Test matches played in largely empty stadia have become a depressingly familiar sight for cricket fans of late. Yet one of the remarkable memories for anyone who grew up in Chennai in the 1970s were the huge crowds, often running into the thousands, which used to watch the annual Buchi Babu Memorial cricket tournament every August-September. And these were matches that werent even rated first-class.You got to watch past greats like Polly Umrigar, Ramakant Desai and Bapu Nadkarni, current Test cricketers like Ashok Mankad and S Venkataraghavan, rising stars like Brijesh Patel and Karsan Ghavri, and nearly men like Kenia Jayantilal, Parthasarthi Sharma and Dhiraj Parsana playing on small grounds with practically no facilities and nothing more than a line of white chalk separating spectator from player.Private corporations like the Associated Cement Company (ACC) and Mafatlal sponsored strong teams filled with Test and Ranji stars as did the public-sector State Bank of India (SBI). Then there were the local clubs, like the Jolly Rovers, replete with some of the best cricketers in the south. The matches were keenly contested two-day affairs and mostly played on matting wickets.Two memories from those days stand out for me. The first was a match at the scenic Loyola College ground between ACC and Jolly Rovers. It must have been in 1971 as the Indian team had just returned from winning their first series in the West Indies and England.Opening the batting for ACC was a diminutive batsman in his early 20s named Sunil Gavaskar. And while everyone knew about his amazing recent exploits, hardly anyone down south had seen him bat. I have no idea how many spectators were actually there that morning, but the number must have been at least a few thousand as there wasnt even enough room to stand.When Gavaskar was dropped early on in the slips, the crowd roared in approval. After some dazzling shots, he hooked a short ball and was brilliantly caught near the boundary. It was a sprawling over-the-shoulder effort by the fine-leg fielder who was clearly not in on the plot - that the thousands who had thronged the ground that day had not come to see his fielding prowess but to see Sunny bat.I remember Gavaskar sportingly applaud the fielder as he quickly exited the pitch to the (relative) safety of the very makeshift pavilion. I doubt a bigger crowd has ever been shoehorned into Loyolas cricket ground before or after that day. My second memory is from the 1972 final between the star-studded teams of Mafatlal and SBI. It must have been late afternoon at the University Union ground and the match was as good as over as Mafatlal were comfortably ahead.SBIs top order were all back in the hut when in walked a tall and wiry, almost thin, batsman in billowy whites who then proceeded to launch one of the most amazing blitzes of clean hitting I have ever seen. Length balls, short ones, long hops, good or bad balls, fast or spin, none of it mattered. They were sent soaring over the rope for sixes or searing along the grass for boundaries.R Prabhakar, the mayhem creator, raced to about 70-odd runs in a few overs before being dismissed. He was a Tamil Nadu Ranji player who often opened the bowling with his medium-pace cutters and batted well down the order. He was a local legend since his high-school days for his ability, when in the mood, to rain sixes. That afternoon, Mafatlals strong bowling attack included Desai, a former Test medium-pacer who was still a very nippy customer on a matting wicket, and Nadkarni, the original metronome renowned for his stinginess and accuracy. Both were sent to every corner of the ground.Mankad, Mafatlals captain, might have felt a sense of déjà vu while watching Prabhakars innings. The two players had met in the 1967-68 Ranji Trophy final between Madras and Bombay, where Prabhakar had played a similarly swashbuckling knock of 67, in a losing cause*, after coming in at 81 for 7. Mankad scored a century in reply.Prabhakars career remains a bit of an enigma because, in addition to his astonishing big hitting, he was a very useful medium-pace bowler with a knack for dismissing an opener or two fairly regularly, and an electric fielder with a flat and hard throw. Yet his overall numbers are on the ordinary side and his ESPNcricinfo player page is threadbare in terms of details. One can only imagine the sort of price he would have commanded in todays world of T20 cricket and the premium on long-ball hitting.As the shorter forms of the game become more and more popular, and Tests, barring marquee match-ups like the Ashes or India v Australia, find it hard it to draw people to the arenas, those distant Buchi Babu days seem from another world. A world in which thousands flocked to a college ground to see a young prodigy in the flesh or to be surprised by the incredible talents of an obscure cricketer.*October 25, 10.00GMT: It was incorrectly stated that the Ranji Trophy was shared. Bombay won it in 1967-68 Swell Bottle Wood Collection .500 on the season. The Jets are now 0-5-1 in the second game of back-to-backs. The game started the same way the Vancouver game started the night before, with the Jets taking the first two penalties of the game and killing off the first, but the Oilers getting on the board first, scoring on the second man-advantage. SWell Bottle Clearance . -- Charline Labonte couldnt have asked for a better homecoming. http://www.swellbottlesclearance.com/ . Halifax beat the Saint John Sea Dogs 7-5 on the strength of two goals apiece from Nikolaj Ehlers, Matt Murphy and Brent Andrews. Jonathan Drouin also scored and had three assists while Zachary Fucale made 17 saves for the Mooseheads (16-8-0), who led 6-1 after two periods. Swell Bottle Elements Collection . On June 12, just as the sun sets on the magnificent historical city of Sao Paulo the inventors, innovators and purveyors of “joga bonitowill” open their campaign. The opponent, Croatia and all its football might and will. As opposites do attract we are set for a corker of an opener. Swell Bottles Wholesale . PETERSBURG, Fla. LOS ANGELES -- If the Los Angeles Dodgers expect to compete against the Boston Red Sox, they need a solid outing from one of their starting pitchers.Scott Kazmir was the latest Dodgers starter who failed to deliver in three of the last four games. Kazmir (9-5) allowed four runs on five hits with four walks and two strikeouts in 5 1/3 innings in a 9-0 loss to the Red Sox on Friday night at Dodger Stadium.Overall, he just really didnt command the fastball tonight, Dodgers manager Dave Roberts said. Thats a very good hitting club and they made us pay for some mistakes. Game got away from us.Kazmirs troubles come on the heels of Los Angeles starters managing just seven innings in two blowout losses to the Colorado Rockies earlier this week. On Saturday, theyll trust their fate to Ross Stripling.Stripling (2-3, 4.14 ERA), who is being called up from Triple-A Oklahoma City, has not been consistent. But the Dodgers have few options since right-hander Bud Norris (back strain) is headed to the 15-day disabled list Saturday. Norris injury is the latest of a string that have handcuffed the Dodgers, including ace Clayton Kershaw (herniated disk), who landed on the 60-day disabled list earlier this week and isnt expected back before September.Needless to say, Stripling will be challenged.Theyre a lot of good hitters actually on that team, Roberts said of the Red Sox. I can say we probably caught a break with David (Ortiz) on the bench (Friday night) in a National League ballpark.LLefty Eduardo Rodriguez (2-4, 5.dddddddddddd91 ERA) will get the start for Boston. In his last four starts, Rodriguez has a 2.63 ERA and has allowed only two hits in 12 at-bats with runners in scoring position (.167). This will be the first time hes face the Dodgers.For four months, we really havent had any success, Roberts said regarding his teams woes with hitting left-handed pitchers. Weve got our work cut out but well be OK.They werent OK against Boston knuckleballer Steven Wright, who threw a complete-game shutout in Fridays gem, striking out nine, walking one and limiting the Dodgers to three hits.Outstanding. Complete control, Red Sox manager John Farrell said of Wrights performance. I thought the two big pitches that were really good to see were the 3-2 knuckleballs that he threw to the middle of the order guys in the seventh inning for two strikeouts. He didnt go away from (his knuckleball) even in a four-run game. He executed even when he was behind in the count.Wright (13-5) retired 18 of 19 batters, including 15 in a row at one point, before giving up a single to Yasmani Grandal to open the eighth inning.Watching Dodgers games was what I did growing up, so to have an opportunity to pitch here was fun and to be able to throw my first complete-game shutout was definitely icing on the cake, said Wright, a native of nearby Torrance. ' ' '