Archive for January, 2012

A Golden Age – From The Durban Lambs to the Perth Lions

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

Indian cricket fans all over the world at heart broken. England was thought to be an anomaly but Australia showed that the Indian team was very poor and it could not be blamed to injuries or the like any longer.

However, instead of mourning, we should celebrate what has been a golden age for Indian cricket. The thing about golden ages is that you do not realize you are in the midst of one while you are in it. More often that not, only with the benefit of hindsight do you realize how lucky you have been to experience such an era of greatness.

Between 1932 and 2000, India played 157 matches away from home winning only 14. From 2001, India has played 72 games winning 23. The last decade or so has included series win in England, West Indies and more than 12 months when the team were the number 1 team in test cricket despite stiff competition from the likes of South Africa.

Between April 2007 and March 2011, India won 7 tests abroad and lost just 4. For a team which couldn’t bat even if their lives depended upon it (remember Durban where India was bowled out for 100?), it was a giant leap. If I was told in 1996 that India could win another of the world’s fastest pitches, at Perth in 12 years time, you would have forgiven me to think the person was not sane.

You might blame T20 but batting techniques all over the world have declined because of T20. That is not it. One has to realize that Indian pitches are very different to the ones outside the subcontinent. The extra bounce, pace compared to the extra turn and dead Indian wickets means it is almost impossible for a team coming from the region to win consistently abroad.

Even when you do produce a few batsmen like say Gavaskar and Vishwanath, you do not produce the bowlers. So, the combination with Zaheer Khan leading was a rare phenomenon.

It was a great team with leaders like Ganguly and Kumble and Dhoni, batsmen like Tendulkar, Dravid, Sehwag and Laxman, and bowlers like Kumble, Zaheer Khan and Harbhajan Singh.

The likes of you, we will never see again.

Good bye.

Written on the eve of the Adelaide test. In the most beautiful ground in the world, these greats will come to perform for one more hurrah.

Circumnavigation World Record

Monday, January 23rd, 2012

The Hindu reports:

Dutch teen Laura Dekker on Saturday became the youngest sailor to complete a solo circumnavigation of the world, a year after going to court for the right to make the attempt.The 16-year-old completed her solo round-the-world journey

Things I loved about this record.. Firstly, she had to fight even her country to try and achieve it:

Just to get to the starting line, Ms. Dekker had to fight her way through the Dutch courts, who at first blocked plans for her to cast off a year earlier — when she was just 14. The court ordered her placed in the care of welfare officers on the grounds that she was too young to guarantee her safety at sea. She ran away to Sint Maarten, an island of the Lesser Antilles divided between France and the Netherlands, and police had to escort her back home.

She finally won her court battle with Dutch child welfare authorities in July 2010 — after 10 months — and set sail, originally from Gibraltar on August 21, 2010 in her yacht Guppy.

Secondly, she did it at one go.

The previous record holder was Australian Jessica Watson, who achieved it in May 2010, three days before she turned 17. But unlike Ms. Watson, who circumnavigated non-stop, Ms. Dekker sailed from port-to-port and was never at sea for more than three weeks.

How often do you see such single minded determination, and then, the being able to achieve what you set out to do? Very admirable.

Edit (18.4.2012): She didn’t actually do it at one go. The previous record holder, Jessica Watson did. Bit of a misreading there. Apologies.

“That’s The Way He Plays”

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

The batsman slashes one. He misses it by a mile. Next, you hear the commentator say ‘that’s the way he plays.’ I don’t agree with this at all. The logic is that as it is his natural game, he will work best when he plays in that style.

However, when a driver drives in a jammed road, he is expected to be a bit more cautious not to cause an accident. You don’t tell the driver that you drive well when you drive at 80 KM/per hour. Why don’t you do that ALL the time. So why do we have different standards for a Sehwag or a Dilshan?

Let us not forget that these are professional cricketers. I am not asking a Sehwag to bat like a Chanderpaul. However, you can go down a gear or two. It is not too much to expect.

Lessons to Learn from the Suarez Episode

Monday, January 2nd, 2012

When Luiz Suarez, the Liverpool and Uruguayan footballer was charged with racism, Liverpool reacted angrily. There were even shirt protests.

However, according to the 115 page document by FA, as Guardian’s Stuart James reports, Liverpool may not find any thing more to argue about.

What I find disconcerting here is the manner in which teams come out in protest when racial charges are made at the outset. This is understandably a tricky matter. No one likes to be given a guilty verdict in a racism case. It is a black spot forever. For this very reason, whenever some one is charged, the reaction from the base is usually of outrage.

However, the larger picture has to be understood. Sports persons and public figures set an example to the public at large. From the colas they drink to the way they speak to the way they carry themselves on and off the field, every thing is gauged and noticed by the man on the street.

Before a sports person or a public figure opens his mouth, he should at least check whether he knows what he is talking about.

Racism cannot be tolerated, as I argued even 5 years back.

Also, next time, before the verdict has been given, a bit more grace would be appreciated.

Earlier posts on racism in sport: 1, 2, 3.