Enter Intikhab
The birth of a fine Pakistani legspinner
From the moment legspinner Intikhab Alam, born today, took a wicket with his first ball in Test cricket (at age 17), he became a fixture in the Pakistan side. That first victim was the classy Australian opener Colin McDonald in Pakistan's third Test against Australia in Karachi in 1959-60. Alam was no mug with the bat either, sharing a famous lower-order stand with Asif Iqbal at The Oval in 1967 and hitting a hundred against England in Hyderabad in 1972-73, the season in which he captained Pakistan to their first series win abroad, in New Zealand. He became Pakistan's coach in 2000 briefly before the board surprisingly returned to him in October 2008 for another stint as replacement for Geoff Lawson.
Batting against West Indies in Madras, Sunil Gavaskar scored his 30th Test century, breaking the record set by Don Bradman back in 1948. Gavaskar eventually weighed in with 34 tons.
It was a relief for New South Wales (and everyone else) when Victoria were finally all out for 1107. Victoria's batters were an insatiable bunch in those days: this broke their own world record of 1059 set against little Tasmania, also in Melbourne, four years previously. Those are the only instances of a side reaching 1000 in a first-class innings. Bill Ponsford, a real trencherman when it came to runs, gorged himself with 352, while Jack Ryder may have been disappointed to get out for 295. That talented and whimsical Test legspinner Arthur Mailey took four wickets, but they cost him 362 runs from 64 overs (no maidens). His figures would have been better, he said, if he hadn't had two catches dropped by a man in a trilby hat in the pavilion.
Dale Steyn, at 35, went past Shaun Pollock to become South Africa's leading Test wicket-taker during the team's three-day win over Pakistan in Centurion. He angled a good-length delivery across Fakhar Zaman and got him to nick to slips to get wicket No. 422. But it was a younger fast bowler, Duanne Olivier, who took the bulk of the wickets - a career-best six in the first and five in the second - to dismiss Pakistan for 181 and 190.
Australia retained the Ashes 3-0 with a resounding win before lunch on day three of the third Test. So wretched were England in Melbourne that they couldn't get to Australia's middling 267 in two tries. They were bowled out for 185 on day one, Pat Cummins and Nathan Lyon taking three each. Then debutant fast bowler Scott Boland took 6 for 7 (the cheapest five-for on debut) to wipe them out for 68 in the second innings - England's lowest total in Australia since 1904. The defeat extended England's winless streak down under to a record 13 Test matches.
New Zealand opener Martin Guptill was in a tearing hurry, bashing a 30-ball unbeaten 93 in the second ODI against Sri Lanka at Hagley Oval on this day. Guptill's blitz settled the chase of 118 in just 8.2 overs. His fifty, off 17 balls, was the fastest by a New Zealander, equalling the record for the second-fastest in ODIs. Eighty-four of his runs came off boundaries alone (including eight sixes).
The dreaded Nelson did Arthur Morris no great harm in Sydney. Playing for New South Wales against Queensland, he made that 111 after 148 in the first innings, becoming the first of only three players to score a hundred in each innings of his first-class debut. After a start like that, 12 Test centuries for Australia were no great surprise.
One of the worst Test cricketers of all time was born - with a drawerful of silver spoons in his mouth. When he captained India on their disastrous 1936 tour of England, he was knighted, and so became Sir Gajapatairaj Vijaya Ananda, the Maharajkumar of Vizianagram. Vijaya means victory, Ananda happiness, but there was precious little of either on that trip, though India sent a strong team. Vizzy sent the great Lala Amarnath home, ended the Test careers of class acts like CK Nayudu and Wazir Ali, and ordered one of his openers to run the other out in a Test. He didn't: they both scored hundreds in a big stand - but India lost the series easily. All because of Viz, a comic giant.
Big and red-bearded, Gary Cosier could hit a cricket ball seriously hard, never more so than in Melbourne when he became the first Australian to score a Test hundred against West Indies on his Test debut. He hit a big ton against Pakistan on the same ground in 1976-77, but eventually averaged only 28.93 in his 18 Tests.
The first day of the first women's Test, between Australia and England in Brisbane. Australia were bowled out for 47. Myrtle Maclagan took 7 for 10. England went on to win by nine wickets.
Slim and bespectacled, shy to the point of going almost unnoticed in later life, Paul Gibb scored a century on his Test debut today, for England in Johannesburg, having come close to one in the first innings.
An England captain is born... in Germany. Donald Carr played only two Tests, the second as captain, on MCC's 1951-52 tour of India and Pakistan. He's better known for what he did upon retirement: first he was secretary of the England board, and then he became an ICC match referee.
Another cricketer who played in glasses, South African slow left-armer Norman "Tufty" Mann, was born. When he bamboozled Middlesex and England's George Mann in a tour match during the 1951 series, John Arlott led the rush to state the obvious: "Mann's inhumanity to Mann."
Trevor Gripper, born today, impressed the selectors with a fifty in a warm-up against the touring Australians in 1999-2000, and was given a Test debut against them the following week, where he hit 60 in the second innings. After a spell out of the side, he returned for the tour of Bangladesh late in 2001, and ground out a maiden Test century in Chittagong. His international career hit the buffers when he joined the rebel strike in support of Heath Streak, and although all the players returned to work, Gripper was not among those reselected.
1889 Albert Hartkopf (Australia)
1910 Jack Kerr (New Zealand)
1911 Robert Levick (South Africa)
1911 Frederick Levick (South Africa)
1920 Nyron Asgarali (West Indies)
1927 Norma Whiteman (Australia)
1935 Eileen Massey (Australia)
1949 Steve Bernard (Australia)
1968 Chaminda Mendis (Sri Lanka)
1969 Luuk van Troost (Netherlands)
1978 Josephine Barnard (South Africa)