Hemant Kanitkar

Players

Name Hindi: हेमन्त कानिटकर / Gender Man

Contents
  1. Life and Career of Hemant Kanitkar
  2. Early Life and Personal Details
  3. Career Beginnings
  4. Kanitkar’s International Career
  5. The Highest Point in His Professional Career
  6. Retirement & Death Kanitkar retired in 1986 after a successful stint as coach at PYC Hindu Gymkhana. His life came to an abrupt end on June 9, 2015 when he sadly passed away following a prolonged illness. Hemant Kanitkar might have had limited international recognition but his overwhelming dominance in India’s domestic scene is something that will never be forgotten by the nation’s fervent cricket fans. A list of Achievements: Maharashtra Cricket Association’s first cricketer to play Test cricket for India 87 First-class matches resulting into 5148 runs averaging around 50 per innings – a tally which included several splendid knocks Ranji Trophy winner – ’70 Served as Selector representing West Zone during ’92 – ‘94 period Poll
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  7. Kanitkar retired in 1986 after a successful stint as coach at PYC Hindu Gymkhana. His life came to an abrupt end on June 9, 2015 when he sadly passed away following a prolonged illness. Hemant Kanitkar might have had limited international recognition but his overwhelming dominance in India’s domestic scene is something that will never be forgotten by the nation’s fervent cricket fans. A list of Achievements: Maharashtra Cricket Association’s first cricketer to play Test cricket for India 87 First-class matches resulting into 5148 runs averaging around 50 per innings – a tally which included several splendid knocks Ranji Trophy winner – ’70 Served as Selector representing West Zone during ’92 – ‘94 period Poll
    Poll not found
  8. A list of Achievements:
  9. Poll

Life and Career of Hemant Kanitkar

Hemant Mohan Kanitkar was a cricket player from India. Known for his excellent performances in first-class cricket, this distinguished sportsman was born on December 21, 1942 in Pune, Maharashtra and passed away on June 9, 2015.

Early Life and Personal Details

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Kanitkar did not come into the world of cricket by accident; he followed in the footsteps considering the fact that his father Madhusudan Kanitkar had been a cricketer within their local area as well. His son Hrishikesh Kanitkar is also an established Indian cricketer which made Hemant part of a unique lineage in cricket-playing families.

Career Beginnings

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Kanitkar embarked on his first-class debut during the 1963-64 season showing impressive form ever since. In all, he played 87 matches scoring over 5000 runs at a healthy average of around 50 per innings throughout his first-class career. He remained active in domestic cricket until 1977-78 but left an indomitable mark with many memorable performances.

Kanitkar’s International Career

Following outstanding successes domestically, Kanitkar got the call up to play for India (the national team) against West Indies during the home series (1974/75). Playing upfront as wicketkeeper-batsman, it wasn’t the best start one could wish for in international scenarios – England managed just modest scores across two Test matches featured.

The Highest Point in His Professional Career

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The zenith point came when Kanitkar participated in Ranji Trophy’s 1970-71 season with his exceptional performance. He helped Maharashtra win their first-ever title in this prestigious event, and contributed brilliantly by scoring 250 runs against Mumbai in the final! His excellent play was key to his team’s success and earned him admiration from cricket lovers everywhere.

Retirement & Death

Kanitkar retired in 1986 after a successful stint as coach at PYC Hindu Gymkhana.

His life came to an abrupt end on June 9, 2015 when he sadly passed away following a prolonged illness. Hemant Kanitkar might have had limited international recognition but his overwhelming dominance in India’s domestic scene is something that will never be forgotten by the nation’s fervent cricket fans.

A list of Achievements:

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  • Maharashtra Cricket Association’s first cricketer to play Test cricket for India
  • 87 First-class matches resulting into 5148 runs averaging around 50 per innings – a tally which included several splendid knocks
  • Ranji Trophy winner – ’70
  • Served as Selector representing West Zone during ’92 – ‘94 period

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