Vithal Palwankar

Vithal Palwankar
Personal information
Born 1884 or 1886
India
Died 26 November 1971
Bombay, India
Role Batsman
Relations Palwankar Baloo (brother)
Palwankar Shivram (brother)
Palwankar Ganpat (brother)
Yeshwant Palwankar (nephew)
Domestic team information
YearsTeam
1910-11 to 1928-29 Hindus
Career statistics
Competition First-class
Matches 44
Runs scored 2404
Batting average 35.35
100s/50s 5/11
Top score 149
Balls bowled 12
Wickets 0
Bowling average
5 wickets in innings
10 wickets in match
Best bowling
Catches/stumpings 16/–
Source: CricketArchive, 1 July 2016

Vithal Palwankar (1884 or 1886 – 26 November 1971) was an Indian cricketer, credited with being the first Dalit (lower caste) captain of the Hindus cricket team in the Bombay Quadrangular cricket competition. He was the younger brother of the Indian spin bowler and Dalit social reformer Palwankar Baloo; his other brothers Palwankar Shivram and Palwankar Ganpat were also cricketers.

Early years

The Palwankar family belonged to the Chamar caste, which suffered from the stigma of "untouchability" and caste discrimination.[1] Born in 1886, Vithal was introduced to cricket by his elder brother Palwankar Baloo, who later sent him to attend the Elphinstone College High School in Mumbai (then Bombay), where he began playing cricket seriously.

Prominence as a cricketer

In the following years, Vithal rose in the ranks of Indian cricketers as a stylish and skilled batsman, even as his elder brother Baloo enjoyed legendary status as a successful spin bowler. Despite the controversy over Baloo being passed over for the captaincy of the Hindu team, which was attributed by many to politics and caste discrimination, Vithal's career continued to progress. With his elder brothers ageing and approaching retirement, Vithal emerged as the future of the Palwankar family in cricket as well as one of the best talent in Indian cricket. In 1920, he and several other players protested the appointment of a Brahmin, D. B. Deodhar, as captain following the illness of the incumbent, M. D. Pai; with Baloo being dropped, most considered Shivram and Vithal to be the most senior players and leading candidates for the job. Critics attributed Deodhar's appointment to caste discrimination, and both Palwankar brothers, along with other rank-and-file cricketers withdrew from the team after publishing a letter making their protest public and criticising the selection committee for the "unsportsmanlike" decision. Supporters, rallied by the ongoing campaign against untouchability led by Mahatma Gandhi and other political leaders, raised money for the Palwankar brothers and petitioned for their inclusion in the team. When the recovered Pai returned to captaincy, both brothers were reinstated and Baloo selected to join the team as well. The brothers protested again when they were by-passed for the captaincy for the 1922 competition that was held in Pune.[1]

Captaincy

With the campaign against caste discrimination gaining nationwide support, the selection committee for the 1923 Quadrangular made history by appointed Vithal as the captain of the Hindus team, making him the first lower-caste Hindu to lead the team. Vithal led the team to thrilling victories over the Mohammedan and European teams, where his captaincy and personal performance were praised. His four-year tenure (1923 to 1926) as captain was filled with similar successes and culminated with the Hindus winning the Quadrangular trophy.[1]

Being dropped in favour of younger players in 1929,[1] Vithal continued playing for clubs before retiring from first-class cricket in 1932; his nephew Y. B. Palwankar also played first-class cricket.[2] He left the Hindus two years before the formation of the first Indian national cricket team. After his retirement he continued with his job at the Greater Indian Peninsular Railway, which he had joined after leaving school, while his eldest brother, Palwankar Baloo rose in Indian politics. Vithal died in Bombay on 26 November 1971.

Vijay Merchant's views

Ramchandra Guha writes that Vijay Merchant, as a young boy, considered Vithal as his "hero and role model". He quotes Merchant writing:

Vithal': a slim, alert personality with that well-known green tweed hat on his head and a gracefully held bat in his hand that would swing easily when he reached the wicket ... From thousands of cricket lovers there would come the spontaneous cry: 'there comes Vithal'." "'Vithal': the moment one heard the name ... spectators would visualise all the grace and charm of Indian batsmanship ... With supple wrists, keen vision, perfect judgement of flight and agile footwork, Vithal had mastered the art of [batting]. He used to play his strokes with ease whether in front of the wicket or behind it. But one superb stroke of his that I cannot forget is the cover drive. Nowadays a lot of effort and power goes into this stroke because of the off-side cordon. But due to his timing Vithal used to score more runs on this side of the wicket, effortlessly, through perfect coordination of wrist and leg movements ... He used to score fast because of his art of placing the balls in the gap.

On his death Merchant wrote to the Palwankar's son; "Very few of his generation , with the handicap that he suffered from (so called "low-caste"), would have risen to such heights but for great determination and outstanding talent."[3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Dilip K. Menon, Cultural History of Modern India, chapter 1 Ramachandra Guha: The Heroic Struggles of the Palwankar Brothers. pgs 1-32. 2007, Bergahn Books.
  2. Cricket Archive
  3. Guha, Ramachandra (2011-11-26). "The other side of Merchant". London: ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 31 March 2012.

Further reading

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