Updated On: 12 June, 2025 07:16 AM IST | Mumbai | Clayton Murzello
Around a fortnight ago, I got a call from Sanjay, 56, in Pune, informing me that Ajay was no more. A cardiac arrest at home took him away on March 16. Sanjay spoke about how the various cricket books and autographs they collected do not mean much to him now

Sanjay Gadgil and his late brother Ajay (inset) cherished the autograph of West Indies pace great Joel Garner who they met during the 1995 BSI World Masters tournament at the Cricket Club of India. Here, Garner is obliging Australian fans at the Sydney Show Ground during World Series Cricket on January 18, 1978. Pic/Getty Images
Ajay and Sanjay Gadgil, born in 1968, were identical, inseparable and innocuous. The game of cricket that they once followed was an integral part of the special glue that bonded these twins.
They kept in touch with me intermittently. After one brother finished greeting you in Marathi, the other one would come on the line — same tone, same words, same affection.
Around a fortnight ago, I got a call from Sanjay, 56, in Pune, informing me that Ajay was no more. A cardiac arrest at home took him away on March 16. Sanjay spoke about how the various cricket books and autographs they collected do not mean much to him now.