Archive for February, 2006

F1 – how much will it stretch before breaking?

Tuesday, February 14th, 2006

Rebels – Renault, Honda, Toyota, BMW-Sauber and McLaren-Mercedes have threatened to set up a rival series after 2007.

There has been utter disarray in F1. I wrote regarding the same last year here, here and here.

Max Mosley has now set a deadline for the rebel teams. BBC adds further:

They want a bigger share of revenues, more say in F1’s future and are upset at plans to limit technology from ‘08. Mosley, president of the sport’s governing body the FIA, wants to give independent teams without support from car manufacturers more of a chance by limiting the budget needed to be competitive to around £57m a year. Ferrari’s budget, the biggest in F1, is reputed to be as much as £287m, with Toyota not far behind.

Are restrictions on technology, number of teams really the answer? In a free world, open economy it doesn’t work. The simple demand-supply works. If the F1 authorities continue to try and boss around, the break is very much a real possibility. It has happened in cricket with Packer and has threatened to happen in cricket again recently (I wrote regarding the same here, here and here). Individuals or individual bodies do not relish seeing their scope restricted. Self interest has to be looked into by the authorities in-charge. Without that, a team or an organisation cannot function. Often people try to take this the other way around and the problems arise thus.

England’s attack versus India

Monday, February 13th, 2006

I said how England should consider going in with an all pace attack in Pakistan earlier:

Can England do it despite having a pace centric attack rather than a spin centric attack? Australia did it in India only when they relied on their strength and opted not to change too many things. South Africa, which was the first team to break the jinx of away teams losing in India did it with a rather weak spin attack. The Windies team won every where with their pace battery. So the key is to focus on the strengths rather than change too many things.

I maintain that they should adopt the same verus India. For one India are better players of spin specially at home. For two, England do not have their best spinner Ashley Giles. (We do not know how good Monty Panesar but can we, practically, expect him to create wonders in his first international tour?)

Play a four pronged pace attack. Have Bell and Collingwood play the role of the stock bowler.

Trescothick
Strauss
Vaughan
Bell
Pietersen
Collingwood
Flintoff
Jones
Hoggard
Jones
Harmison

On Dhoni

Monday, February 13th, 2006

The match was all evens-stevens, any one’s game. Then Dhoni, no stranger to playing match winning innings, hit four after four after four till he hit 72* off 46 balls. In total, Dhoni hit 13 fours. In the end, India coasted to victory. Not that the Pakistani bowling or captaincy was great. Zainub elaborates on Rana’s waywardness and Inzy’s errors. But that is no discredit to Dhoni who came in with the game nicely poised and took the game away from Pakistan.

Dhoni now has 1054 one day runs at an average of 50.19. Yes, we still have to see how Dhoni fares outside the sub-continent. But that is for another day, another time. In the sub-continent at least, Dhoni’s bat speaks strong.

On another note, the Indian one day batting line up is looking stronger after every match. The class at the top of the order is there. The depth lower down with Dhoni, Pathan makes it a very potent combination. And we haven’t seen a lot of Raina till now, have we.

Grandma Luge out

Monday, February 13th, 2006

52 year old Anne Abernathy or Grandma Luge, as she is better known, has pulled out of the Olympics because of a wrist injury.

Abernathy has a lot to be proud about. Reports CNN:

She has also built up a cult following of luge fans around the world, having beaten cancer and bounced back from a string of injuries including 12 operations on her knee.

She was appearing at her sixth Olympics in Torino after a career that began in Calgary in 1988 and carried the flag for her country in Friday’s opening ceremony. She became the oldest female Winter Olympian when she competed aged 48 in Utah four years ago. The previous title-holder was Canada’s Edwina Chamier, an Alpine skier who took to the slopes of Garmisch-Partenkirchen in 1936. But Abernathy was not the oldest competitor at the Games — that distinction goes to 54-year-old U.S. curler Scott Baird.

As Grandma Luge says, she is an inspiration to a lot of women, specially to those above 50:

It’s a big deal for a lot of women that someone over 50 is going out there and doing it.

Tendulkar bashers please stand up?

Monday, February 13th, 2006

I have maintained for over one and half years that Tendulkar is not past his best. I wrote a small article in December 2004(which I didn’t put on the blog simply because it didn’t exist then) –

It has been a shame people have expressed doubts over the great modern batsman Sachin Tendulkar. There have been news paper articles, television shows, common people on the street and even ardent cricket fans who have asked this question in the last year or so. Tendulkar has had a very strange 2004. It has been a year in which more questions have been asked of his batting than in any year since he made his international debut in 1989.

Why all this commotion? There has been a 241 and a 194 apart from some other big hundreds. But 50 percent of the innings Tendulkar has played have been below 10. This is no mean statistic for the most consistent batsman to have played the game in the last fifteen years. This is the only argument for the ‘critics’ to doubt Tendulkar.

Tendulkar has had a major injury this year too (the tennis elbow) because of which he has not been hundred percent before and after his injury rehabilitation. Being fit is very important in international cricket. When some part of your body is not upto its best, your performance is bound to go down.

Now about the big scores. The 159* Tendulkar has had via which he has emulated Sunil Gavaskar for 34 centuries not only helps him achieve this record but also makes him nmber two on the list of batsmen having a score of 150 plus (15) beating Lara (14). Surprised because Lara is the one who has had the reputation of the biger scores? This is one key aspect of the game Tendulkar has improved upon which every one has easily over looked.

Tendulkar wont remain the quick feeted fast race horse. But he will surely make bigger scores if you think that Tendulkar’s five biggest test scores have come in the last five years. Gavaskar was 37 when he made his last test century. Tendulkar is only 31. He has been pegged on by Gavaskar to not stop at 40 but go for 50 test centuries. He has made two candid revelations in an interview conducted by ESPN after he made the 34th century. He still has the shoulder pain and is not hundred percent fit. He felt a lot the pressure when every one reminded him of achieving this record of 34 centuries.

He hoped this is a new beginning for him. Knowing the fighter that Tendulkar is, he will achieve what he is destined for. People ask if Tendulkar is past his best. But is the best scoring fast centuries or the big centuries and yet remain consistent? That is what should be the question to be pondered over really. As time goes by, the people who question greatness will shut up for good. And Tendulkar will remain as one of the greats to grace the game along with Grace, Hobbs, Bradman, Sobers, the two Richards, Lara and the many other hallowed batsmen to have strode on the twenty two yards we call the cricket pitch.

The last 14 months or so have been worse for Tendulkar as far as media and fan reactions go. The nadir were statements like Endulkar made in leading newspapers in India.

Well hopefully the Tendulkar bashers can stand up now and admit they were wrong regarding Tendulkar. Still believe he is past his best? All I can say is that a lot more people will look silly in the coming few months.

Update – Outside Edge brings to focus some recent performances and a wonderful poem on Tendulkar.

Record for longest continuous flight

Sunday, February 12th, 2006

Steve Fossett has broken the record set by Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager for the longest non-stop continuous flight despite power failure by flying 26,389.3 miles.

As BBC reports:

Generator failure as he descended to Kent prompted him to make a mayday call and divert to Bournemouth. On landing with limited visibility, two tyres burst, but Fossett was unhurt. He had planned to end his journey at Kent International Airport… He eclipsed the distance record set by Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager, who logged 40,212km (24,987 miles) during a non-stop, non-refuelled trip around the globe in their Voyager aircraft in 1986.

BBC further informs that Fossett already has 109 records to his name! Adventurers like these who stretch boundaries have to be admired, appreciated and reverred.

Bravo Fossett!

Emulating Heiden

Sunday, February 12th, 2006

Chad Hedrick has won a gold medal. He has vouched to win 4 more. If he manages the same, he will emulate Eric Heiden who won 5 gold medals in the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid.

Spectacular opening ceremony

Saturday, February 11th, 2006

An opening ceremony described as filled with rhythm, passion and speed to showcase Italian culture kicked off the Olympics. Italian cross-country skier Stefania Belmondo lit the Olympic flame.

Lankans 1-0 up

Friday, February 10th, 2006

Who would have thought when the VB series started that Sri Lanka would be 1-0 ahead in the finals with run outs galore courtesy Tillekaratne Dilshan. It was surprising enough when they reached the finals.

Winter Olympics kicks off today!

Friday, February 10th, 2006

Winter Olympics, 2006 kicks off in Turin today. Already there have been athletes testing positive. CNN explains some sports being at the Winter Olympics.