Mohinder (Jimmy) Amarnath (b.1950) is the son of the legendary cricketer LalaAmarnath. He played for the Indian national team from 1969 to 1989 scoring4378 Test runs. Nine of his eleven Test centuries were scored overseas. He wasMan of the Match in the semi-final and the final when India won the World Cupin 1983. He was named one of the Wisden Cricketers of the Year in 198Rajender Amarnath is the youngest son ofLala Amarnath. A graduate from St. Stephen's College he played first-classcricket in India and professional cricket in England. Later he was a selectorand coach for the Haryana state team. He is an author commentator and cricketanalyst. “4 and alsoreceived the Arjuna Award the same year.
<p>‘The story of my cricketing life flows like a Hitchcock thriller: a little twist here another there…’</p><p>An iconic figure in the world of cricket in the 1970s and 1980s Mohinder Amarnath started his career as a batsman who was found suspect against short-pitched fast bowling and finished it as one of the finest and bravest players of pace. He is still remembered with awe for hooking fearsome pace attacks on bouncy Caribbean and Australian tracks-without wearing a helmet.</p><p>Grit guts and gumption defined Amarnath’s rollercoaster career. According to both Sunil Gavaskar and Imran Khan Amarnath was the best batsman of their era. But strangely he kept getting dropped from the Indian team and subsequently became famous for his comebacks earning him the moniker ‘the comeback king’. He was a player who didn’t flinch in the face of fire: a fearless cricketer and a man who just wouldn’t be defeated or denied.</p><p>His frank forthright and anecdotal memoir written with his brother Rajender Amarnath gives readers a keen insight into his personality and a glimpse into a bygone glorious era of cricket. For any lover of the game Fearless is a must-read.</p>