• Wednesday, April 16, 2025

Sport

VVS Laxman’s 281 against Oz was one of the finest innings ever, says Ian Chappell

VVS Laxman (left) is congratulated by team mate Rahul Dravid after reaching 200, during day four of the 2nd Test between India and Australia played at Eden Gardens, Calcutta, India. (Hamish Blair/ALLSPORT)

By: indiaweekly.biz Staff

Former Australia captain Ian Chappell has picked VVS Laxman’s legendary 281 against Australia at the Eden Gardens in 2001 as one his favourite innings against high-quality spin bowling.

Thanks to Laxman and Rahul Dravid (180), India went on to win the game against Australia after following-on.

“The absence of any cricket (due to the COVID-19 pandemic) gives me an opportunity to reflect on an aspect of the game I enjoy: watching a batsman utilise good footwork to combat top-class spin bowling. Two innings stand out: one played by India’s VVS Laxman, the other by Doug Walters of Australia,” Chappell wrote in a column for ESPNcricinfo.

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Laxman and Dravid shared a marathon 376-run stand to engineer an unforgettable win for India. Chappell said he was simply in awe of Laxman’s batting as the wristy Indian batsman toyed with the likes of Shane Warne.

 

VVS Laxman's 281 against Oz was one of the finest innings ever, says Ian Chappell
Australian leg spinner Shane Warne supports himself on his knees after getting hit by a barrage of boundaries by Indian batsman VVS Laxman as the umpire signals a boundary on the the third day of the second test match between India and Australia at Eden Gardens in Calcutta 13 March 2001. (Photo: DESHAKALYAN CHOWDHURY/AFP via Getty Images)

 

 

“Laxman’s incredible 281 at Calcutta in 2001 is the best I’ve seen against top-class leg-spin.

“At the conclusion of that exhilarating series I asked Shane Warne how he thought he bowled. ‘I don’t think I bowled that badly,’ he replied. ‘You didn’t,’ I responded.

“If Laxman comes three paces out of his crease and hits an unbelievable on-drive against the spin and you then flight the next delivery a little higher and shorter to invite another drive and instead he quickly goes onto the back foot and pulls it, that’s not bad bowling. That’s good footwork.

“Laxman regularly did this during his 452-ball stay, in which he hit 44 boundaries. Therein lies a clue to Laxman’s success: he consistently hit the ball along the ground.

Talking about fellow Australian Doug Walters, Chappell called him the best player against off-spin.

“Walters scored a Test century in a session three times. There are no complete records regarding this feat but I suspect only Sir Donald Bradman did it more often.

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“Walters was the best player of off-spin bowling I have seen; he didn’t just survive against the very best, he occasionally battered them into submission. He scored a sublime hundred on a Madras minefield in 1969, facing the off-spin wizardry of Erapalli Prasanna, clubbing 14 fours and two sixes in the process.”

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