A Tribute to Alvin Kallicharran: Pofessionalism Personified

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By Albert Baldeo

“Kallicharran is one of the best players of spin bowling I have seen…This is not to say that he was inadequate against pace, and, at his best, is the complete player.” – Clive Lloyd

“Once we walk out to bat, there is no rich or poor and there is no black or white. It is just me and you. So I was brought up in that culture of being a streetfighter – that you don’t see danger, you don’t see anxiety. All you are looking at is tomorrow – how will you fight again. So Lillee bowling to me is, just… I’m going to bat again tomorrow. Not that I don’t respect him. I respect what opposition we are playing against, but if you say that you are going to walk out and feel intimidated, what are we going out there for? Why did they select me if I am not going to fight?” – Alvin Kallicharran

In 1979, the smallest international batsman, standing a mere 5ft 4in at full height, took apart a rampaging Vanburn Holder in a dazzling innings of 107* when Warwickshire defeated Worcestershire with such ferocious hooks, pulls and drives of sheer genius that Holder was immediately taken off. In 1982, against Somerset, he played one of the great limited overs innings in hammering 141*. When the 6ft 8in Joel Garner bounced at his head, he swiveled beautifully in trademark style and hooked his towering adversary high over square leg for 6 with stunning power. Warwickshire’s captain Bob Willis said that the little man’s “knock contained a myriad of high-class shots. His stock-in-trade pulls and hooks were supplemented by a series of silken drives on the rise through the off. Somerset came apart at the seams.”

In 1983, after Warwickshire had been swept aside for 43 by Sussex, he lifted them from the doldrums with 210 at Leicester. He carved up Gloucestershire for 173 at Nuneaton. A week later came the Southport saga, when he blasted 230* in an English record fourth-wicket stand of 470 with Geoff Humpage. A marvellous195 against Surrey, followed by 109* in the return against Worcestershire preceded the big battle at Southampton. It pitted the little master, the country’s leading run scorer, against Malcolm Marshall, the leading wicket-taker – a clash of titans. The little dynamo won that contest, taming the great Marshall’s hostile pace with genius, and enthralled again with a superb131 raising him past 2,000 runs in a season for the first time in his career. His eight centuries in a summer equaled the Warwickshire record held jointly by R. E. S. Wyatt (1937) and Rohan Kanhai (1972).

In 1975, this was the same batsman who set cricket’s biggest inaugural tournament on fire when he tamed the hostile Dennis Lillee by hooking, cutting, cover driving and pulling the demon fast bowler astonishingly all around the ground in a spellbinding 10 ball sequence of 4,4,4,4,4,1,4,6,0,4 – 35 runs, which sent the crowd into pandemonium-real high class batting artistry and stroke play.

Who was this little maestro and why, with so much class and technique, was he not playing for his country, having just been chosen as one of Wisden’s Cricketers of the Year in 1983, the benchmark of cricket recognition?

He was Alvin Kallicharran, and the rest is history. Although among the very top tier of batsmen of his era, Alvin Isaac Kallicharran is hardly given the thanks and commendations he earned. Playing cricket in South Africa did not help his cause, but he is a genuine, yet unsung, hero.

“Kalli,” as he is affectionately called, was believed to bear more than just a namesake to the legendary Hindu deity when he unleashed his incomparable batting skills all over the world, packing such power and genius in his batting that it seemed divinely granted. When he toured India, a country where cricketers are treated like deity, many spectators came to see him bat, and left convinced that he was thus blessed. He was indisputably considered one of the most complete, accomplished and versatile batsmen ever produced by the West Indies, one whose artistry was not brooked by limitations and one who was the master of all types of bowlers and wickets. He was a man for all seasons, a quintessential gem in any batting lineup. If I were a betting man, and the West Indies needed a savior in a crisis, I would have betted my money on Alvin Kallicharran in front of anyone else.
His professionalism to the game and his clinical, and spellbinding annihilation of Dennis Lillee in the 1975 World Cup are two of the game’s most enduring memories. His encounter with Lillee pitted a cricketing David against a virtual Goliath in Lillee. Lillee, one of the game’s most feared pace merchants and an automatic pick in any all-time World XI, was at his prime, and had destroyed batsmen literally and figuratively the world over with peerless pace and accuracy. Kallicharran, batting without helmet, thigh pad or arm guard, played a succession of magnificent shots which sent Lillee into vanquished submission. The more Kalli dispatched him, the faster and more hostile he bowled, and the more the Guyanese savaged him, enthralling the crowd with rare virtuosity and gifted stroke play.

Iconic: One of cricket’s greatest sights is Alvin Kallicharran annihilating Dennis Lillee in the inaugural 1975 World Cup, immortalized on You Tube.

Born in Port Mourant, the Mecca of Guyanese batsmen, Kallicharran represented the Guyana school team in the West Indies championship in 1966. A mere year later, at the age of 16, he then became the youngest player to appear for Guyana in the Shell Shield. He thereafter inspired Guyanese sportsmen to reach for cricket’s greatest accolades. Kalli was a lightweight who packed a knockout punch and a killer instinct which floored many bowlers around the world, keeping them down for the count. Like his idol and mentor, the legendary Rohan Kanhai, the diminutive Kallicharran was a stroke player who derived his power from tremendous talent, the heart of a lion, hawk eyesight, panther reflexes and immaculate timing. He struck the ball far beyond the capacity of his diminutive frame. Whereas other batsmen like Viv Richards, Gordon Greenidge and Clive Lloyd bludgeoned the ball, Kalli mostly caressed it, surgically bisecting gaps in the field with his supple wrists and an impressive array of breathtaking strokes to all corners of the ground, while also unleashing shots of unbelievable power.

His greatest asset was his determination and masterful assessment and appreciation of the game as it stood and his application thereafter to give his team the edge in winning. Kallicharran’s best performances were made when everyone was at odds with the bowling and when his world class ability to bat was sorely needed by his team- whether it was for Guyana, Berbice, the West Indies, Warwickshire, Queensland, Transvaal or Orange Free State, or whether it was the long or short version of the game. This wristy genius had every stroke at his command and in his armory, and that was why he was easily acknowledged around the world as one of the best exponents in the art of batting in his heyday. His technique and temperament were among the best in the game, whether he was playing the fiery pace like fire of Dennis Lillee, Jeff Thompson, or Bob Willis, the menacing swing of Imran Khan, Kapil Dev or Sarfraz Nawaz, the blistering yorkers of Ian Botham or Bruce Taylor, the befuddling spin of Intikhab Alam, Bishen Bedi or Terry Jenner, the mesmerizing guile of Derek Underwood or the unique magic of Bhagwat Chandrashekar. Or whether he was batting at a batsman’s paradise like Bourda or Kingston, the spinners’ pitches like Port of Spain, Bangalore, Karachi, Lahore, Madras or Kanpur, or the lightning fast tracks of Perth, Brisbane or Headingly or at the home of cricket-Lord’s. No occasion was too big for him. Kalli was professionalism-personified.

Kallicharran made his international debut against New Zealand in the fourth Test at his native in sensational fashion at Bourda, Georgetown in 1972, and thrilled the spectators with an unbeaten century when he joined the revered and distinguished band of players who have made a century on their Test debut. Sobers gave him a mere hour to complete his century having been overnight on 58, in an attempt to inject life into the game, and Kalli smashed the New Zealanders all over and out of the ground. One wonders how much more runs he may have made if Sobers had not declared the innings, as Glenn Turner and Terry Jarvis then put on a 387 opening partnership in seven hours. In his next Test innings in the final match at Port-of-Spain, Kallicharran scored another magnificent century to cement his place in the side.

Against the touring Australians the following year, the world had to take notice of cricket’s little dynamo. His consistency, solidity, poise and temperament were unequalled and Kalli could not be denied his rightful place in the side as the linch pin of the batting, and he gracefully joined fellow compatriots Fredericks, Lloyd and Kanhai onto the world stage.

As was his trademark throughout his career, the Guyanese opened his account with a solid score (50), at Kingston and confirmed his class with 53 and 91 in the third match at Port-of-Spain. West Indies looked to Kalli for salvation and a memorable victory here, but Kalli, after a long and valiant vigil, lost a nerve-wracking fight to the indefatigable Aussies. He had so narrowly failed to win the game for the West Indies on his own on a treacherous pitch. Tony Cozier chronicled Kalli’s batting thus, “Meeting every delivery with a broad bat and superb technique…” Cozier later justifiably predicted that “the world would someday pay in centuries for this character building innings.” Kallicharran’s continuing good form continued in England later that year and he hit 80 in each innings in the first Test at the Oval, sharing in a double century partnership with his skipper Lloyd in the first.
He hit three centuries against county sides and finished the tour with an impressive average of 64.78.

In the return series Kalli consolidated his growing international reputation by hitting 158 in the first Test at Port-of-Spain, and followed that up with 93 in the second match at Kingston. In the third game at Bridgetown Kallicharran scored 119, sharing in a record second wicket partnership of 249 with Lawrence Rowe.
On the West Indies tour to India and Pakistan in 1974-75, he passed fifty in six of the seven Tests and was often the foundation for his team’s batting. In the first match at Bangalore he hit a magnificent hundred on a difficult wicket. Tony Cozier reminisces that, “With further rain during the night, the pitch became a vicious turner, fully exploited by the classy Indian spinners, but it was a masterful technical display by Kalli which was the highlight of the exchanges. He carried his score from 64 to 124 before he was last out-in other words 60 out of 77 added by his team on the second day.”

The iconic Sunil Gavaskar, the Little Master who was romanticized in calypso for his incomparable batting exploits, in his book “Idols,” said that “it was batting of the highest class. With the ball turning and popping, Kallicharran gave us a tremendous batting lesson. The ball dropped dead at his feet when he played defensively forward. But when he hit the ball, it invariably went to the boundary. A six off Chandrasekhar showed his quick reflexes. He was preparing for a defensive shot when he heard the no-ball call from the umpire and he changed his shot to swing it over the mid-wicket fence.” In the deciding game at Bombay, he made 98, sharing in century partnerships with Roy Fredericks and Lloyd, to win the series for West Indies. Kallicharran top-scored with an unbeaten 92 in the first Test on the Pakistan leg of the tour, at Lahore, and in the final match at Karachi he scored 115, sharing in a three figure stand with Lloyd. Of his 92*, Cozier wrote, “Kallicharran’s mastery of the problems which troubled all the other batsmen was almost completely responsible for a West Indian reply of 214. Sarfraz (Nawaz) took 6-89 for Pakistan but the left-handed Kallicharran was seldom bothered and finished 92*, denied a well-deserved century by a lack of adequate support.”

When West Indies visited Australia later that year Kallicharran was one of the Caribbean’s few who stood up to the deadly and lightning pace of Dennis Lillee and Jeff Thomson. Jeff Thompson was clocked at 99.7 mph in 1975, which was then the highest electronically measured speed for a bowled ball in the Guinness Book of Records. In the first Test at Brisbane he scored a century, adding 198 with Rowe for the fourth wicket, and an exemplary 57 in the second match at Perth, despite a broken nose, one of cricket’s greatest courageous moments. In these battles, Kalli never had the luxury of a helmet. Any split second mistake when hooking Lillee and Thompson off the eyebrows would have constituted fatal error. Many batsmen actually died from such injuries in the sport in those days. He crafted another two half centuries in the fifth game at Adelaide. When comparisons are made with today’s batsmen, one must consider the vulnerability a batsman faced in Kalli’s days when batting without a helmet. There were few better sights in batting than little Kalli hitting thunderous boundaries against bowlers, wearing only a box as protective gear.

The most memorable sight in World Cup cricket history for many is Kalli blasting Dennis Lillee in the 1975 World Cup against Australia at the Oval. Gordon Ross, the noted commentator, described his onslaught as akin to “a firecracker, exploding all round.” Kallicharran cut, pulled, slashed, drove and hooked Australia’s greatest fast bowler with unprecedented majesty and skill. The Golden Arrowhead never flew higher. It was a rare sight in batting as Kalli showed he was “the real master.” He paralyzed the Australians with his genius in that mesmerizing innings of 78. Few batsmen have catapulted a crowd in such a frenzy. He then played another magnificent innings in the win against New Zealand, thus setting up West Indies in a memorable victory in the World Cup final. He was also part of the victorious 1979 World Cup squad.

Kallicharran had a consistent series against India when they visited the Caribbean in 1976, finishing second in the averages to the ascending Viv Richards, who was to later dominate the cricket world. After the pair had shared in a double century third wicket stand in the first test at Bridgetown, Kalli hit an unbeaten hundred in the third game on his favorite Port-of-Spain ground, scene of many of his glorious performances. Few batsmen knew how to move their feet to good spin bowling like Kalli. He was adept at that and enthralled many with his silken stroke play. Soon afterwards Kallicharran was afflicted with fibrosis in his shoulder, a painful condition which seriously affected his performance against England later that year. Yet, espousing the bravery and determination which propelled him to the heights of international fame, he battled valiantly for 97, sharing in a triple century partnership with Richards, in the Test at Trent Bridge. Ducks at Lord’s and Old Trafford and further injuries ruled him out of the rest of the tour. The left-handed dynamo struggled when Pakistan visited West Indies in 1977, with his only notable innings being 72 in the third match at Georgetown. Apart from his injury, Kallicharran was obviously tired from playing continuous cricket which knew no seasons and comparatively few wages. He understandably lost his appetite for the game that underpaid cricketers in his time.

Then came the Kerry Packer affair. Kallicharran was one of the first players to sign for Packer’s World Series tournament. But, he later withdrew from the contract, which conflicted with an earlier one he had signed with a radio station in Queensland, and returned to lead the official West Indies side. Kallicharran’s world class ability was in sharp contrast to his teammates. The gifted Guyanese had already top-scored in the opening Test against the Australians with his customary century at Port-of-Spain, before the walkout by the Packer players on the eve of the third game at Georgetown. Installed as the new captain, Kallicharran guided his inexperienced colleagues to victory in the fourth Test at Port-of-Spain with 92 and 69, and hit a splendid hundred in the final match at Kingston. Kalli led from the front with several breathtaking performances.

He continued to be the fulcrum of the batting in the series against India in 1978-79, playing several captain’s innings. In the first Test at Bombay he hit 187, then 71 at Bangalore, 55 at Calcutta, 98 at Madras, and 45 at New Delhi. He was certainly the one man Kerry Packer needed to complete the constellation of stars in his firmament. Picked for the tours to Australia and New Zealand in 1979-80, he made a century in the third match at Adelaide and 75 and 46 in the second and third Tests in New Zealand. Thereafter he was not the same giant killer on subsequent tours to England and Pakistan.

Controversy and sometimes poor social graces often courted Kallicharran and he was called a pariah by becoming the first West Indian player to appear in South Africa’s Currie Cup competition when he joined Transvaal in 1981-82 for 20,000 pounds. This ill-advised decision should be analyzed in the context of Kallicharran’s bread and butter needs and his anger at the West Indies administration’s betrayal. Now that South Africa is no longer blacklisted, history may take a kinder look at players like him who committed that error.

His brilliant run-scoring attracted worldwide recognition and the prodigious Guyanese signed contracts with Warwickshire and Queensland. He thrived at Warwickshire and, in the early 1980s, if he had not gone to South Africa, Kallicharran’s sparkling form would have certainly demanded a Test recall. Indeed, after his banning, Kallicharran said he looked on county cricket as sending a strong message to the West Indian selectors for their notorious and perverted historical idiosyncrasies. In 1982 he scored over 2,000 runs, featuring three championship double centuries-including 230*as he shared in a record fourth wicket stand of 470 with Geoff Humpage against Lancashire at Southport, which remains the highest partnership in English county cricket, and five single hundreds. In 1982 and 1983 Kallicharran topped Warwickshire’s batting averages while, in five of his first seven seasons with the club, he hit 1,000 first-class runs. Altogether in the championship he has scored 46 centuries-including a record nine in 1984 and six double hundreds, where he put all bowlers, including Malcolm Marshall and Joel Garner, to the sword in the English circuit. He was eventually registered as an English qualified player. While playing against minor county Oxfordshire in the 1984 one day Natwest Trophy he scored 206 and took 6 for 32.

The Port Mourant legend left indelible memories in the game of cricket not least with his fielding, where he held several remarkable catches. In 1983, along with such cricket greats as Kapil Dev, Imran Khan and Malcolm Marshall, he joined the elite group of cricketers chosen as one of Wisden’s Five Cricketers of the Year. Those who appreciate the genius in a man will never deny Kalli his due. Like the immortal Rohan Kanhai, Lance Gibbs and other faithful stewards, it remains a travesty of justice that heroes who flew the flag of their country so high, and earned the respect of so many cricket lovers around the globe, should receive so little in return for their groundbreaking achievements.

CAREER STATISTICS:
First-class record: [1966-1990] 505 matches, 32,650 runs (43.64) including 87 centuries, 84 wickets, HS 243*; Tests: 66; Test runs: 4,399 (44.43); 12 centuries; HS: 187 v India, Bombay, 1978.