K R
Rajagopal came like a breath of fresh air to Madras cricket from Bangalore,
when he joined the star-studded Jolly Rovers team of the 1960s. He quickly
established himself as one of the most entertaining batsmen in the state, an
opener crowds went miles to watch.
Rajagopal
was one of the most aggressive opening batsmen around. He played his shots from
the word go, shots based on a straight bat, free downswing and follow-through.
With his keen eye, swift footwork, perfect balance and steely wrists, all
buttressed by a sound technique, he looked for scoring opportunities all the
time, and for a few years culminating in the 1967-68 season, he electrified
both local and national matches played at Madras.
In an
era of swing bowling, Raja had an equally delightful answer to the outswinger
and the inswinger. He cover drove imperiously, but he also played a gorgeous
ondrive. He was equally fond of hooking and cutting.
Raja
struck a fine partnership with his teammate and captain Belliappa. Both were
openers and wicket keepers, and as state captain, Belliappa was the first
choice behind the stumps, though Raja was brilliant in that department. When
Raja was a strong contender for a place in the Indian team touring Australia in
1967-1968 after a magnificent domestic season as a batsman, another wicket
keeper Indrajitsinhji was preferred to him on the pretext that Raja did not
keep for his own state.
Raja is
a simple man. For most of his playing days in Madras (he earlier played for
Mysore), he worked at Sankarnagar, Tirunelveli, and took the night train to
Madras to play league matches on the morrow for Jolly Rovers, the highly
successful team sponsored by his employers. He brought as luggage a
ridiculously small bag and went straight to the house of another
"Raja", P N Sundaresan, The Hindu's cricket correspondent and
the father of his teammate P S Narayanan. On the morning of the match, Raja
would jump on to the pillion of Narayanan's Lambretta, tousled hair, stubble on
his chin, crumpled shirt and trousers and all, with his cricket shoes wrapped
in an old copy of The Hindu.
Such
was Raja's pre-match preparation, but once he put on his pads and settled down
to face the first ball of the innings, the change in him was electric. Slight
of build and short in stature, he was a picture of poise as the bowler started
his run towards him. Little notice did he give of the daring strokes he would
soon play all round the wicket. Few
batsmen in the history of Tamil Nadu cricket have given as much pleasure to so
many.
1 comment:
Dear Ram,
K R Rajagopal was a treat to
watch. KRR and Belliappa were
simply test class. Did chennai
affinity spoiled their
cricketing future? They should
have moved to place where they
would have got better
opportunities. your thoughts
Srinivasan Krishnan
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