Hanumant Singh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Indian Flag
Hanumant Singh
India (IND)
Hanumant Singh
Batting style Right-hand bat
Bowling type Legbreak
Tests First-class
Matches 14 207
Runs scored 686 12338
Batting average 31.18 43.90
100s/50s 1/5 29/-
Top score 105 213*
Balls bowled 66 3934
Wickets - 56
Bowling average - 40.94
5 wickets in innings - 1
10 wickets in match - -
Best bowling - 5/48
Catches/stumpings 11/- 110/-

Test debut: 8 February 1964
Last Test: 25 September 1969
Source: [1]

Hanumant Singh pronunciation  (29 March 1939 - 29 November 2006) was an Indian cricketer. He played in 14 Tests for the Indian cricket team from 1964 to 1969. He was later an ICC match referee in 9 Tests and 54 One-day Internationals from 1995 and 2002.

Hanumant Singh was born in Banswara, Rajasthan. He was the second son of Chandraveer Singh, Maharawal of Banswara from 1944 to 1985, making him Maharajkumar of Banswara. His mother was the sister of Kumar Shri Duleepsinhji, making him the grand-nephew of Kumar Shri Ranjitsinhji. His older brother, Suryaveer Singh, also played first-class cricket, as did his son, Sangram Singh. A cousin, KS Indrajitsinhji, also played in 4 Tests for India.

Hanumant Singh played domestic first-class cricket for Madhya Bharat and then Rajasthan and Central Zone, and was known as "Chhotu" as a result of his short stature. He made his Test debut in the 4th Test against England at Delhi in February 1964, becoming the fifth Indian to make a Test century on debut, emulating Lala Amarnath, Deepak Shodhan, AG Kripal Singh and Abbas Ali Baig. Later that year, he reached 94 in his first Test against Australia. He also played at home against New Zealand in 1964-5 and against West Indies in 1966-7, and toured England in 1967. However, like many other prominent Indian players, he was surprisingly excluded from the 1967-8 tour to Australia. Recalled to play against New Zealand at Bombay in September 1969, he scored 1 and 13, and did not play Test cricket again. He never scored a second Test century.

He continued to perform well in Indian domestic cricket. He was captain of Rajasthan in three Ranji Trophy finals, but lost each time. He also captained Central Zone to its first victory in the Duleep Trophy in 1971-2. In the Ranji Trophy final in 1966-67, he scored 109 and 213* against Bombay. He retired from first-class cricket in 1979.

He was manager of the Indian team that toured the West Indies in 1983, and he served as an ICC match referee in 9 Tests and 54 ODIs from March 1995 to February 2002. He was also chairman of the National Cricket Academy, based in Bangalore, and a coach for Rajasthan. Outside cricket, he was an executive for Bank of India.

He died in Mumbai of lung and kidney failure, after contracting from dengue fever and hepatitis B.

[edit] References

In other languages