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Narendra Hirwani

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Narendra Hirwani
Personal information
Full name
Narendra Deepchand Hirwani
Born (1968-10-18) 18 October 1968 (age 56)
Gorakhpur, Uttar Pradesh, India
BattingRight-handed
BowlingRight arm leg spin
RelationsMihir Hirwani (son)
International information
National side
Test debut (cap 180)11 January 1988 v West Indies
Last Test1 December 1996 v South Africa
ODI debut (cap 67)22 January 1988 v West Indies
Last ODI18 January 1992 v Australia
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1984–2006Madhya Pradesh
1996–1997Bengal
Career statistics
Competition Tests ODI FC LA
Matches 17 18 167 70
Runs scored 54 8 1179 121
Batting average 5.40 2.00 10.34 7.55
100s/50s 0/0 0/0 0/1 0/0
Top score 17 4 59 25*
Balls bowled 4298 960 42890 3573
Wickets 66 23 732 75
Bowling average 30.10 31.26 21.05 34.14
5 wickets in innings 4 0 54 0
10 wickets in match 1 0 10 0
Best bowling 8/61 4/43 8/52 4/42
Catches/stumpings 5/– 2/– 48/– 14/–
Medal record
Men's Cricket
Representing  India
ACC Asia Cup
Winner 1988 Bangladesh
Source: CricketArchive, 21 September 2008

Narendra Deepchand Hirwani pronunciation (born 18 October 1968) is a leg spin bowler who played for India. He is mainly remembered for his success on his Test debut.[1] He was a part of the Indian squad which won the 1988 Asia Cup.

Early days

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Hirwani came from a well-off family in Gorakhpur. He belongs to the Sindhi Hindu community and his father owned a brick factory. Hirwani moved to Indore in his teenage where he stayed in a room near the ground under the guidance of the Madhya Pradesh cricketer Sanjay Jagdale.

Hirwani made his first class debut for Madhya Pradesh at the age of 16 and took five wickets on his debut. He did much better in the following seasons and took 23 wickets in an under-19 three Test series against Australia.

His big break came for India U-25 against the touring West Indians in 1987–88. He failed in the first innings but took all the six wickets to fall in the second. This got him selected to the Test team.

He is an alumnus of the Guru Gobind Singh Sports College, Lucknow.

Success in Tests

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Hirwani's debut was in the final Test of the series at Madras. The wicket was underprepared. India won an important toss and made 382. Hirwani took three of the five West Indian wickets to fall on the second day. On the third morning, Hirwani clean-bowled Vivian Richards with a googly which the batsman failed to pick, and dismissed the remaining four batsmen to finish with 8 for 61. This made him only the fourth bowler to take eight wickets in an innings on debut.

Set 416 to win in the second innings West Indies were dismissed in about 40 overs. The batsmen tried to hit out, the result of which was five stumpings for the wicket-keeper Kiran More. Hirwani took 8 for 75, for match figures of 16 for 136. This bettered the record of Bob Massie who had taken 16 for 137 on his debut in 1972, and is still a record to date.

More success followed in the home series against New Zealand the next year. The pitches afforded spin; Hirwani took 20 wickets in three Tests, and his partner Arshad Ayub 21. In his first four Tests he had taken 36 wickets, the most by any bowler at this stage of their career.

ODIs

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Hirwani won the man of the series in the 1987–88 Sharjah Cup a three nation tournament in Sharjah a few months later, capturing 10 wickets in three matches. In the process, he became the first Indian bowler to capture 4 wickets in 3 consecutive ODIs.

Later career

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His career took a turn for the worse on the tour of West Indies in 1988–89. He struggled, even at Port of Spain where the wicket helped spinners, taking six wickets across three Tests at an average of 57.33,[2] his bowling was expensive but was not helped by his captain's field placings.[3]

Thereafter he had little success in his international career. Hirwani was too slow in the air to cause trouble, except on wickets which turned sharply. One of the few memorable performances was in the last league match of the 1991–92 World Series. India needed to beat West Indies to qualify for the final. Picked unexpectedly, Hirwani played an important part with a spell in which he had Brian Lara stumped off a flipper and Richie Richardson leg before wicket on the backfoot with a leg break. This was not sufficient to find him a place in the team for the World Cup that followed.

His next chance came in a Test against New Zealand four years later. On a rain affected match, he took 6 for 59. He toured England in 1996 and played two more Tests against South Africa at home. In 2001, he was picked in the fourteen to play Australia at home, but he never made the final eleven. After the series, he went to the press, criticising Indian captain Sourav Ganguly for not choosing him.

Narendra Hirwani continued to be a prominent bowler in domestic cricket. He took over 400 wickets for Madhya Pradesh in Ranji trophy and retired from first-class cricket at the end of the 2005–06 season.

On 3 September 2014, Narendra Hirwani was appointed as the chairman of Ranji Trophy Tournament Selection Committee of the Madhya Pradesh Cricket Association.

He has also invested in a UClean franchise in the state of Uttar Pradesh. UClean is India's largest laundry and dry-cleaning chain which works on the franchise model. He is also seen in the famous video of Mile Sur Mera Tumhara in the Sindhi section of the song, representing the Sindhi people of India.

Records

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Hirwani holds the Test record (World Record) of bowling 59 overs unchanged without a break (other than for scheduled intervals), during a test match against England at The Oval in 1990.[4]

Coaching career

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He was appointed as director of cricket for Nepal National Cricket Team

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "The Chennai marauder". ESPNcricinfo. 18 October 2006. Retrieved 18 October 2017.
  2. ^ "Statsguru - ND Hirwani - Test matches - Bowling series averages". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 9 October 2024.
  3. ^ "The Indians in the West Indies, 1988-89". Wisden Cricketers' Almanack. 1990. Retrieved 9 October 2024 – via ESPNcricinfo.
  4. ^ "The longest spell, and ten wickets and losing".
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