaskar plumb in front and umpire Rex Whitehead, standing in just his third Test, raised the finger.

But Gavaskar, who thought that the ball had got his bat on the way to the pad, protested by standing his ground long enough.

Gavaskar also slapped his pads with the bat, letting the umpire know about his anger. As Gavaskar reluctantly started to leave, Lillee reportedly made one comment too many and the Indian snapped, returned to the crease and instructed fellow opener Chetan Chauhan to walk off the pitch with him.

A bemused Chauhan did as he was told, but at the boundary rope, the batsmen were met by team manager Shahid Durrani and Bapu Nadkarni, the assistant manager.

Chauhan was persuaded to return to resume his innings, while Gavaskar walked into the pavilion.

“I regret the decision. It was a big mistake on my part. As Indian captain I was not supposed to act in that manner. In no way I can justify my act of defiance. Whether I was out or not, I should not have reacted that way,” Gavaskar said during a tea-time chat show with Sanjay Manjrekar and Kapil Dev.

“If the incident would have occurred in present times then I would have been fined,” he added.

Durrani’s quick intervention saved the incident from becoming far more serious. Had Gavaskar succeeded in his walkoff, then India would have been forced to forfeit the Test and face suspension as a result.

Gavaskar also spoke about how the team was charged up to defend the total as Australia were set a relatively modest 143 to win.

“Both Shivlal Yadav and Dilip Doshi were injured but they played that match. We never used to celebrate as the cricketers of today do but when Kapil took a wicket, Yashpal Sharma was excited and congratulated him and we all surrounded Kapil,” said Gavaskar.

Speaking about the incident Kapil said the team was with Gavaskar.

“I was too young at that time to react. But I can say one thing that we were all with the captain. Whether right or wrong, we backed our skipper. He [Gavaskar] can now say sitting here that it was wrong but at that time we were all with him,” Kapil expressed.

Published in Dawn, December 28th, 2014

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