New York, May 19 India's first world-cup winning cricket captain Kapil Dev urged kids to play sports for the love of it, and community leaders to think in terms of delivering cricket pitches so that more people could take up the game in New York and other places in the United States.
New York State passed a law earlier this year amending the existing framework to include "the promotion and expansion of cricket in the state of New York to the jurisdiction of the state athletic commission." The local cricket leagues are thrilled with this decision.
Kapil Dev answered questions with his signature humour and candour at a fundraiser-cum-spread-the-word event for cricket's uptake in New York. Kapil Dev's presence drew eclectic fandom to a packed room at the Indian Consulate in uptown Manhattan.
Kapil Dev's free flowing conversation with the audience was based on criss-crossed sport, philanthropy and memories of the 1983 cricket World Cup.
Fresh off watching the film 1983, economist and first vice chairman of NITI Aayog Arvind Panagariya asked Kapil Dev whether he really didn't know he had broken a world record during his historic 175-run knock against Zimbabwe.
"I didn't know nothing about what the world record is," Dev told Panagariya. "Ninety seven to 98 percent this movie is true whatever they showed."
Taking questions on his top five matches, Kapil Dev went back in time to when he was "very young" and playing for his home state Haryana. Back then, Kapil Dev's team beat Mumbai in a 5-day match.
"If I had to pick my best five matches, that Mumbai match would very much be on the top," Kapil Dev said.
Did any batsman intimidate him? "Anybody I can't take wicket, I get intimidated by," Kapil Dev explained.
Kapil Dev brackets Sunil Gavaskar and Vivian Richards as the greatest batsmen he bowled to.
"Apart from Sunil Gavaskar - because I played alongside him a lot and 'ghar ki murgi daal baraabar' - without doubt Richards," he said.
Kapil Dev did not translate the daal and murgi idiom for the benefit of his invited audience at the Indian mission.
He was implying that we don't often covet our own greats.
Throughout the evening, Kapil Dev kept circling back to the theme of parents, children and goal setting. "My job, indicating the role of the parents is (I) want to see what is your passion," he said.
"So you should have a passion, not your father," Kapil Dev said, pointing in the general direction of young cricket players who had come to meet him.
"The first step is giving them the ground where they can go and express themselves," Kapil Dev reminded local cricket administrators in the audience.
"That's more important than to start looking for the champions."
Kapil Dev is on a U.S. fundraising tour for his non profit Khushii, which helps educate underprivileged children.
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