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A very good batsman, but ...
SOME years ago, Tim Rice was awarded an Oscar for the songs he
wrote for the Disney film "The Lion King". In his acceptance
speech, the British songwriter told the audience in Hollywood
that "I'd also like to thank Denis Compton, a boyhood hero of
mine". Rice's hosts, the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and
Sciences were baffled. Later, they were constrained to issue this
official disclaimer: "We do not know who Denis Compton is. He
does not appear to be at Disney Studios or have anything to do
with 'The Lion King'."
A previous Oscar awardee, Satyajit Ray, might have helped answer
the question for the Academy. In the monsoon of 1944, when Ray
was watching Hollywood films in the Minerva Theatre, off
Calcutta's Chowringhee Avenue, his more sport-minded friends and
relatives were across Chowringhee at the Maidan, watching Compton
play on the left wing for the Royal Fusiliers against Mohun
Bagan. For football was the Englishman's first game, and
fittingly the one he first played in India. However, after the
rains stopped Compton was posted to Mhow, deep in the interior.
Now Mhow is an army encampment which is but 14 miles from Indore,
then capital of Holkar State. Then also capital of Indian
cricket, the home of Colonel C. K. Nayudu and Mushtaq Ali. The
Arsenal and England footballer thus reverted to being the
Middlesex and England cricketer. That year's Ranji Trophy had
commenced, and Holkar hoped to recruit him into their team. Their
Colonel talked to Compton's commanding General, who said he would
release him from his duties for 10 days in all.
Mindful of this limit, Nayudu did not call upon the Englishman in
the early matches. He did, however, play against Madras in the
semi-final, topscoring with 81 as Holkar won by 10 wickets
(Compton also took a wicket, bowling chinamen). The final was
played at the Brabourne Stadium, against Bombay. In the fashion
of the day, it was to be played to a finish, regardless of how
long that took. The match was played in scorching heat, and on
the most perfect of pitches it hinged crucially on the toss.
Vijay Merchant won it, and his side batted for a day-and-a-half,
ending with 462 all out. Holkar replied with 360, including 109
by Syed Mushtaq Ali. When Bombay batted again, the match had
already been in progress for close to four days. Holkar went into
the field for a second time under a disadvantage such as no
cricket team had faced before (or since). This was C. K. Nayudu's
strange insistence that none of his players were to drink water
or other refreshments during play, even during the intervals
allowed for the purpose. Holkar's Hitler granted an exception for
the White man, but this was no use, for Compton was not one of
the main bowlers. Those poor fellows toiled in the sun as the
Bombay batsmen made merry. Merchant scored a double 100, the
talented Parsi pair of Rusi Mody and Rusi Cooper a century
apiece. The innings closed at 764, leaving Holkar 869 to win.
Time, in this case, was not of the essence: they could bat on
till the millennium, if they had the will to.
Holkar lost three wickets for a hundred odd, but then Mushtaq and
Compton (who had failed the first time around) got stuck into the
Bombay bowling. Mushtaq played his usual game, straight in
defence one moment, crooked in attack the next. Between overs
Compton would tell him to cool it. When he reached his second
century of the match, the Englishman told him that if he played
carefully, victory was within the bounds of possibility. Soon
afterwards the carefree Indian was caught on the boundary, but
Compton went, on, and on. When the ninth wicket fell there were
nearly 500 runs to get. The last pair got 109 of them, number
eleven's share being 11 runs. Compton finished with a heroic 249
not out.
Compton was to later write of that innings that he felt cheated
not because his team-mates had let him down, but because a
wealthy Indore merchant had not paid up as promised. He claimed
that at lunch on the seventh or eight day, when he was about 80
not out, this man, Seth Hiralal, promised him Rs. 50 for every
additional run he would score after his 100. When the match
ended, Compton went to the Holkar dressing room expecting to find
a packet with Rs. 7,450 waiting for him. He was instead delivered
a handwritten note which read: "Urgent illness in family. Have to
return to Indore immediately". He was never to see the man again.
In his own memoirs, written long after his partner's, Mushtaq Ali
was emphatic that Compton had no reason for complaint, for the
merchant's offer was for the first innings only. In that knock
Mushtaq was out for 109 collecting Rs. 450, but as he noted,
"That day, if I had consciously played for money, I could have
made a fortune. Instead I played aggressively as I have done
throughout my career". Of their famous second-innings partnership
Mushtaq recalled how they "stole many impossible singles from
gaps in the field. It was surprising how Denis and myself could
get that understanding between us, so as to produce perfect
running between the wickets". Now if this were true it would be
more noteworthy by far than the case of the (possibly)
dishonourable merchant. For Compton was a dreadful judge of a
run, someone who had sent to their doom at least a thousand other
batsmen. One of his victims, Frank Tyson, said of Denis' running
between the wickets that to the three standard calls, "Yes",
"No", and "Wait", he added a fourth: "Bugger It", this uttered
when it became clear that his partner would be run out.
Compton's last appearance on an Indian cricket field came late in
1945, when he was picked to play at the Eden Gardens for East
Zone against the visiting Australian Service team. He was batting
on 98 when there was an invasion of the pitch by a section of the
crowd. Members of a leftwing students union were protesting the
arrest the previous day of some prominent nationalists ... The
leader of the students now walked up to the Englishman and said:
"Mr. Compton, you are a very good batsman, but you must go."
After a brief pause Compton carried on to score his 100, but the
radical's words were to be remembered always by first slip. For
years afterwards, whenever he came to bat in an Ashes Test, Keith
Miller would greet him thus: "Mr. Compton, you are a very good
batsman, but you must go".
The next summer, Compton played three Tests for his home country
against the visiting Indian side. In the second Test, played at
Old Trafford, he scored 51 and 71 not out. In the final Test,
played at the Oval, Compton made 24 not out in his only time at
bat and, while in the field, ran out Vijay Merchant with a deft
kick from short mid on. However, in the first Test, played at his
home ground, Lord's, he made a duck. When another Indian Test
side played at the Home of Cricket 40 years later, Compton sought
out one of its members, Mohinder Amarnath. "Did you know," said
Denis to him, "that in 1946 I played here against your father,
and he bowled me first ball."
"Yes, sir," answered Mohinder, "I have often heard about it." A
lovely exchange that tells us what we must remember about all
three men - the son's devotion, the father's pride, and the
Englishman's generosity.
RAMACHANDRA GUHA
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