Unsung Heroes of Indian Cricket : the amazing Paddy Shivalkar story

Despite being among the most economical and successful spinners of his time, Paddy never got the chance to represent Indian cricket.

Indian Cricket’s unsung hero…

Success does not come in a single dosage pill. It is more of a combination medicine, containing many components in the proper proportions and administered over a prolonged period.

There are innumerable examples of sportsmen with exceptional talent who have not achieved the fame and name that was proportional to their talents and efforts. Some get waylaid by injuries, while others are unable to handle the pressure of professional sports.

Then there are some who, despite having done everything and a bit more , have the misfortune of being around at the wrong time, a time when someone equally good overshadows them.

The story of Padmakar Shivalkar, the left-arm spinner from Bombay, is one such tale.

Paddy, as he was fondly called, was a left-arm offspinner with exceptional talent. Unnerving accuracy and an ability to extract turn from wickets with just a hint of help served him well.

Vinoo Mankad, one of cricket’s legends, noticed him at a trial and offered him a job at a cotton mill in Mumbai. Shivalkar, who had never held anything but a tennis ball, had found a calling. Playing in the rough and tumble of Bombay’s amazing cricket circuit, he slowly grew in confidence. He caught the eye of Vijay Manjrekar and Madhav Mantri, the colossal doyens of Indian cricket, and soon Shivalkar was in with a chance of playing first-class cricket.

He made his debut for Mumbai in 1962 and kicked off a career that lasted for 26 years. It was a time when Mumbai was a dominant presence in the first-class cricket scene, and Shivalkar was a part of the march of Mumbai in the Ranji Trophy. He was a part of 18 of Mumbai’s 20 Ranji Trophy wins in those years.

In 124 matches, he grabbed 589 wickets with 42 five-trick hauls and 13 ten-trick hauls. All this at an average rate of 2 runs an over. He played for the Mumbai Ranji team till the 1980–81 season, a season in which Mumbai was crowned champions.

Paddy’s memorable rout of Tamil Nadu at Chepauk.

The highlight of his career was his performance in the Ranji Trophy final of 1972–73. Tamil Nadu in their own wisdom and to gain a slight advantage from the presence of spinners like S Venkataraghavan and VV Kumar produced an under prepared pitch. The trick seemed to have worked as Bombay, with the likes of Sunil Gavaskar, Ajit Wadekar, and Dilip Sardesai in their ranks, crumbled to 151 with both Venkat and Kumar taking five wickets each.

When Tamil Nadu came into bat, they realised that their plans had backfired. The dusty, crumbling pitch and the conditions suited Shivalkar better. With his familiar three-step hop run-up and his accuracy, he dished out a masterclass. The ball was turning square a dusty bowl of a pitch, and Tamil Nadu collapsed to a total of 80. Paddy returned with figures of 17-5-10-8. Mumbai managed just 113 in the second inning.

Tamil Nadu needed 185 to win. It was just the third day, and the wicket was already a minefield. It’s underprepared nature, and two days of wear had made it look like a ploughed paddy field. Shivalkar resumed where he left off, and Tamil Nadu did worse the second time around. Shivalkar took 5 for 23, bowling them out for 61. ( the other five wickets were taken by Eknath Solkar bowling spin). Mumbai had won the Ranji for an astonishing 15th time in a row.

Indian cricket

Shivalkar drifted off the scene after Mumbai won the Ranji Trophy in 1981. In a surprising return to Ranji cricket, he was picked to play in the semifinals of the 1987–88 season. At the age of 48 Shivalkar stepped up, and against Karnataka, he picked up the wickets of Gundappa Viswanath and Roger Binny and helped Mumbai into the finals. He finally retired from all forms of cricket at the age of 50. A career of selfless service under trying conditions. It was a career that, for all the effort and success, was tinged with remorse for the want of that final acknowledgment—an Indian Cricket Test cap.

Lady Luck plays a miser

Despite being among the most economical and successful spinners of his time, Paddy never got the chance to represent India. The presence of the one and only left arm orthodox off spinner, Bishen Singh Bedi meant that he never got a peek into the Indian Cricket team. It was the time when the Indian cricket was well served by the famous spin quartet. Bedi, S Venkataraghavan, EAS Prasanna, and B S Chandrasekhar were wreaking havoc in the opposition ranks in international cricket with their spin wizardry. In Shivalkar’s own words, he and Rajinder Goel (another luckless unsung hero) were around at the wrong time.

In sports, like everywhere else in life, success is the result of inherent talent, hours of effort, and a bit of luck. The irony of the whole thing is the fact that it is the luck part that seems to be the dominant ingredient. Luck, as an attribute, is difficult to define and impossible to create. The dictionary defines it as “success or failure apparently brought by chance rather than through one’s own actions.” and well, it is a noun and not a verb.

Noun or not, Padmakar Shivalkar did get a lesser share from Lady Luck’s disbursal. He confessed that it was quite a hard knock to take and struggled to cope with it. He, however, soldiered on, and Bombay cricket was served well. Shivalkar was a man with an interest in music and someone who would enjoy singing a song. Music certainly soothes and may well have kept him sane.

It was no surprise when, to a question on how he handled the misfortune, he replied by quoting a Sahir Ludhiyanvi song from the iconic Dev Anand starrer Hum Dono. “

Jo mil gaya usi ko mukqaddar samajh liya, jo kho gaya mein usko bhulata chala gaya. Mai zindagi ka saath nibhata chala gaya, har fikr ko dhuven mein udata chala gaya.”

(Whatever I received, I considered it my fate; what I lost, I chose to ignore; I kept on with life and blew every worry away.).

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Sudhir Bhattathiripad
Sudhir Bhattathiripad

13 Comments

  1. Nicely written article but I don’t know why you call Shivalkar and Bedi as off- spinners. As far as I know they were leg-spinners.

    • Happy you love it. They are also referred to as left arm orthodox. A left hander bring in the ball to a left hander batsman would be an offspinner also one using finger spin to turn the ball. Use the wrist to spin the ball and you are a leg spinner if right handed and a Chinaman or left arm unorthodox if a left hander. Shane Warne / Kuldeep Yadav. LOL not sure if I made sense!!!!

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