Bishan Singh Bedi Wiki, Height, Age, Wife, Children, Family, Biography & More

September 2024 · 14 minute read

Bishan Singh Bedi is a former Indian cricketer widely acclaimed as one of the most celebrated Indian spinners of all time. His main strength was to bowl with easy action and deliver that extra flighted variation to puzzle the batters with his small turn from the wicket. He was part of the renowned Indian spin quartet during the 1960s and 70s alongside Erapalli Prasanna, Srinivas Venkataraghavan, and Bhagwat Chandrasekhar.

Table of Contents

Wiki/Biography

Bishan Singh Bedi was born on Wednesday, 25 September 1946 (age 75 years; as of 2021) in Amritsar, Punjab. His zodiac sign is Libra. He started playing cricket at the age of 13 after listening to the cricket commentary on the radio. Soon, he moved to Delhi and played his first Ranji game a few later. In 1966, he made his international debut and impressed everyone with the two wickets against West Indies at Eden Gardens.

Bishan Singh Bedi bowling in a match

While he was making his mark in the longest format, selectors in 1974 decided to take him in an ODI series against England at their homeland.

India and England’s team assembled at the ground before the start of the game in 1974

He was featured in the 1975 ICC World Cup and helped India to register their first-ever win in ODI history. Carrying forward his form, he was made the skipper of the national side in 1978 but could only manage to play just 22 test games during that tenure. In 1981, he retired from all forms of the game. Post-retirement, he started working as the national team’s coach and manager in 1990. He also featured in many sports show as an expert where his fury comments on various cricket topics were admired by many. In February 2021, he was admitted to Ganga Ram Hospital in New Delhi after suffering from a heart attack. However, his condition was stable.

Physical Appearance

Height (approx.): 5′ 6″

Weight (approx.): 80 kg

Family

Parents & Siblings

His father’s name is Gyan Singh Bedi. He has 13 siblings and he is the youngest of all.

Wife & Children

He was married twice. His first wife Glenith is an Australian and after getting married, they had a divorce. He had one son and one daughter from her. His son’s name is Gavasinder Singh and his daughter’s name is Gillinder Singh.

Bishan Singh Bedi with his first wife Gleninth

He got married to his second wife named Anju Inderjit Bedi.

Bishan Singh Bedi with his wife

From her too, he had one son and one daughter. His son Angad Bedi is a model and actor.

Angad Bedi

He is married to a Miss India 2002, model, and actress Neha Dhupia.

Neha Dhupia

His daughter’s name is Neha Bedi and she is a lifestyle columnist and vlogger.

Neha Bedi

Signature/Autograph

Career

International Debut

Test

Bishan Singh Bedi made his Test debut on 31 December 1966 against West Indies at Eden Gardens, Calcutta (now Kolkata).

ODI

He made his One Day International debut on 13 July 1974 against England at Yorkshire Cricket Ground in Leeds, England.

T20I

There was no T20 at that time.

Records

Domestic Teams

Bishan Singh Bedi was born when India was struggling with freedom against the Britishers. It all started from the streets of Amritsar where Bedi used to play marbles which ultimately helped to increase his finger strength in the future. He first started playing cricket when once he was hearing a cricket match commentary on the radio between India and West Indies at the age of 13. Initially, he took up cricket to decrease his weight as advised by his friend. [7] Soon in 1974-75, he played his first Ranji season where he took record 64 wickets after moving to Delhi in 1968-69.

Bishan Singh Bedi during his young days

He played his first international game against West Indies in 1966 where he took two crucial wickets and helped India to restrict opposition on a score of 390 in the first inning. Although, West Indies won this match by an inning and 45 runs.

Bishan Singh Bedi posing with his team in his debut international match. Bedi 2nd from right; standing

He took his first five-wicket haul in a test match from 22 to 27 February 1968 against New Zealand. Bedi took their first wicket when Kiwis were 208 runs. Soon, he took five more wickets and finished his spell with 6 wickets for 127 runs. He then took two more wickets in the second inning after giving 21 runs in 17 overs. However, New Zealand won this match by six wicketsHis best test bowling performance came against Australia at Eden Gardens, Calcutta (now Kolkata) in December 1969. In that match, he took the key wickets of their captain Billy Lawry and Doug Walters. He ended his bowling spell with 7 after conceding 98 runs but couldn’t prevent India’s defeat by ten wickets. One of his most memorable spells came against East Africa on 11 June 1975 during the 1975 ICC World Cup, which coincidentally was India’s first-ever victory in One-day international cricket. While East Africa was batting first, Bedi’s bowling halted their run flow, and at one moment, their batting was having no clue against his bowling. Bedi finished his spell with a record 6 runs and one wicket in 12 overs and helped India to reduce opposition on a score of 120 runs in less than 56 overs.

Bishan Singh Bowling in a match against East Africa during 1975 ICC World Cup

Bedi opens up in a TV series about the unofficial test with Sri Lanka in 1975 in Nagpur by recalling that,

“I was captain of the team. We were made to stay in an MLA hostel. It was during the month of December and the winter was at its peak. But only I had warm water coming in my room, and not other players. So I called the secretary of the Vidarbha Cricket Association (VCA) and told him to provide warm water to all players. I told him that people who would be coming in numbers to watch the match will not come to see him but the players. I had an altercation with him and he behaved very rudely. I must have abused him too. It was so bad that after the match ended, they (VCA) did not even book the first-class railway ticket for me and another player. We had to travel sitting in the luggage rack of the general compartment in that cold weather.”

India team for the unofficial match against touring Sri Lanka in 1975. Bedi 2nd from right; standing

In 1976, he was designated as a captain of the Indian cricket team after replacing Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi. The first time, his team won was against West Indies at Port-Of-Spain in the third test of the 1976-77 series. In this match, India chased down the record target of 406 runs in the fourth inning. India then went on to win the test series against New Zealand by 2-0 at home. However, he could not carry on with his form and suffered tournament defeats against England, Australia, and Pakistan after which he was sacked from the captaincy position and was replaced by Sunil Gavaskar in 1978. At that time, he was also playing for his home state, which is Punjab, and then moved to Delhi to play for that state until he got retired in 1981. Besides this, he also played county cricket for NorthamptonshirePost-retirement, he took up the responsibility of a coach and manager of the Indian cricket team. He was given the inexperienced Indian side, which was led by Mohammad Azharuddin against the host New Zealand. He came to the limelight when he offended the Indian team by signaling them to throw into the Pacific Ocean as a result of their poor performances during that time. India failed to chase the modest target of 150 against the Aussies. He also opposed Azhar’s decision to bat first against England at Lord’s in 1990 and ended on a losing side in a series that ended with 1-0. Bedi however, was sacked from this position after the official statement from the Indian team, which stated that they don’t require any coach or cricket manager. After that, he became the coach of Punjab, Delhi, and Jammu & Kashmir Ranji sides. Under his guidance, Punjab registered their win in the Ranji’s final in 1992-93.

Stats

Some of his most memorable series where he has taken most of his wickets are against Australia in 1969-70 where he took 21 wickets. Against England in 1972-73 where he took 25 wickets. Against West Indies in 1975-76 where he took 18 wickets. Against New Zealand in 1976-77 where he took 22 wickets. Against England in the same year where he took 25 wickets. Against Australia in 1977-78 where he took 31 wickets. In tests, he played 67 matches and took 266 wickets with an average of 28.71. His best test bowling performance came against Australia on 16 December 1977 at WACA, Perth where he took 7 wickets after conceding 98 runs. Overall, he has bowled 3560.4 overs and conceded 7637 runs with an economy rate of 2.14. His most impressive record is against England against whom he has taken 85 wickets in 22 matches. This was followed up by West Indies and then New Zealand. 1976 is the year when he had taken most wickets (48 wickets with an average of 20.00). In ODIs, he has played ten games and taken 7 wickets at an average of 48.57. Overall, he has bowled 98.2 overs and conceded 340 runs with an economy of 3.40. His best ODI bowling performance was registered against Pakistan on 1 October 1978 at Racecourse Ground (now Bugti Stadium) in Quetta, Pakistan.

Controversies

Awards, Honours, Achievements

Favorites

Facts/Trivia

References

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