Grit, guts and gumption personified Amarnath's
roller-coaster career, which began in 1969 and spanned two eventful
decades. He was cricket's Frank Sinatra - the master of the comeback. He
started his career as suspect against short-pitched fast bowling, and
finished it as one of the finest and bravest players of pace. His defining
season was 1982-83: coming back to the side after three years, he stood
tall to knock off 1182 runs - including five hundreds - in 11 away Tests
against West Indies and Pakistan. He crowned the season with back-to-back
Man of the Match awards at the climax of India's World Cup-winning
campaign in 1983. But his world came crashing down again the following
home season, when he managed only one run in six innings against that same
West Indian team. "Mr Amarnought" got the axe. But it wasn't the end: he
bounced back with renewed force and vigour and was soon hooking fast
bowlers off his eyebrows again. He didn't go in for cheap runs - nine of
his 11 Test centuries were scored overseas -- and he collected his share
of bruises. He will be remembered as a batsman who didn't flinch in the
face of fire.
H Natarajan