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Sportsperson of the year awards circus

December 30th, 2006

Firstly, apologies for the long absence. I have been very busy with work and did not have much time to blog forcing a break of sorts.

Coming back to the topic at hand.. strong and diverse opinions are usually among sports fans and in sports columns on who should be the sports person of the year around this time of the year. for 2006 though, the answer seems obvious as Roger Federer has had a near perfect year with 3 grand slam wins and a dream win-loss record of 92-5. Yet, we find sports awards going to people other than Roger Federer and some people are, as a result, not happy about this. Chris Baldwin of travelgolf.com writes:

…athlete of the year deserves to go to …, the most dominant athlete in any sport. That without question is tennis’ Roger Federer….

Tiger Woods winning AP Male Athlete of the Year only proves how embarrassingly provincial Americans can be. Too bad there aren’t enough U.S. sports fans like Tiger and me who can see the entire sports world.

It is no secret that this is true regarding Americans, particularly where sport is concerned. They focus mostly on US sports and hardly on sports from around the world. However, I do not see why this should be a reason to be agitated about. English football fans focus much more, or in a lot of cases, almost entirely on their own league. Even when we analyse teams sports fans follow, a lot of people only keep indepth track of their own team and not the entire league be it any sport. The basic nature of sport is that you root for you own team and revel in the roller coaster ride following a team provides.

When a sports award does the same, it shouldn’t cause any alarm. The Associated Press has been awarding the Americans for many years now and it is nothing new. BBC gives out a similar award and to compensate, they also gives out the overseas version.

Perhaps it is best that we accept there will be natural bias in awards, one which any group or panel cannot avoid. Even the Laureus award conferred by a very international panel cannot be said to be unbiased. We do not have a nominee from each country in the panel and each member of the panel cannot be expected to know the weightage of each achievement in various sports. If we look at the award winners, they are popular sports persons from more main stream sports. It is arguably the best award out there and yet it cannot be said that it can be bereft of biases.

Awards help celebrate sporting achievements and that should be that. The real trophies have already been won - on the sporting field.

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Tiger

August 22nd, 2006

Another major win then. There is no limit to how great his accomplishments can be when he is finished.

To win his latest major, he identified a flaw and was good enough to rectify it the next day. Guardian has more:

“I told Hank (coach Haney) that I saw what I did yesterday on 16 on the highlights last night on TV,” Woods said, referring to his three-putt bogey in the third round. “I saw how my putter blade went back, and I didn’t like that very much at all. I rehearsed it a little bit last night, came out this morning and I just felt like, hey, this is back to how I putted two weeks ago at the Buick.” …

… Woods, 30, made another tactical move that paid off on Sunday, relying on his five-wood off the tee to place the ball at the corners of the many doglegs among Medinah’s holes.

I had read a Time Magazine cover article a few years back on how Woods changed his swing because he was unhappy with the unpredictability of it despite winning. The big decision meant that Woods had a slack period but eventually it paid off. That is just one of the many instances through which we have got a peek into the strong mind which he possesses.

Woods is confident of his ability and is not afraid to take risks or initial hiccups. To a smaller degree, some thing similar was witnessed on Sunday:

He began the day by hitting five-wood off the tee after opening each of his first three rounds with errant shots using his three-wood.

What a champ.

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Go Tiger

July 24th, 2006

Today saw one reiterate his greatness while another became a champion after a great performance.

A young kid held a go Tiger banner along with a USA flag on it cheering Tiger on. That kid didn’t know it yet but he was forming emotional bonds with Tiger, golf and sport in general. The attachment means that we share the highs and lows of the sports persons and the teams we follow while we watch our sport. Tiger had no Earl to hug as he usually used to have. He cried and you couldn’t help but feel sad as well.

Even Deadspin cannot come up with a sarcastic comment after a perfect performance by Woods this week as they admit adding:

And we’ll probably not see anything like it again. Just minutes after he left the green, he did a television interview with barely any hints that he had just cried as hard as you’ll ever see anyone cry. It was amazing. No puffy eyes, red nose, wet cheeks. Just a couple of hard swallows, and other than that, all calm smiles.

Huge discipline apart from the hard work and talent is required to achieve what you do in sport. You do wonder at the composure and the discipline some of these sportspersons display outside the playing arena as well. For example, just look at Agassi answering questions thrown by media persons. Even the most outrageous questions are answered with cool finesee. The composure is staggering.

It is an exciting age to live in. Not only do we have Woods who will become the greatest sportsperson of our generation when he retires if things keep on going on track. We also have a Federer in tennis; Armstrong retired a year back and Schumacher is in the fag end of his career. Every generation produces it’s greats. However, I am sure that ages from now, people will marvel how these sportspersons could have been that good in a very competitive era.

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Champions are Human

June 17th, 2006

How else can you explain Federer facing a match point against Olivier Rochus or this? Sport is a leveller and we see that every day.

CNN tracks Federer’s progress on grass this week:

Federer had struggled all week here beating Indian qualifier Rohan Bopanna 7-6 6-2 in the first round before battling over three sets to defeat France’s Richard Gasquet 7-6 6-7 6-4.

On a given day, any individual or team can defeat any one else. We think that the oft stated any thing can happen in sport is not always true. Then, we see Bangladesh defeat Australia in tests and Senegal defeat France in football. We know instantly that any thing can indeed happen in sport.

It always occurs when we least expect it. The unpredictability is thrilling and is one of the many factors which draws us to sport. It is a far more important aspect than we usually realise.

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Wie: Breaking Barriers

May 6th, 2006

Michelle Wie is achieving what few women have managed - competing in a man dominated professional sport. CNN reports:

Sixteen-year-old Michelle Wie on Friday became the first women to make the cut in a major men’s tour event for 61 years at Incheon, South Korea.

Wie fired four birdies on her way to a three-under 69 in the second round of the Asian Tour’s SK Telecom Open to put at her at five under.

The last woman to make the final two rounds of a senior men’s event was Babe Zaharias at the 1945 Los Angeles Open.

Babe Zaharias did it in another era. That no one managed it till now in golf, since then, is testimonial to the increasing standards in golf, and gives some understanding to what Wie is achieving. Analysts and golf writers say that we might only start understanding what Tiger Woods achieved in golf, the barriers he broke and what he meant to golf only after many years of the Woods retirement.

Read the rest of this entry »

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Decalink #2

May 4th, 2006

This edition has been a wee bit delayed. It is here, though, now.

• So I am not the only one who feels the round 1 of the NBA Playoffs have been never ending.

• Tiger’s father Earl dies.

• What a 24 hours - a Blackburn Rovers fan.

• Lakers lose their cool.

• Ganguly career far from over?

• Any one could do the Ericsson job?

• Six Nations schedule declared.

• US fan confused whether to support US in football or not.

• India exits from Thomas Cup.

• Jan Ulrich’s Tour de France preparations.

Phew!

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