1. Well Of Course Finals
KQA Cricket Quiz 2014
@soganmageshwar
@paap_singer
2. What to look forward to
• Written Round I
• Clockwise (17 questions)
• Written Round II
• Anti-Clockwise (17 questions)
• List It
3. Written Round I
• During the 2013 Ashes held in England, members of the English
team drew caricatures of each other and these were sold for
charity.
• Identify the cricketer.
• 10 points per correct answer.
• Get all right, 10 points bonus.
35. Clockwise
• 17questions.
• Infinite bounce. 10 points
• Like the review system – you get maximum of 2 incorrect
pounces. So +10 for pounce, but in case of an incorrect pounce,
you lose 1 pounce.
• And in case you are pouncing, all parts of the answer must be
correct.
36. 1.
• During Sobers’ record breaking 365 knock, he was batting on
360. Hanif Mohammad was introduced into the attack with the
hope that Sobers would lose concentration and give his wicket
away as a non-regular bowler was in operation.
• However the 2nd ball of the over, Sobers hit a boundary thereby
equalling Len Hutton’s record. In order to distract Sobers further,
Hanif tried something different for the rest of the over. The first 2
deliveries he did not concede any run, but of the final ball Sobers
got the coveted run of the final ball of the over.
• What had Hanif tried to do, in order to ensure Sobers does not
get the coveted single?
37. • He bowled left arm spin instead of right arm off spin that he was
bowling. This makes him the only bowler to bowl right arm and
left arm spin in the same over.
• The only other instance I can remember is Hashan Tillakaratne
bowling the final over in the 1996 world cup game against Kenya.
The result was beyond doubt and he bowled right arm off spin
and left arm in the same over.
38. 2.
• New Zealand took on Zimbabwe in the 2nd test of their tour on
November 7th, 1992. The Zimbabwe cricket authorities wanted
to maximize revenues for November 8th, a Sunday and decided
to do something that had precedents in England, but never in
test matches. It is also something that has never happened again.
• What happened on November 8th?
39. • Interrupted a test match and played a One Day international. It
didn’t make much difference to Martin Crowe. He scored 140 on
day 1 of the test and then scored 94, the next day in a One Day
International.
40. 3.
• The battle of Monte Cassino was a costly series of 4 assaults by the Allies
against the Winter Line held by Germans and Italians during WW2. The
intention was to reach Rome.
• The Americans attempted first and due to heavy casualties were replaced
by the New Zealand Corps. If British Author Fred Majdalany is to be
believed the codename that was to be given to the New Zealanders was
devised by a British staff officer, who typically did not know the difference
between New Zealanders and Australians.
• What was the code used by Allies to signal the troops to attack Cassino?
41. • Bradman will be batting tomorrow. – If they were going to attack.
• Bradman will not be batting tomorrow – If they weren’t going to
attack.
42. 4.
• Two Aussie bowlers – X and Y.
• X came in as a replacement for Glenn McGrath for the 2nd test against New
Zealand in the 97 series. He took 7 wickets in his first test, including a career
best 5/39 in the second innings. However, he had a hard struggle to get into
even the New South Wales side that year. He broke his ankle bowling in his
first year for the Blues and found it difficult to recover. Played only 2 tests.
• Y took a hat-trick against Pakistan at the MCG in 1996-97, in his 3rd ODI and
got some excellent returns for NSW in the years which followed his first inter-
state appearance in 1994-95. From there, though, his performances tapered
away quickly, to the extent that he did not play at the international level and
lost his place in the NSW XI within 12 months.
• Identify both.
44. 5.
• Wisden Cricketers of the Year award is an honour given to
cricketers that had a considerable “influence over the English
cricket summer”. Barring a few exceptions, Wisden almost always
awards this to 5 cricketers. In 2011, Wisden awarded it to only 4
players.
• Why?
45. • Due to his performances, Mohammed Amir
would have been the 5th awardee.
• Wisden in its edition just said – Awarded to
a Pakistani player but not listed as a result
of alleged match fixing.
• “If [the player in question] were exonerated,
then it would be possible to reconsider the
position. That is why I didn’t pick anyone
else instead. But as things stand, we don’t
feel we can choose. Its all very sad”, Scyld
Berry, the editor of Wisden.
46. 6.
• “X will be missed. Missed by England for whom his standards of
professionalism and excellence were an example to all. I will miss
him too; his tenacity made him a pleasure to play with and
against.
• I will not miss his ___. X’s ___ - that dirty, smelly, grubby,
patched-up, stitched-up, upside-down-flower-pot-of-a-thing –
caused me more grief as an English captain than any Brian Lara
hundred or Shane Warne hat-trick.”
• An English skipper writing about his experience with X and ___.
Identify X and ___.
48. 7.
• Quotes from the 40th year reunion of a historic occasion.
• “The game was put on as bit of entertainment.”
• “We didn’t appreciate the occasion at the time.”
• “Looking back now, it was a momentous occasion. John said,
they didn’t want to play. They were worried about injuries.”
• “We were just happy to get out of the dressing room.”
• “More than 40,000 turned up. We had to play.”
• What was this historic occasion?
49. First ever ODI
• Played on the last day of
what would have been
the 3rd test of the Ashes.
The test match was
abandoned without a ball
being bowled.
• On the last day, they
decided to play a one day
international.
51. Kennington Oval
• The Kennington Oval, was used as a POW camp during the
second World War.
52. 9.
• X arrived wearing a camouflage mash jacket and an enormous
briefcase which contained his lunch – two bottles of claret, a
vine-root corkscrew, cheese, biscuits, a plate, cutlery and
underneath – Playfair. His first words to Y were, “Hello, welcome.
What do you give a woman who has everything?”
• “Encouragement”, Y replied.
• “No, Penicillin”, said X rather triumphantly.
• He then told Y, “I hear you like driving. Well, I like drinking. We
are going to get along well.”
• First meeting between X and Y. Identify both.
54. 10.
• The story of what and who is the speaker?
• “I was working as a journalist at the Wolverhampton Express and Star,
and the librarian there suggested I wrote to the Hayward family, who
were from the town and well-known for helping ailing causes. So I
penned a letter to Jack's father Charles, but by all accounts it was
screwed up and thrown in the bin, because he wasn't interested in
sport. Luckily, his secretary fished it out and gave it to Jack! He knew
my name from reading my reports in the paper, and so he came to
sponsor two tours of the West Indies.”
• “I was staying in Sussex with Jack and his wife. After supper we started
having a little slurp of brandy, and as the level went down with the
bottle, Jack suddenly said, “Why don’t we have a _____ ___ __ ______
_______?”, and that he would pay for it. I put the idea to the governing
body, he sponsored the whole event, and it was as simple as that.”
56. 11.
• Montague Druitt had played against MCC as a nippy opening bowler.
He travelled in the Western country in 1882 and 1883 with a team
called Incogniti. In early August 1888, he turned up for Bournemouth
against the visiting Parsees, the game in which Mehallasha Pavri took 6
wickets and helped them win by 6 wickets.
• But, at the end of the 1888 cricket season, things went bad for Druitt.
He lost his job as a school teacher and in early December drowned
himself in the Thames. His suicide note to his brother stated – “Since
Friday, I felt I was going to be mother and the best thing for me to do
was die.” His mother had been in the Manor House Lunatic Asylum.
The inquest was held and the conclusion was “Suicide whilst of an
unsound mind.”
• Events after his death led to major speculation. Why was the death of
an amateur cricketer news?
57. Jack The Ripper
• Montague Druitt was one of the suspects. Jack the Ripper was
active between August and November 1888 murdering at least 5
women. The murders ended either due to the death,
imprisonment or emigration of the killer.
• Assistant Chief Constable Sir Melville Macnaghten named Druitt
as a suspect in the case. In a private handwritten memorandum
dated February 23, 1894, Macnaghten highlighted the
coincidence between Druitt’s disappearance and death shortly
after the last of the five murders. He also claimed “From private
information I have little doubt that his own family suspected this
man of being the Whitechapel murderer; it was alleged that he
was sexually insane.”
58. 12.
• Earlier in the day, it was about Mohammed Azharuddin and his
divorce and subsequent marriage to Sangeeta Bijlani. Later it was
Debashis Mohanty for his dark complexion.
• What was the third, that brought it to limelight?
59. Inzamam being called Aalo.
• Some chap called Thind
abused Azhar and Mohanty
when India fielded.
60. 13.
• Mary Boosey and and her husband Bruce — met, fell in love and
got married in India. In fact, Mary Boosey lived in Kolar Gold
Fields in Karnataka. Mary comes from a very sporting family.
• Her father Dudley was in contention for a place in the 1936
Olympic Hockey Team.
• Her uncle Leslie was the leading triple jumper in Asia in the
late 30’s to early 40’s.
• Leslie’s son Derek (also from KGF) represented Karnataka,
Maharashtra and Great Britain in triple jump at the 1968
Olympics.
• Mary and Bruce had a child in 1975, who represented his country
in 24 tests and 39 ODI’s. Who?
62. 14.
• He has lent his name to 2
stadiums that have hosted
world cup finals. Identify him.
63. George Eden
• Lord of Auckland after whom Eden Gardens in Kolkata and Eden
Park in Auckland are named.
• Eden Gardens hosted the cricket world cup final in 1987.
• Eden Park hosted the rugby world cup finals in 1987 and 2011.
64. 15.
• This was the brainchild of the Australian Cricket Board as a part
of the country’s bicentenary celebrations. It took place across
picturesque venues in South Australia and Victoria. 8 teams took
part. The concept was renewed with more enthusiasm few years
later.
• What?
65. U-19 World Cup
• The first ever version was held
in 1988. The Indian team had
future internationals like
Nayan Mongia, Pravin Amre,
SLV Raju, Hirwani etc.
• U-19 world cup was later
taken over by ICC and they
hosted their version in 1998.
Since then, the U-19 world
cup is played every 2 years.
66. 16.
• 1956 – Jim Laker
• 1975 - _____ ______
• 1981 – Ian Botham
• 2005 – Andrew Flintoff.
• Fill in the blank with a bank clerk who went to war.
• Also connect the four (exhaustive).
67. David Steele
• Made his test debut at the age of
33, when Tony Grieg asked the
selectors for someone who could
play fast bowling.
• The four are the only cricketers to
have won the BBC Sports
Personality of the Year Award.
68. 17.
• Edward Stevens was a Glenn McGrath like bowler known for his
accuracy back in the 18th century. John Small was a Gavaskar like
batsman known for his technique and a propensity to use the straight
bat. In a game at the Artillery Ground, these 2 faced off.
• Stevens’ team batted first and made 37. Small’s team replied with 92,
75 of which were scored by Small. Stevens’ team in the second innings
somehow did better to score 102 and set a target of 48. Small batted
last in the innings and went in when 14 were needed and despite not
really being in control he managed to take his team to a 1 wicket win.
• A controversy arose as Stevens had managed to beat Small’s bat thrice
but was not able to secure his wicket. This was due to the existing law
at that time and this game forced the law to be changed.
• What was the rule change?
69. 3 stumps
• Cricket back in the 18th century was played with 2 stumps.
Stevens managed to beat Small’s bat and despite bowling him
through the gate, could not get his wicket.
• So a new law was passed ensuring 3 stumps.
74. 3.
• He won the South African cricketer of the Year award in 1994 and
1995 for his performances in the first class competition. They
ended up being his final 2 seasons of cricket. Who?
75. 4.
• 2 people opening the
batting for Indian
Journalists XI at
Faislabad. The slightly
rotund gentleman is a
doyen among Indian
cricket journalists and
has a record of touring
with every single team
from 1968 to 2003.
Who?
76. 5.
• This now obsolete machine being used. What was it called?
Named after the city where it was used and its function.
77. 6.
• Sherlock Holmes makes an
appearance in a legendary test match.
Which one?
• The match is famous for a possibly
apocryphal quote.
78. 7.
• This was one of the earliest
bowling machines ever invented.
Invented by a man named
Nicholas Felix. What was it
called?
87. 3.
• He won the South African cricketer of the Year award in 1994 and
1995 for his performances in the first class competition. They
ended up being his final 2 seasons of cricket. Who?
89. 4.
• 2 people opening the
batting for Indian
Journalists XI at
Faislabad. The slightly
rotund gentleman is a
doyen among Indian
cricket journalists and
has a record of touring
with every single team
from 1968 to 2003.
Who?
91. 5.
• This now obsolete machine being used. What was it called?
Named after the city where it was used and its function.
92. • Brumbrella
• It made its appearance from 1981 to 2001 at the Edgbaston
cricket ground. Its name is a portmanteau of Brum – nickname of
Birmingham and Umbrella – reflecting its function.
93. 6.
• Sherlock Holmes makes an
appearance in a legendary test match.
Which one?
• The match is famous for a possibly
apocryphal quote.
94. • 1902 Fifth Ashes Test held at The Oval.
• Quote – “We’ll get them in singles”
95. 7.
• This was one of the earliest
bowling machines ever invented.
Invented by a man named
Nicholas Felix. What was it
called?
100. Ewen Chatfield
• He nearly died on the pitch after being hit by bouncer from Peter
Lever. England physio Bernard Thomas pulled his tongue out and
let the air flow in again.
102. David Hookes
• Hit on the head from a bouncer by Andy Roberts. This incident
and the quality of pitches on display at the WSC fast tracked the
introduction of helmets.
103. Anti-Clockwise
• 17 questions.
• Infinite bounce. 10 points
• Reset the number of incorrect pounces to 2. So +10 for pounce,
but in case of an incorrect pounce, you lose 1 pounce.
• And in case you are pouncing, all parts of the answer must be
correct.
104. 1.
• Connect the following first class games.
• Duleep Trophy semifinals 2013 between North Zone and East
Zone.
• Plate Division semifinals 2004-05 between Himachal Pradesh
and Services.
• To my knowledge these are the only 2 games to share this
connect.
106. 2.
• These games were initiated in 1951 by a keen cricket fan and the
money raised was donated to Legacy, a charity for the
dependents of deceased Australian servicemen. It later fell into
abeyance but was revived in 1984 and has continued ever since.
• It is struggling to find relevance in a crowded calendar, but is
seen as a showcase for future stars. Today most games involve a
retired legend, who is thanked for his contribution to the game
and gives an opportunity to up-and-coming youngsters to show
their wares.
• What?
107. Prime Ministers XI games in Australia
• Started by Robert Menzies in 1951. Stopped in 1965.
• Later reinstated by Bob Hawke in 1984.
• The last ever appearance of Don Bradman on a cricket field was
at the 1962-63 Prime Ministers XI vs MCC game. Alec Bedser
decided to play for MCC but they could not face each other as
Bradman was dismissed for 4.
108. 3.
• 2 sides to the story
• Gogumal Kishenchand wanted to be in the record books and
hence requested his captain a chance to bowl.
• Lala Amarnath as a surprise tactic asked Kishenchand, who had
not bowled a single ball on the tour to bowl.
• Whatever the story, the record was made on the 5th ball of
Kishenchand’s over. So what essentially is Gogumal
Kishenchand’s claim to fame?
109. • Kishenchand was the bowler when Bradman reached his 100th
first class hundred. This was achieved during a game between
Australians XI and India.
110. 4.
• Bangladeshi pacer Shafiul Islam was the first to be penalized
after the change of rules. The rule change was necessitated after
an incident in August 2012.
• What is the incident that caused a rule change?
111. Steve Finn rule
• If a bowler breaks the stump
while bowling, it is now
considered a no ball.
• Steve Finn had got Greame
Smith caught at slip. But it was
called a dead ball after Smith
complained to the umpires
that he was distracted by the
bowlers action. Though,
earlier in the day he smashed
a half volley for four despite
the bowler breaking the
stumps.
112. 5.
• The legendary father uses x in his surname, whereas the son uses
ks. The son made his test debut in 2003 becoming the first
person from his region to play test cricket. He played an
important role in a world record in just his second test match.
But he could not sustain his promising start and was dropped
soon.
• The son retired in 2012 in order to emulate his father. Identify
the father and the son.
113. • Father -> Bankie Banx – also called the Anguillian Bob Dylan
• Son -> Omari Banks – first player from Anguilla to play test
cricket. Had an important hand in West Indies beating Australia
while chasing 418.
114. 6.
• Hanson “Sammy” Carter was an Australian wicketkeeper who
played 27 tests between 1907-08 and 1921-22. As a batsman, his
repertoire included an usual ____ shot – not unlike the Dilscoop
– that sent the ball over his left shoulder. The legend was that he
perfected his shot due to his profession which he did for many
years before his cricket career started.
• What was Carter’s day job?
115. Undertaker
• One of his saddest tasks was
to arrange the funeral of
Victor Trumper.
116. 7.
• X’s stereotypical Englishness spawned many possibly apocryphal
anecdotes - He was fielding for ________ _____ ____ and
dropped a catch. He then asked his butler to fetch the glasses for
him. After dropping another catch, he is said to have remarked
“Damned fool, has brought my reading glasses.”
• X was spotted once at Lord’s. “That guy seems familiar”,
remarked one man. “Yes”, said the second, “Chap called X, used
to play for Sussex”. Obviously the second guy was oblivious to his
post cricket career.
• X?
118. 8.
• In his last interview before his death, when asked about how he
got into the game, X mentioned that he started out as an umpire
and stood as umpire in all the major domestic games. When
administrative duties took more of his time, he decided to give
up umpiring. X in a playful response said that if he had known
BCCI would have pension schemes for umpires, he would have
stood as umpire in at least 1 one day international.
• Identify X notorious for an accurate prediction. What was his
prediction?
119. Jayawant Lele
• Before the 1999 series against
Australia, he predicted that India
will lose 3-0. He was the board
secretary at that time.
120. 9.
• He was a rock star schoolboy cricketer but was unable to make it
to the first XI of Yorkshire. He went to Worcestershire in 1960. He
played 22 times in the 1964 season, when Worcestershire won
their maiden championship win. He finished his career playing 97
games with only 1 first class hundred.
• In 1986, he became the chairman of Worcestershire and
managed to attract high profile names like Ian Botham to the
team and this enabled them to win 2 county championships, 2
Sunday League titles, 1 B&H cup and 1 Natwest Trophy in his 12
years as chairman.
• He is associated with ‘3 stumps’ and was considered a batsmen’s
best friend during the 70’s and 80’s. Who?
121. Duncan Fearnley
• Some of the best batsmen of the 80’s used Duncan Fearnley bats.
Like Gavaskar, Lloyd, Botham, Gooch, Richards, Border etc.
122. 10.
• Nazar Mohammad, father of Mudassar Nazar, became the first
Pakistani batsman to carry his bat when he made 124 not out
against India in his 2nd test match. He played the entire series
scoring 277 runs and being only 31, he looked a certainty at the
top of the order for Pakistan for the foreseeable future.
• A certain Shaukhat Hussain in his memoirs ‘Noor Jehan and I’,
claims that he is responsible for ending the career of Nazar
Mohammad.
• How?
123. • Shaukhat Hussain returned
home one day early to catch
Noor Jehan and Nazar
Mohammad in a
compromising position. When
Nazar saw Shaukhat, he
jumped from the first floor
injuring his hand and leg.
• The injuries from this fall
ended Nazar Mohammad’s
career.
124. 11.
• The 1936-37 Ashes series was a classic. England won the first 2
tests comprehensively, before a Bradman inspired comeback in
the 3rd and 4th tests drew the series at 2-2. In the final test
Bradman won the toss and scored 169. McCabe joined in the fun
with 112. Ross Gregory, who had made his debut in the previous
test almost joined the duo with a century of his own but was
caught off the bowling off Ken Farnes, who finished with a six
wicket haul. Australia amassed 604 and won the game by a
innings to win the Ashes 3-2. Gregory never played again.
• The dismissal of Gregory was unusual when looked at
retrospectively after events that happened in the next few years.
What is unusual about this dismissal?
125. All victims of World War 2.
• Fielder was Hedley Verity who died in Sicily.
• Bowler Ken Farnes who died while flying over Oxfordshire.
• Ross Gregory was killed in active service in 1942.
• 9 test cricketers were killed on duty during World War 2.
126. 12.
• Excerpts from an article written by Derek Pringle –
“The thought occurred while recently watching X's _ __________
______ and noticing a Y on the prison governor's desk as he
informs the lead actor of his selection as a guinea pig for a
government experiment.
X was a well known obsessive and the yellow tome, a 1969 edition,
would not have been there by accident. My guess is that it was a
visual metaphor used to depict both authority and the
establishment.”
• What is this all about?
128. 13.
• Sidney Adams was a right handed batsmen and leg break bowler
who played for Northamptonshire. He was one of the many who
died during World War 2.
• He is also one of the few to take 2 wickets of the 2 balls that he
bowled in first class cricket. He achieved this feet in a game
against Dublin University in 1926.
• The first wicket that he took was of a person who never played
first class cricket again. During the time of the game, he was a
student at Dublin University and once he left, never played first
class cricket again as he went to pursue other endeavors.
• Who is this batsman?
129. Samuel Beckett
• He played 2 first class games, both
against Northamptonshire.
• Only Nobel laureate to be included in
the Wisden Almanack.
130. 14.
• He was a compact batsman – and a competent off break bowler
– with a defense that was hard to breach. He led Ruia college
with distinction at the inter-collegiate level and was almost
selected for the Bombay University team.
• He played Kanga league ‘B’ division for Young Comrades and
graduated to ‘A’ division for Jolly cricketers. He was good enough
to play against the likes of Gavaskar and Vengsarkar in the Kanga
A division. He now travels to San Francisco every July for
coaching assignments.
• But he is most famous for a close association with another
cricketer. Who?
132. 15.
• It has sometimes been attributed to Duke of Richmond. One of
the Duke’s ancestors was indeed involved in the early days, but it
is unlikely that he inspired it. It may have been borrowed from I
Zingari.
• But it is most likely attributed to William Nicholson, who was the
owner of Nicholson’s Gin company. He saved them during crisis
by providing significant loans. Though there is no written proof, it
is most likely a form of thank you to Nicholson.
• What?
133. Egg and Bacon colours of MCC
• Is considered to be cricket’s first corporate sponsorship.
134. 16.
• The first time he celebrated this way was after scoring a double
hundred – his second outside his home country. Considering
what happened the next day, his celebration seemed ironic.
Subsequently, he used it after scoring hundreds.
• Interpretations are varied – either celebrating his career
resurrection or a message to selectors who would drop him after
a few failures, or aiming at critics who questioned his age,
commitment and a disparity in performances between home and
away records.
• What is this all about?
135. Thilan Samarawera, gun celebration
• He celebrated this way for the
first time after reaching his
double hundred at Lahore.
The next day, he had a bullet
travel 12 inches into his thigh.
136. 17.
• He was as shocked as everybody else when his name was
displayed. He asked people associated with the project and was
told that they needed someone, who was obviously not a
possibility. Maybe the writer, who is English and a cricket
follower, heard him commentating and decided to include him.
• Who and what is this all about?
137. Michael Slater
• He was one of the options in Slumdog Millionaire movie for the
question – who has scored the most first class centuries.
• Other options – Sachin Tendulkar, Ricky Ponting and Jack Hobbs.
139. List It
• 6 players have captained Karnataka to their 7 Ranji titles.
• All 6 have represented India in tests. List them. 5 points for each.
• One has lifted the trophy twice. Circle the name for 5 bonus points.
• The years in which Karnataka won the Ranji Trophy are given below:
• 1973-74
• 1977-78
• 1982-83
• 1995-96
• 1997-98
• 1998-99
• 2013-14
143. 1.
• It all started in 1969, when _____ _____, then a budding
wicketkeeper-batsman at the government run Birla School, failed
to find a place in the final 16 of Delhi’s CK Nayudu trophy team
that was led by Y.
• “Y was the captain and despite being the best wicketkeeper-
batsman, I was not selected as there was a huge turf war
between Delhi Public School and Xavier’s on who would get
more people into the team. I was from lowly Birla school and was
rejected. That day I decided not to let another talented poor boy
to suffer my fate.”
• Fill in the blanks and identify Y, who is probably more famous for
bringing into question a certain person’s ability to ahem… harden
at the correct moment.
144. Tarak Sinha, Salman Khurshid.
• Tarak Sinha famously started the Sonnet club. He has coached 13
international players and over 100 first class players including
Manoj Prabhakhar, Aakash Chopra, Shikhar Dhawan and Anjum
Chopra.
• Salman Khurshid of course called Narendra Modi ‘impotent’.
145. 2.
• The pinnacle of his playing career was being part of a New South
Wales U-19 schools cricket team captained by Michael Slater and
also had Adam Gilchrist for company. A back injury after this
game forced him to reassess his playing career.
• Who?
147. 3.
• ? – X, Y
• 68 – Rahul Dravid
• 60 – Vijay Hazare
• 55 – Dilip Vengsarkar
• 55 – VVS Laxman
• 54 – Mohammed Azharuddin.
• Identify ?, X and Y.
148. Number of first class hundreds by Indians
• ? – 81
• Sunil Gavaskar and Sachin Tendulkar share the record for most
first class centuries by Indians.
149. List It
• List all Indian bowlers to have taken more than 5 wickets in an
innings at Lords.
• There are 12 names.