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When pace and bounce proved too hot to handle
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Bowler Sean Abbott (right) leaves the St Vincent Hospital after paying his tributes to Phil Hughes.
Bowler Sean Abbott (right) leaves the St Vincent Hospital after paying his tributes to Phil Hughes.

It was around 1987 when a teen Javagal Srinath, yet to make his first-class debut, came to sort of prominence in Bangalore’s cricketing circles after he left former Karnataka opener B Raghunath bleeding on the pitch.

Raghunath was a prominent first-class batsman by then while Srinath was still an unknown commodity. It’s possible that Raghunath ‘underestimated’ the paceman from Mysore and went out to bat without a helmet, playing for State Bank of India against Mysore Gymkhana in Mangalore.

After some testing deliveries, Srinath slipped in a bouncer on a matting wicket and Raghunath was too late to react. The ball crashed straight into his forehead. He suffered a cut and started bleeding profusely. “We didn’t know much about Srinath then. We had no idea that he was so quick,” Raghunath recalled.

“As I was being taken off the field, I saw Kiri (Syed Kirmani) walking in with just his panama hat on. I screamed out at him ‘the boy is really quick, wear helmet.’ I am glad he heeded my advice because the next ball was even nastier and hit on his helmet with big impact. (After hearing Hughes’ death) I called up Kiri and told him that we should thank our lucky stars because things could have been as worse for us.

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(Published 28 November 2014, 00:14 IST)