Pankaj Roy (born May 31, 1928, Calcutta (now Kolkata), India—died February 4, 2001, Kolkata) was an Indian cricket player who was the opening batsman in 43 Test (international) matches for India between 1951 and 1960, scoring 2,442 runs. He is possibly best remembered for setting a world record of 413 runs with opening partner Vinoo Mankad against New Zealand in 1956. (Their record stood until 2008.)
As a youngster, Roy had a preference for football (soccer), but after sustaining a fracture during a match, he turned his attention to cricket. He scored a century (100 runs in a single inning) in his domestic first-class debut in 1946 and continued to do well at the domestic level. In 1951 he was selected for the national side against England and impressed greatly in his debut Test series, scoring his first international century with 140 runs in the second Test in Bombay (now Mumbai) and topping the run aggregates for India with 387 runs in the series. He was widely hailed as a new star for Indian cricket, but a disastrous tour of England in 1952, when he scored just 54 runs in the series, led some observers to question his technique and temperament.
Roy was arguably fortunate to have been selected for India’s tour of the West Indies in 1953, and he took the opportunity to salvage his reputation. He returned to his earlier level of play against the strong Caribbean side, the highlight being his innings of 85 and 150 in the fifth Test at Kingston. He also acquitted himself well in the home series against New Zealand in 1955–56 with two centuries, including the career-high 173 runs he scored during his record-setting innings with Mankad.
In the last five years of his international career, Roy produced good scores intermittently but lost some of his consistency. He failed to make a three-figure score in his last 19 Tests, his best being 99 runs against Australia in Delhi in 1959. Roy played his last Test against Pakistan in Bombay in December 1960. However, he continued to play at first-class level until the 1967–68 season.