Rajinder Goel
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Career record | First-class | List A |
Matches | 157 | 8 |
Runs scored | 1,037 | 11 |
Batting average | 9.34 | 5.50 |
100s/50s | 0/0 | 0/0 |
Top score | 44 | 5* |
Balls bowled | 39,929 | 508 |
Wickets | 750 | 14 |
Bowling average | 18.58 | 20.00 |
5 wickets in innings | 59 | 0 |
10 wickets in match | 18 | N/A |
Best Bowling | 8/55 | 4/54 |
Catches/Stumpings | 66 | 3 |
As of 19 November 2006 Source: Cricketarchive Edit this template |
Rajinder Goel (born 20 September, 1942 in Narwana, Haryana) is a former cricketer who holds the record for most wickets in Ranji Trophy, India's premier first class competition, despite which he was never selected to play for India. A left arm spinner, he represented Patiala, Southern Punjab, Delhi and Haryana in domestic cricket.
The son of an assistant station master in the Indian Railways, Goel came up through the Vaish school and college in Rohtak.His first major success was for North Zone schools in 1957 when he took four wickets against West Zone in the final of the All-India schools tournament and was declared the best bowler of the competition. He made his Ranji debut in the next season. Goel credits his early success to his teacher and coach Kishan Dayal. He started his first class career with Patiala, which then evolved into the Southern Punjab team. He moved to Delhi in 1963 and Haryana ten years later.
Goel appeared for India against Ceylon in an unofficial Test at Ahmedabad in 1964-65 where he took 4 for 33 in the second innings. Thereafter, the presence of the "Indian spin quartet", especially Bishen Bedi who bowled similar style, restricted his appearances for India. When Bedi was dropped from the team for the Bangalore Test against West Indies in 1974-75 on disciplinary grounds for appearing in a BBC interview, Goel was selected to the Indian team but was excluded at the last moment. He also took 6-102 and 3-43 against the Australians in 1979-80. Goel rated his 12-134 against the South Zone in the 1975-76 Duleep Trophy as his most satisfying performance.
Goel went past V. V. Kumar's Ranji record of 417 wckets in the 1978-79 season. His 600th wicket was Chandrakant Pandit, caught at deep squareleg in the Ranji semifinal against Bombay in 1983-84. He retired after taking 39 wickets in 1984-85 season. Goel's 640 wickets is a record by a long way, Srinivas Venkataraghavan with 530 wickets being the next best. He took more than 25 Ranji wickets in a season fifteen times, including in his last nine seasons. Haryana reached the Ranji semifinal thrice during Goel's time but lost on each occasion. Their first appearance in the final happened in the season after his retirement.
Goel is one of two non-Test cricketers, the other being Padmakar Shivalkar, who Sunil Gavaskar chose among his "idols" in his book the same name. "He is the one bowler whom I am have really dreaded facing in my life", he wrote about Goel, "I have never been able to feel comfortable against his left hand spinners and Goel has been one who, because of his flatter trajectory, has not given me the opportunity to step down the track and drive". However, Gavaskar considered Bedi the greater bowler overall.
During his playing days, Goel was employed with the State Bank of India. He later served as a selector for Haryana and the Indian junior teams. His son Nitin Goel was also a first class cricketer.
[edit] Notes
This article follows the Indian sources which credit Goel with 640 Ranji Trophy wickets. According to Robert Brooke's The Cricketer Book of Cricket Milestones, Goel has 636 wickets, while as per CricketArchive, the wickets that he took for his four Ranji teams add up to 637. If one goes with Brooke or Cricketarchive, Goel's 600th wicket would be in the match between Haryana and Jammu Kashmir in the 1984-85 season.
[edit] References
- Sportstar, March 31, 1984
- Sunil Gavaskar, Idols, pp 163-166
- Cricinfo interview with Goel : Light under a bushel
- Another Cricinfo interview : "I was born at the wrong time"