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Pakistan's Eden Park heist, and Chetan Sharma's moment

Inzi announces his arrival, and India's hat-trick hero

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The young tiger mauls New Zealand, Auckland, 1992



Inzamam's 37-ball 60 dismantled New Zealand's World Cup hopes© Getty Images

The great World Cup dream seemed to be turning into a nightmare as Pakistan needed an improbable 123 runs in the final 15 overs. That was when Inzamam-ul-Haq chose to script a fantasy. Imran Khan had told his team-mates to play like 'cornered tigers' in the tournament but he himself had played like a wounded tiger that day. His laborious 43, as Pakistan chased 263, took a time-consuming 93 balls. The other old hand, Javed Miandad, was still in the middle when a young Inzamam entered the arena.

One man had been there and done that while the other was itching to get a taste of the big hunt. It was a lethal combination. With Miandad constantly goading him, the feisty Inzamam went berserk. The pair put on 87 runs in 10 overs as the New Zealanders were stunned into surrender. Martin Crowe, who had a dream Cup till that night, was off the field for the Pakistan innings due to a hamstring injury and his deputy, John Wright, was a mute witness to the carnage under lights. Even their surprise weapon, Dipak Patel, whose opening eight overs had yielded a miserly 28, leaked 22 when he returned for his last two.

Inzamam was simply unstoppable that day. He would shuffle to off and heave a full-length delivery over midwicket and when the bowlers dragged it further outside off, he would unfurl a fierce cut. Although he was run out 36 runs short of the win, he had by then waltzed into the public imagination. The unknown Inzamam-ul-Haq would thereafter be Inzi, a household name.
Sriram Veera

Hat-trick hero, Nagpur, 1987



The first hat-trick by an Indian, and the first in a World Cup © Getty Images

Going into their last round-robin game of the 1987 World Cup against New Zealand, India had already assured themselves of a place in the semi-finals, courtesy four wins in their first five matches. Lurking in the other half, though, was an extremely strong Pakistan outfit, and the only way India could avoid meeting them in the semi-finals at Lahore was by topping their own group, for which they not only needed to beat New Zealand, but also win by a convincing margin to push their run-rate beyond Australia's.

After winning the toss, New Zealand chipped their way towards a substantial score, reaching 182 for 5 after 41 overs. With Ken Rutherford having entrenched himself at the crease, and Ian Smith and Martin Snedden to follow, New Zealand had a fair chance of posting a 240-plus score.

Enter Chetan Sharma for his sixth over. His first five had been fairly lacklustre, but Sharma was known for his knack of suddenly coming up with an unplayable delivery in between some pretty ordinary stuff. No-one, though, had reckoned that he would conjure up three.

Sharma's most lethal weapon had always been his sharp indipper - delivered with a whiplash action at a pace that belied his wiry frame and his languid run up to the crease. After bowling three dot balls, he let rip one such special. Rutherford had already negotiated 53 deliveries, but there was little he could do against the incutter which shredded his defence and crashed into the stumps.

The dangerous Ian Smith walked in, and was immediately greeted by a similar delivery which nipped back and kept a touch low. It would have tested greater batsmen; for first-baller Smith, it was far too much to handle. A frenzied Nagpur crowd cheered the double-strike, and as Ewen Chatfield prepared to take strike to the last ball of the over, the magnitude of the occasion slowly dawned - no bowler had ever taken a hat-trick in World Cups, and no Indian had managed the feat in any ODI.

After a long consultation with Kapil Dev, his mentor and captain, Sharma raced in, and fired another one on the stumps, this time a bit fuller than the previous two. Chatfield didn't have too many pretensions as a batsman, and it showed: he shuffled so far across with his left leg that the ball sneaked in between his legs and unerringly found the stumps.

New Zealand were restricted to 221, and India, needing to get to the target within 42.2 overs to pip Australia, blasted their way to victory in 32.1 overs, with Sunil Gavaskar's fantastic 85-ball maiden ODI hundred capping a day of many memorable firsts.
S Rajesh

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