Flamboyant Claudius never had an off-day

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The midfielder was also the first hockey player in the world to feature in four Olympic Games

Anglo-Indians, barely a million in numbers in the colonial days, contributed immensely towards hockey taking its root in the Indian sub-continent. Many of the successful domestic teams were exclusively manned by them with only a sprinkling of players from other clans.

There were nine Anglo-Indians in the 1928 Olympic hockey team, three in 1932 and eight in the 1936 Berlin team. Most of them were among the playing eleven. They were so gifted and talented that chronicler Jeremy Potter to portrayed them as “a mixture of bloods which for some reason produces the best hockey players in the world.”

Leslie Walter Claudius, the talented right-half, held on to the legacy of the Anglo-Indians even as many of them left the country after Indias independence. The only Anglo-Indian to captain the Indian team (1960 Rome Olympics), the mid-fielder was also the first player in the world to play in four Olympics hockey events (1948 to 1960).

Hard to believe as it is, Claudius the Olympian might never have been, for the player had no great love for hockey. For a boy whose passion was football, such unique achievements in a different sport might sound like a fairy tale.

In 1946, as an onlooker Leslie took up the hockey stick when Dickie Carr, 1936 Olympic team member, asked him to make up the eleven.

The only thing he knew then was to stop the ball and push it to the player ahead of him. Shortly, he faced a dilemma to make a choice between football and hockey. He chose the latter as it offered a better chance to be at the Olympics.

Within two years of taking up the game, he realised his dream of becoming an Olympian. With the London Olympics gold, Claudius was delighted though his regret was that he figured in only one match. He went on to play three more Olympics where he played all the matches.

He would never give up ball possession or the hope of triumph. He was flamboyant and aggressive and despite being a mid-fielder, one could often see him in striking circles. Whenever the chips were down he would emerge the saviour. Many times he saved even after the goalkeeper was beaten.

In Claudius career, there was no off-day. For him to lay-off meant losing fitness. His expertise at both football and badminton not only kept him extremely fit but also avoided any monotony. Such was his brilliance that he was often said to wield a stick which is connected to his brain.

After the 1948 Olympics, Claudius became an inseparable part of all Indian teams in international games that included the 1952 Olympics, an East African tour the same year, the Malaysia tour in 1954, the New Zealand and Australia tours 1955, the 1956 Melbourne Olympics, the third Asian Games in 1958 and the Europe tour in 1949. In 1960, he was elevated to Olympic captaincy, a fitting tribute to his service to the game.

The 1960 Rome Olympics presented a period of suspense for India with arch-rival Pakistans ascendancy to gold. He said, “Pakistan scored an early goal. That goal sapped our confidence. We never recovered. We had our chances to get on level terms but they were not snapped up. Had we scored the equaliser, we would have won the match.”

The Rome loss was considered a national loss, the backlash was severe. His illustrious international career came to an end with that. Claudius joined the Padma Shree fraternity in 1971. Bengal Olympic Association declared him as the Best Player of the Century in 2000.
— Hockey Features