Baqa Jilani
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Batting style | Right-hand bat (RHB) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bowling style | Right-arm medium pace | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Mohammad Baqa Khan Jilani pronunciation (born on 20 July 1911, Jalandhar, Punjab - died on 2 July 1941, Jalandhar, Punjab) was a bowler who represented India in Test cricket.
Jilani was related by marriage to the family that also produced Majid Khan, Javed Burki and Imran Khan. As a right-arm medium-paced bowler and a decent lower-order batsman, he kicked off his career with twelve wickets on first-class debut. He also took the first hat-trick in Ranji Trophy, for Northern India against Southern Punjab in the semifinal of the first tournament in 1934-35. Southern Punjab was dismissed for 22 which was the lowest total in the competition for 76 years.[1][2]
Jilani played his only Test match in England in 1936 during a tour wrecked by infighting between two factions supportive of the captain Vizzy and the former captain C. K. Nayudu. Jilani belonged to the former group. A few days before the Test Match at the Oval, Jilani publicly insulted Nayudu while coming down to breakfast. It has been alleged that he owed to this incident his subsequent Test debut, a forgettable affair to which he contributed sixteen runs and fifteen wicketless overs. During the tour, according to Cota Ramaswami, Jilani suffered from high blood pressure, insomnia, sleep-walking and violent outbursts of temper. "Nobody could say when he was normal and when he got into uncontrollable temper. He was constantly undergoing treatment during the tour". [3]
An Extra Assistant Commissioner in Jalandhar, Jilani died a few days before his thirtieth birthday, thus becoming the second-ever Indian Test cricketer, after Amar Singh, to die. He suffered an epileptic fit, fell down from the balcony of his house in Jullundur, and died instantly.[4] It is occasionally incorrectly reported that he committed suicide by hanging himself.
See also
References
- ↑ Cricket Archive
- ↑ Lowest teams totals in first class cricket
- ↑ C. Ramaswami, Personalities of the 1936 tour of England (My reminiscences - IV), Indian Express, 9 August 1964 (accessed 9 September 2013)
- ↑ Indian Express, 5 July 1941
- Mihir Bose, A History of Indian Cricket
- Richard Cashman, Patrons, Players and the Crowd
- Cricinfo Profile
- Cricketarchive profile