Naoomal Jeoomal
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Naoomal Jeoomal India (IND) |
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Batting style | Right-hand bat (RHB) | |
Bowling type | Leg-break bowler | |
Tests | First-class | |
Matches | 3 | 84 |
Runs scored | 108 | 4,140 |
Batting average | 27.00 | 32.59 |
100s/50s | 0/0 | 7/16 |
Top score | 43 | 203* |
Balls bowled | 108 | 5102 |
Wickets | 2 | 108 |
Bowling average | 34.00 | 27.54 |
5 wickets in innings | - | 6 |
10 wickets in match | - | 0 |
Best bowling | 1/4 | 5/18 |
Catches/stumpings | 0 | 43 |
Test debut: 25 June 1932 |
Naoomal Jeoomal Makhija pronunciation (April 17, 1904, Karachi - July 28, 1980, Bombay) was India's first opening batsman in Test cricket.
Naoomal Jeoomal scored 33 and 25 opening India's innings in their first ever Test at Lord's in 1932. He also shared stands of 39 and 41 with his opening partner Janardan Navle in the two innings. Naoomal was a dimunitive, defensive batsman whose strong point was the cut. He made 1,297 runs in the tour, playing in all the 26 first class matches, a decent performance considering that he had played only on matting wickets till then. Wisden even commented on Jeoomal's fielding abilities.
When England returned the visit in 1933-34, Jeoomal missed the first Test. He scored 2 and 43 at Calcutta, but in Madras, he was hit on the face by Nobby Clark. The injury ended his innings and his Test career. In his first match in the Ranji Trophy, for Sind against Western India in 1934-35, he scored 63 and 53, despite being hit by Amar Singh and Ladha Ramji, and took 5/78 and 3/52 in bowling. He played in the Sind Pentangular matches from 1922 till 1946, scoring 1,993 runs (average 47) with six hundreds.
His highest score in first class cricket was a 203* scored in four and a half hours for Sind against Nawanagar in 1938-39 [2]. The Sind total of 326 was at the time the second highest completed first class innings to include a double hundred.
He coached Pakistan in the late 1950s and became national selector from 1957. He moved to India in 1971.
Jeoomal was the oldest Indian Test cricketer to attend the Golden Jubilee Test in 1980, which marked the fiftieth year of the founding of BCCI. The oldest living cricketer Cota Ramaswami was absent.
Note : Jeoomal's obituaries in Wisden Almanack and Wisden Cricket Monthly both give his date of death as July 18.
[edit] References
- Indian Cricket 1980 obituary
- Christopher Martin-Jenkins, The Complete Who's Who of Test Cricketers
- Cricinfo Profile
- Cricketarchive Profile
- Lowest innings totals to include a double century