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  1. Sunil Manohar Gavaskar (Marathi pronunciation: [suniːl ɡaːʋəskəɾ]; born 10 July 1949) is a former captain of the Indian national cricket team who represented India and Bombay from 1971 to 1987. [2] Gavaskar is acknowledged as one of the greatest opening batsmen of all time.

  2. Arguably one of the greatest opening batsmen of all time, Sunil Gavaskar was statistically most successful. An immaculate technique, unerring concentration, and most importantly, daring nerve...

  3. Sunil Manohar Gavaskar (pronunciación en maratí: [suniːl ɡaːʋəskəɾ]; nacido el 10 de julio de 1949) es un excapitán del equipo nacional de críquet de India que representó a India y al Bombay desde 1971 hasta 1987. [1]

  4. Sunil Gavaskar was one of the greatest opening batsmen of all time, and certainly the most successful. His game was built around a near-perfect technique and enormous powers of...

  5. Gavaskar scored 13 hundreds in 27 Tests against the West Indies. It was a show of guts and steel, averaging 65.45 with a tally of 2749 runs. Indian cricket was no more about spin and skills ...

  6. Born on July 10, 1949, Sunil Gavaskar went on to represent India in 125 Tests and 108 One-Day Internationals. Considered one of the greatest batsmen of all time, he ended his career with stunning figures – a total of 10,122 Test runs at an average of 51.12, including 34 centuries, and 3,092 runs in 108 ODIs at an average of 35.13.

  7. 10 de jul. de 2020 · On a challenging fifth-day wicket against Wasim Akram, Iqbal Qasim and Tauseef Ahmed, Sunil Gavaskar carried India yet again in his final Test innings. Chasing 221 for a win at the Chinnaswamy Stadium, Gavaskar made 96, battling it out for nearly six hours, before he was the eighth man dismissed with India still 41 away from a win.