Watch: Unbeaten on 92, Gambhir Gets Guard of Honour in Last Match

At stumps on day 2 of his farewell match, Gautam Gambhir was batting at 92 against Andhra.

The Quint
Cricket
Updated:
Gautam Gambhir scored an unbeaten 92 on the second day of his farewell match.
i
Gautam Gambhir scored an unbeaten 92 on the second day of his farewell match.
(Photo: PTI)

advertisement

Gautam Gambhir lived a charmed life but the famous grit was displayed in abundance on way to an unbeaten 92 – in his final match in competitive cricket – that guided Delhi to 190 for one on Friday, 7 December.

On the second day of the Ranji Trophy encounter against Andhra, Delhi were placed well in reply to the visitors' first-innings score of 390.

Everything else became a footnote once Gambhir entered the field.

The Ranji match is being hosted at the cricketer’s home-ground Feroz Shah Kotla for which a few hundred faithfuls from Old Delhi turned up.

There was a customary security breach (synonymous with Kotla) with a fan trying to click a selfie before being hauled up, the Guard of Honour by teammates at every break and his wife turning up with two adorable daughters just after the husband completed a fifty.

2011 World Cup and 2007 World T20 winner Gambhir announced his retirement from all forms of cricket on 4 December. The 37-year-old left-handed opening batsman has been out of favour for a while as far as the national squad was concerned – last making an appearance in the shorter formats nearly six years.

At the stadium on 7 December, there was the artist Saif splashing his canvas with colours to capture for posterity Gambhir’s final on-field exploits.

Gautam Gambhir’s wife Natasha and daughters with a painting by Saif.(Photo: PTI)

Gautam Gambhir had it all and even the Almighty wouldn't have wanted the fairytale script to go awry.

So no one complained when an Andhra fielder dropped a sitter at mid-off, a regulation catch which would have been otherwise gobbled "11 out of 10 times".

He was twice dropped in the slips but it didn't matter during the 152 balls that he played.

They wanted to see Gambhir bat like Gambhir. Ugly but effective with some pleasant drives sprinkled in between and scrappy at other times.

On 4 December, Gautam Gambhir announced retirement from all forms of cricket.(Photo: PTI)
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT

The tuck of the hips, the jabs and the dabs with quick rush and that occasional cover drive were all there to see.

Once into his 70s, he slowed down as the milestone approached.

The photographers got edgy, elder daughter Azeen and toddler Anaiza wanted to run into the ground, but Gambhir didn't want to ruin it.

He was ready to grind it one last time.

It's his last chance to lift his bat, open his helmet and acknowledge whoever will be present at the Kotla on Saturday.

He needs eight runs more and probably wouldn't mind if a few more cricket fans turn up for that probable moment.

Gambhir, and his fans, know he deserves that last hurrah.

(With inputs from PTI)

(At The Quint, we question everything. Play an active role in shaping our journalism by becoming a member today.)

Published: 07 Dec 2018,06:43 PM IST

ADVERTISEMENT
SCROLL FOR NEXT