Till Wisden named the 1985 Indian team as the best Wisden Indian team of the century, the 1983 team, which won the World Cup was considered as the best team. You were a part of the 1985 team that won the World Series championship in Australia. Which according to you is the best team?
The 1983 team was selected according to the conditions that prevailed in England. So, they had more medium pace bowlers; they had Roger Binny, Madanlal, Mohinder Amarnath, etc.
In 1985, I would say the conditions in Australia were pretty good in the sense that it helped both the good batsmen and good bowlers. There was variety in the bowling team with Ravi Shastri and myself as spinners. According to me, variety is also an important aspect of a good team.
I also would say that our [Shastri and me] success in the World Series championship paved way for the arrival of spinners and saw them playing a major part in one-day cricket. It probably was the first tournament in which spinners played such a big part in the success of the side. Before that only medium pacers and fast bowlers played in one-day games. So, it was a big turn around.
I feel the 1985 team won more convincingly than the 1983 team. So, I prefer to say that the 1985 team that won the World Series Championship was one of the best teams that India has ever had.
What would you say about the 1983 team that won the World Cup?
It was a very good team but nobody expected India to beat the West Indies and win the World Cup. Overall, the conditions suited the medium pacers and they stuck to the task. I am not saying that the 1983 team is anyway inferior to the 1985 team.
How do you think your team (the 1985 team) could bowl out all the teams, except New Zealand for less than 200?
Yes, New Zealand scored 206 or so against us. Apart from the final when Pakistan were 9 wickets down, we could bowl out all the other teams. That is because of the variety in our bowling attack and we also succeeded in exploiting the conditions in Australia. It is not that the wickets totally favoured the bowlers. The bowlers were good enough to exploit the conditions.
The fielding standard was also of very high quality. Our batting strength also was very good, with [Krishnamachari] Srikkanth and Ravi Shastri in the top order, and [Sunil] Gavaskar, Mohnider Amarnath, Mohammad Azharuddin and Kapil Dev to follow. All-rounders like Roger Binny and Madanlal were also part of the team.
Which match in the series do you cherish the most?
The whole series was so good. All the players jelled so well in all the matches. We worked really hard, and we won the series.
Personally, getting Javed Miandad out in the final was a big moment for me. He is such a great player and getting him out on such a big occasion, at the vital part of the innings, was a great moment for me. I still cherish the wicket.
Which was the toughest match in the series?
The semi-final against New Zealand. They were bowled out for 206; the only team that crossed 200 against India in the entire series. We were 50 for 2 in 25 overs. Then Kapil was promoted up in the order and he played a gem of an innings. Ultimately we won the match with about 2-3 overs to spare. That was the only match that was close.
After getting a side all out for 170 or 180, it is not that difficult a task for the batsmen to get the runs. I thought we played exceptionally well throughout the series. We played like champions and we deserved to be the champions.
- Shobha Warrier