When an individual’s feat articulates the aspirations of a marginalised community, it overcomes nationalistic barriers. The individual achievements of several Black athletes in the US, for instance, have marked the community’s triumph over racism. The greatest example India has ever seen is of Baloo Palwankar, a Dalit, the first formidable Indian cricketer, also the role model of countless Dalits, including B.R. Ambedkar. Ramachandra Guha in his book, A Corner of A Foreign Field, has written his moving biographical sketch. An untouchable, who was once not even allowed to bat and was merely asked to bowl in the nets, was denied the space to have tea with his teammates in his initial years, went on to claim 114 wickets when the Indian team first toured England in 1911. Consider the achievement that since then, Guha wrote, “only one other Indian bowler, Vinoo Mankad in 1946, has claimed more than a hundred first-class wickets on a tour of England”.