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The hit-and-miss classique at Bangalore

Sohail starts, Prasad finishes

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan

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Prasad lets the ball do the talking, 1996 World Cup quarter-final



Time for high fives as Sohail's off stump is uprooted © The Cricketer

Background
This was always going to be the showpiece event of the 1996 edition of the World Cup. India v Pakistan in a knockout clash in a quarter-final at Bangalore had all the makings of a classic. There was controversy, with captain Wasim Akram pulling out in the last minute, high-voltage tension, a pent-up sort where a riot was just a step away, quality Indian batting, led by Navjot Singh Sidhu's fighting 93 and boosted by Ajay Jadeja's ballistic 25-ball 45, and a sensational riposte, with Saeed Anwar and stand-in captain Aamer Sohail thumping 84 off the first 10 overs. The 35,000 spectators packed into the Chinnaswamy Stadium, who'd gone wild during the end of the Indian innings, were almost in a state of shock, silently praying for a breakthrough.

The moment
Anwar fell with the score on 84 but Sohail continued to shred the opening bowlers. He brought up his fifty at more than a run a ball and celebrated with a sizzling slash off Venkatesh Prasad, booed in certain stands despite being a local. Once the ball had raced away to the extra-cover fence, he openly lampooned Prasad, pointing to the region with the bat as if to say, 'Go fetch that'. Sohail tried to repeat the slash off the next ball, despite it being on off stump, and was comprehensively bowled. A charged-up Prasad gave him a send-off ('Go home you f***n bastard') and the quiet tension suddenly gave way to an eruption, as the crowd realised that the tide had turned.

Boundary view
It was undoubtedly the point where the game turned, with Sohail paying the price for not controlling his aggression. "Pakistan stand in captain Aamir Sohail won his battle against the interfering ways of former captain Javed Miandad, who he banished to the outfield," wrote R Mohan in the 1996 Indian Cricket annual, "but he did not win the battle against his own temper, which he lost when he was right on top of the bowling and was hitting the seamers where he wished. It was a moment of the match, when Prasad bowled him. Or was Sohail bowled by his own hot temper?"

What happened next
Pakistan lost the crucial wickets of Ijaz Ahmed and Inzamam-ul-Haq in the next few overs and veterans like Saleem Malik and Miandad were not up to matching a climbing asking rate. India went on to complete a hugely popular win and all those out on the streets of Bangalore witnessed a joyous victory parade. The reactions in Pakistan were vitriolic: one fan reportedly shot his television and then himself, while Akram, who didn't play after rupturing his side muscles, was burned in effigy. Sohail was vilified for his moment of madness and the game also heralded the end of Miandad's career, one that had spanned three decades. India went on to meet Sri Lanka in the semi-final at Kolkata but were outsmarted in yet another charged encounter, one which was disrupted by crowd violence and awarded to the eventual champions.

Siddhartha Vaidyanathan is staff writer of Cricinfo

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Players/Officials: Aamer Sohail | Venkatesh Prasad
Series/Tournaments: ICC World Cup | Wills World Cup
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