Mahadevan Sathasivam

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mahadevan Sathasivam (18 October 1915, Ceylon - 9 July 1977 in Colombo, Sri Lanka), or Satha as he was known, was the Sri Lankan Tamil whom Garry Sobers called "the greatest batsman ever on earth," and Frank Worrell called him "the best batsman he had ever seen."[1]. Sathasivam played cricket in the 1940s through the 1960s. Sathasivam was the first, and probably the only, man to captain three national teams. He was captain of the Ceylon team in 1948, and then captain of the Singapore team, and finally captain of the Malaysian team.

In 1948 a controversial decision of the Ceylon Cricket Association selected Mahadeva Sathasivam of the Tamil Union to lead the All-Ceylon XI team.[2]

In 1951 Sathasivam was falsely accused of murdering his wife, was acquitted but he left Ceylon because of the negative publicity.[3][4]

Sathasivam settled in Singapore where he captained its cricket team, and then later, after that island's merger with its northern neighbour, Sathasivam led the Malaysian team as well.[5]

[edit] References & Notes

  1. ^ Gunasekara, C.H. (1996) The Willow Quartette, Colombo: Sumathi Publishers, p. 57
  2. ^ "Mahadeva Sathasivam, playboy cricketers & the book of Guinness" by Michael Roberts Cricket Online 12 Oct. 2004 archived at Internet Archive
  3. ^ "A Sri Lankan master" by Sriram Veera December 3, 2005 in CricInfo SriLanka; reprinted at uk.sports.yahoo.com
  4. ^ "The Finest at Chepauk" by S. Muthiah The Hindu 7 Nov. 2005;
  5. ^ Sathasivam the batting maestro by Edmund Dissanayake; M.Sathasivam by Christie Seneviratne; M.Sathasivam - 'Not Guilty' from the Sunday Island 11/4/04 Wesley College Colombo