Dear Cricket Monthly,I was schooled at St Xaviers but my lifes university was
Third Ground on the Kolkata Maidan.
Jimmy Butler Jersey .Third Ground (between
Governors House and Fort William) was like the outcry chaos of the stock
exchange. A number of teams played concurrently; the midwicket position in one
match would be the leg slip of another; the gully of one match would be the
mid-off of another. There should have been an insurance scheme to cover the
health hazard that fielders negotiated without abdomen guards, shin guards or
helmets, instinctively covering their heads when they heard a middled stroke
within 20 feet and praying nothing happened. If something did happen, the poor
fellow would be carted to hospital, stitched up and returned to the ground to
resume fielding (somewhere safer as his captains concession). We learnt survival
skills on Third Ground.Third Ground was the cathedral of our existence, where
Shield matches would be held. These were the tournaments for which my fathers
club conducted meetings wearing specially monogrammed ties, deliberated on
tournament practices, wrote extensive minutes in archaic English, planted green
flags on boundary lines, set up scorers tables, attired umpires in dentist-style
overalls, served players chicken soup (strength!) between innings and
congregated with families in the evening for the post-mortem followed by a thaal
dinner. We learnt organisational skills on Third Ground. Third Ground was a
place with a multi-generational reference point. When my father was into his
sixties, he would occasionally be stopped by someone 20 years younger with the
words, Kaisey hai, uncle?Yaad hai aapko bees saal pehle apne khele the… [How are
you, uncle? Remember we had played together 20 years ago…] Or when someone
mentioned that Haider bhai had died, there would be a shaking of heads among
old-timers of other teams with the words Kya legcutter daalte the. [What amazing
legcutters he would bowl.] We learnt to respect on Third Ground.Third Ground was
mini India. The oldest pitch tenants were Bohra Muslims who accounted for three
strips and had been playing there since the early 50s. The Sindhis played on one
standard pitch for decades, the Marwaris accounted for another three, and some
of the Gujarati teams floated from one to another based on their playing
schedule. This was where entire communities, who otherwise lived clannish
existences, briefly (but periodically) interfaced with each other. For most of
those from my clannish Bohra background, the Sindhis were a people belonging to
a remote world; on Third Ground they were touchy-feely, they were outstanding
gentlemen, and their portly Subhash (nobody knew his surname) was the
friendliest face of a friendly team of a friendly community. And so if the
Sindhis lost, questions would be communicated from person to person until they
reached them four pitches away: Prem itna lallu ball mein out kaise ho gaya?
[How did Prem get out to such a useless delivery?] Or if they pulled off an
unexpected victory over, say, Paridhee, teams from other pitches would turn
around with a Well done! before turning to take the next ball. We learnt to
engage with others on Third Ground.Third Ground was a crucible where all these
teams (60 in all) participated in the overarching Maidan League, which was our
version of the World Cup. This league was the brainchild of Ram Nivas, better
known as the Maidans Kerry Packer. Ram Nivas was ahead of his time - his
starched white kurta-pyjama would contrast the general playing attire; his
briefcase would carry team schedules, umpire reporting sheets and cash; he was
team owner (of Ankur) and tournament organiser, which would have carried charges
of conflict of interest today; he was known to buy players for his team before
anyone had heard of auctions.Ram Nivas legacy to the Maidan was that he created
a tournament that extended into May and attracted participation from all
communities. Bohra Muslims played Burrabazar Marwaris; Bhowanipore Gujaratis
played Sindhis; you know what I mean. And we understood communities better when
we played against them. There was a Maidan awe about the way Mohib bhai moved
the new ball. Everyone feared the Sunil Gupta who peppered Red Road with 60-yard
sixes. We learnt to appreciate people for what they were on Third Ground,
irrespective of which pocket of Calcutta they came from and what we might have
earlier heard about them. And lastly, Third Ground was our Facebook. We
identified people by their cricketing quirks. Pawan Haralalka bowled the fastest
off four steps. Pradeep Acharya never bowled without chucking. Bala Parekh
overcame a physical handicap (one leg shorter than another) to bowl into his
fifties. Chandresh Soni was the guy who wore a harlequin cap while opening.
Feroze Degani probably ran faster than he bowled. Sanjay Chowdhry was the only
one on the Maidan who batted with an original Gray-Nicolls. Manoj Chharia rode
the sexiest Honda bike to the Maidan. Usman and Uchit were the maalis who
watered our pitches, applied choonaon our popping creases and got us nimbu paani
between innings from absolutely unhygienic metal containers. Bharat Express
Thakkar could be recognised from 500 metres away due to his Michael Holding-like
evenly paced run-up. Taher Muchhala bowled legspinners till into his late
sixties, driven by the dream of beating CK Nayudus feat of playing first-class
cricket at 69. The Bohri Shield matches generated a crowd of 2000 (1000 women!)
that made it worthwhile for every single batsman to want to hit a six while they
were around. We learnt at Third Ground to belong.Third Ground was the address of
hundreds for 20 Sundays a year, nine to one. Third Ground was where everyone
wanted to make it big (to hell with bloody Eden Gardens). Third Ground was where
we wanted to be cherished. Third Ground was the happiest place in the world.In
the mid-90s, the army carved away a part of the precious Third Ground turf to
build a memorial for those who had fought in the 1971 war.Teams scattered,
tournaments disbanded, communities drifted, silence descended.Nobody plays on
Third Ground any more.Third Ground lives. But only in our
memories.Nostalgically, Mudar
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