Home
New Zealand spinner Ajaz Patel joins Kumble and Laker in exclusive 10-for club
When Anil Kumble took all ten wickets in an innings in the Delhi Test against Pakistan in 1999, Ajaz Patel was ten years old. That may or may not have been propitious, but on a day the New Zealand left-arm spinner became the first man since Kumble to achieve the magical mark, it was hard not to look at such happy statistical quirks.
Bowlers have taken eight wickets in a Test innings on 12 occasions in India, and four of them have belonged to visitors. Nine-fors have been taken only thrice, and none of them have come from visiting bowlers. India is not an easy place for an overseas bowler, and that includes spinners, who have to contend with some of the finest batters adept at smothering their art.
For Ajaz then to take only the third ten-for ever in the history of Test cricket — after Kumble and England’s Jim Laker in 1956 – against the country of his birth in the city of his birth has to belong to the rarest of rare category of sporting feats.
Home
What monkey fled with a bag containing evidence in it: Read full story
The court, generally, considers a person who commit a crime and the one who destroys the evidence, as criminals in the eyes of law. But what if an animal destroys the evidence of a crime committed by a human.
In a peculiar incident in Rajasthan, a monkey fled away with the evidence collected by the police in a murder case. The stolen evidence included the murder weapon (a blood-stained knife).
The incident came to light when the police appeared before the court and they had to provide the evidence in the hearing.
The hearing was about the crime which took place in September 2016, in which a person named Shashikant Sharma died at a primary health center under Chandwaji police station. After the body was found, the deceased’s relatives blocked the Jaipur-Delhi highway, demanding an inquiry into the matter.
Following the investigation, the police had arrested Rahul Kandera and Mohanlal Kandera, residents of Chandwaji in relation to the murder. But, when the time came to produce the evidence related to the case, it was found that the police had no evidence with them because a monkey had stolen it from them.
In the court, the police said that the knife, which was the primary evidence, was also taken by the monkey. The cops informed that the evidence of the case was kept in a bag, which was being taken to the court.
The evidence bag contained the knife and 15 other important evidences. However, due to the lack of space in the malkhana, a bag full of evidence was kept under a tree, which led to the incident.