Sanspareils Greenlands
Sanspareils Greenlands, commonly known by the abbreviation SG, is a cricket equipment manufacturer.[1] Its balls are used in Test cricket and in the Ranji Trophy in India.[2][3] They have a more prominent seam and are closer together than the Kookaburra balls used for Test matches, used in rest of the world apart from England and West Indies (which use Duke), resulting from the thicker thread used for stitching.[4] The balls are also completely hand-crafted.[5]
Industry | Sporting goods |
---|---|
Founded | 1931 |
Founder | Kedarnath Anand |
Headquarters | Meerut, Uttar Pradesh, India, Meerut |
Area served | Worldwide |
Key people | Kailash C. Anand (chairman) Paras Anand (director) Puneet Anand (director) Trilok N Anand (director) |
Products | Cricket and sports Equipment |
Number of employees | c. 3,000 |
Parent | Sanspareils Greenlands Pvt. LTD. |
Subsidiaries | SG infrastructure SG sportswear |
Website | teamsg.in |
Brothers Kedarnath and Dwarakanath Anand established Sanspareils Co. in Sialkot in 1931. They were originally from Lahore where they apprenticed in their uncle's sports shop RICHIE Sports. In 1940 they established a company named Greenlands to facilitate export of their products. After the partition of India, the family moved to Agra and then settled in Meerut in 1950.[6] Its factory has been in Meerut, Uttar Pradesh since 1950.[7]
SG has been exporting bats manufactured in Meerut to the UK and Australia for most of the international cricket brands. The company has been the market leader in India with legends like Sunil Gavaskar, Mohammad Azharuddin and Rahul Dravid endorsing the brand. In 2008, Virender Sehwag became an SG brand ambassador.
Since 1994, all Test Matches played in India have been played with SG balls.[7] SG Test balls are handmade[8] and are said to be 20% of the price of Kookaburra balls.[8]
Criticism
The SG Test Balls have come under severe criticism in recent times. Ravichandran Ashwin, who enjoyed a lot of success with the SG Ball, has criticized the quality of SG Test Balls used recently, saying "Right now, I say that the Kookaburra red ball is the best. Dukes is quite good. But I’m disappointed with the SG ball. It used to be top-notch when I started playing. The seam would be prominent even after 70 overs. It’s not the same any more". Kuldeep Yadav too shared his thoughts on the SG ball saying "Kookaburra red ball is good to grip. SG is okay at the moment".[9]
Indian Captain Virat Kohli, jumped on the bandwagon and said that Test cricket across the globe should be played with the England-made Duke balls, expressing his displeasure at the poor quality of the SG balls that India use at home and supported the issues raised by Ashwin, saying "I totally agree with him (Ashwin). To have a ball scuffed up in five overs is something that we haven't seen before. The quality of the ball used to be quite high before and I don't understand the reason why it's gone down".[10]
Speedster Umesh Yadav, joined the growing list of Indian players who feel the SG Test ball was not ideal, complained that it is ineffective to bowl with the SG Test Balls in India. He says that after the ball wears out, it offers no pace or bounce on flat Indian tracks and makes it difficult to contain the lower order batsmen of the opposition.[11]
Sponsorships
The following players have had endorsement deals with SG. This is not a comprehensive list.
Players
Shane Watson - Watto Edition Shakib Al Hasan - Players Edition Liton Das - Sierra 350 Mominul Haque - Sierra 350 Hardik Pandya - HP 33/triple crown M S Dhoni - triple crown KL Rahul - KLR 1/Sunny Tonny Rishabh Pant - RP 17/Roar le Krunal Pandya - players edition Yashasvi Jaiswal - players edition Sunil Gavaskar - Sunny Tonny Suresh Raina - SR 210 Mohammad Azharuddin - Boundary LE Virender Sehwag - VS 319 Shreyas Iyer - players edition Gautham Gambhir - players edition Cheteshwar Pujara - Sunny Gold Rahul Dravid - King cobra Rohit Sharma Parthiv Patel - Players Edition Shafali Verma - Players Edition Deepti Sharma - VS 319 Mayank Agarwal - Players Edition Sachin Tendulkar - Sunny Tonny Axar Patel - Players Edition Misbah-ul-Haq - players edition Dananjaya De Silva - VS 319 Andre Russell - AR12 Big Hitter Marlon Samuels Jason Holder - Triple Crown Shimron Hetmyer - T-45 Brandon King - SunnyTonny/VS 319 Shane Dowrich - Triple Crown
References
- "All about the cricket ball". Zee News. 22 January 2007. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
- "India opens door to Kookaburra balls in Tests". Daily Times. 10 March 2006. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
- "Delhi and Haryana players disappointed with SG balls". India Today. 6 November 2011. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
- Rundell, Michael (2009). Wisden Dictionary of Cricket. A & C Black. p. 288. ISBN 9781408101612.
- SGCricket Official (17 March 2017), How an SG Ball is Made, retrieved 27 July 2017
- "sgcricket.com, about us". Retrieved 25 March 2018.
- Rudraneil Sengupta (13 August 2012). "1931 Sanspareils Greenlands | A historic innings". Livemint. Retrieved 6 March 2017.
- Archived 2006-05-19 at the Wayback Machine
- "IND vs WI: Ravichandran Ashwin slams the SG ball after India's record-breaking win in Rajkot". Times Now Digital. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
- "India vs West Indies: Virat Kohli wants Dukes to replace SG balls in Tests". PTI. Retrieved 11 October 2018.
- "Difficult to contain lower-order with SG Test balls: Umesh Yadav". PTI. Retrieved 12 October 2018.