Monday, March 12, 2012

Bidding Adieu!!

It seems that Rahul Dravid's retirement caused the espncricinfo website to crash. Although the website denied this causality, it does bear testimony to the adoration that Rahul Dravid enjoys in the cricketing fraternity that most people still believe his retirement and the website crash were linked!

This incident highlights two very important facets of Rahul Dravid's cricket. First and foremost, he was a truly international cricketer loved by fans the world over. Accolades and testimonials flowing from international cricketers further reinforce the stature of the man in international cricket. Secondly, and more critically, Rahul Dravid is the connoisseur's hero. He is undoubtedly a purist in cricketing terms - of course this didn't affect his performance in the IPL at all - but in years to come, Rahul Dravid will inevitably be placed amongst the great test cricketers so much so, that his Limited over International heroics will be completely forgotten.

The other curious feature in the tributes flowing for Rahul Dravid is that none of them actually extol his cricket in numerical terms. Come on, five figure runs in both forms of the game and no one seems to be talking about it. If this had been any other imminent retiree (such as Kallis, Ponting or even Sangakarra in a few years time), the first wave of odes would refer to their cricketing achievements, their awards, centuries and averages - but not Dravid.

The reason for not extolling Dravid's cricketing achievements is quite simple - no, it is not because they are eclipsed by his teammate Sachin but because it is not his amazing numbers that make him a cricketing great. It is the manner in which he went about scripting his runs and career that set him apart.

The most important contribution of Dravid and his Indian contemporaries - read fab five - is the legacy they leave in the Indian dressing room. It should be noted that the fab five were the first generation that enjoyed the monetary surplus of Indian cricket. They were the first cricketing millionaires and probably billionaires. Hence the task of demonstrating the manner of enjoying the enormous success and lifestyle that cricket provided fell on the fab five and what a job they have done!

They have shown that wealth and fame can indeed be tamed and enjoyed than knock you off your perch. Most of the accolades for Rahul Dravid have a similar theme - they describe the perpetual dignity and stature of the man, his equanimity and utter dedication to the sport. The very fact that the golden generation of Indian cricketers have lived a scandal-free celebrity life for nearly two decades stands testament to their stature.

It is only because of the fab five that Indian cricket was able to bounce back from the match-fixing quagmire at the dawn of the new millennium. Indian cricket and cricket lovers are deeply indebted to this great group of men for this very simple reason - for keeping cricket alive. Match fixing is rearing its ugly head once again. Rumors are rife and investigations will begin soon. In this uncertain climate, it would be prudent to extol players like Rahul Dravid, not for their cricket but for being impeccable cricketers.

The true value of a player like Rahul Dravid can only be gauged by the dressing room. Unfortunately, a cricket fan or follower or even their closest family members can never truly understand the value of such legends to the game. Their lasting contribution in to the culture in the dressing room. Only the current and coming generations can reflect the culture that these legends leave behind.

The current and incumbent generation of Indian cricketers have a sacrosanct responsibility to live up to the heady ethical standards set by the golden generation. Being a cricket lover, I know that I will, in the near future have to write a testimonial for my favorite cricketer SRT and even VVS Laxman but on each occasion, my tune would be similar - Cherish the manner in which this golden generation has lived and played the game and conclude with a fervent hope that the coming generations will endeavor to meet the lofty standards set by stalwarts like Rahul.

Friday, December 9, 2011

Predictable Carnage

Yes, the title does refer to the carnage that began less than 24 hours ago in Indore. In fact, after watching the post match conference of the 3rd ODI between India and West Indies, I had a sense of deja-vu. Prior to the India v Bangladesh curtain raiser of the 2011 World Cup, Sehwag had made ominous pronouncements of a revenge game. He backed it up with a 175 that seriously threatened Sachin's 200*

When Sachin scored his maiden ODI double ton, every Indian and most cricket fans would have told you that the most likely batsman to dislodge Sachin from the top of the highest ODI innings list was the Nawab of Najafgarh. I thought Sehwag would do it in that game against Bangladesh. It is due to this obvious sense of inevitability that Sehwag's double ton yesterday was received with mostly acceptance than surprise. That holy list of highest ODI innings looks more and more like an Indian batting line up!!

Personally, after watching Sehwag's honest and determined words at the post match presentation of the 3rd ODI, I strongly felt West Indies had it coming. Sehwag and India were smarting the end of India's unbeaten run in home ODIs and Sehwag was on the money in suggesting that a non-performing top order is eventually going to cost a match no matter how many rescue acts the middle order pulls off.

Well, the West Indies did have it coming but they did not help themselves by being shoddy on the field. Sehwag does have a deflating effect on the opposition and weak opposition tend to fall apart in the field when Sehwag summons his 'kolaveri'!!

Sehwag on fire seems to induce panic, then mistakes in the fielding and finally a sense of resignation. Once Sehwag had gotten his hundred, the West Indies seemed to be resigned to the fact that a mammoth score was on and it was pointless to resist. It is only this mental disintegration that could possibly explain Sammy's dolly drop when Sehwag was on 171. Credit must be given to the West Indian bowlers though - they did not give up and kept creating chances and running in hard but then when you are in deep, a meter or a mile more do not matter.

Undoubtedly, Sehwag and Gambhir's return to form augurs well for India's tour down under. It sets up a mouth watering contest and yet again, the Indian contingent, especially the bowlers are heading for a very important tour, quite unprepared. Without the requisite conditioning, expect a further spate of injuries to the already bare Indian fast bowling cupboard!! With Sehwag and Gambhir finding their old touch, the batting seems all set to click but the bowling may yet let India down.

Whatever happens, I hope the tour begins with Sachin's ton of tons on Boxing Day!!

Thursday, July 21, 2011

One of those rare celestial alignments at Lords'

The mind-numbing euphoria of India's World Cup victory is long gone. The long afterglow of victory is a distant memory. The IPL acted like a gatecrasher on India's WC triumph party. It was followed by a dour sojourn to the Caribbean. India should have remained unbeaten throughout and should have won all the three tests. Neither good omen came to pass.

Then the Indian squad gathered at the home of cricket. In a few hours, they will be walking out onto the home of cricket to play the 2000th test of all time. It will the 100th test between England and India. Felicitations and ceremonies have been planned. The stage is set. The occasion is taken to a whole new level by the men in white involved.

There has been a lot written about the Indian triumvirate. It started out as a quintet - the big 4 and Jumbo - then Sehwag made it a league of six extraordinary gentlemen for a brief time. Like all great things, six were pruned to four and oddly enough, the youngest of India's golden generation remains unfit to make it a measly triumvirate - a far cry from a heady six!

But, what a triumvirate it is - Sachin, Rahul and VVS. It seems they have 99 test hundreds between them - Sachin has 99 international hundreds of his own and is still searching for that elusive name on the Lords' honors' board. All this imminent theater on the backdrop of an ambitious England outfit out to dethrone the World Champions.


For cricket connoisseurs and romantics alike, this must rank as one of the rarest occasions in cricket history - almost like one of those rare celestial events that can be witnessed from earth - maybe a supernova!

Pundits and fans alike are waiting with bated breath but it would be unwise to lose perspective. India have started the tour predictably - a horribly chalked out schedule with a harried practice match and the most insipid of performances that would put any international outfit to shame.

Still, we love this Indian team! We want them to do well. Indian fans think in a strange manner - yes, they would like to see India maintain the number one rank but they love India for the fact that they make lions of rats - the Indian team can make a test with Bangladesh seem as interesting as a test against Australia. The Indian team has an uncanny knack of leveling the playing field. Which is why the Indian fan always stays hooked!

Which is why, the Indian fan may forgive a loss to the West Indies but will demand a victorious performance at the best theater of cricket - I don't mean just the 2000th test but the series as a whole. As a thumb-rule, India will struggle at Lords' - India always struggles in the first test of a series - Indian fans always like a fightback story. Nonetheless the theater will be at its most vibrant at Lords'.

If India manage unscathed at Lords' we will be in for the most glorious month of cricket. This series shares a lot of omens with the Australia v India series in 2007 - one of the more acrimonious series in recent times. I certainly look forward to hostilities in the forthcoming series but I hope the omens only go so far - I hope the omens do not preclude the results. For all the furor of that ill-fated Aus-Ind series, India still lost it 2-1.

This time around, I would like to see Sehwag come back in the third test and win the series for India, not salvage it!

O India, May the fours be with you!

Sunday, April 3, 2011

FINALLY, my own story!

"Kapil ran a mile and caught Richards", "No one imagined India could win", "A bunch of no-hopers ended up as World Champions" ....

I have heard an account of India's greatest sporting triumph before April 2, 2011 recounted from multiple sources. My father's generation has reveled in letting us know how it felt to be World Cup Champions in 1983. Every time I listened to him, I had this yearning to experience it for myself. In 2007, when India won the T20 World cup, I thought I would be satisfied but then, the disappointment of the Carribbean World Cup was still raw. I can unequivocally say that I knew then that it is the 50 over cup that really counts. Yes, there was all that celebration but deep down, I knew - The 50 over cup is 'The Cup that Counts' - I could have given the WC2011 organizers that tag line four years ago!

Curiously, the 1983 Champions reflected the psyche of the nation that they hailed from. India was still finding its feet as a global force. Indians were unheard of or underdogs in most vocations that they were exploring. The triumph that lifted a nation reflected the bristling drive of ambition that fore-shadowed the emergence of a economic giant in the next 20 years.

28 years later, the nation needed another triumph to reflect the changed national psyche. It is ironic indeed that a sport like cricket is the only reliable barometer of Indian nationalism. It is the only pursuit that projects India as a nation. Politically and socially, India exists as multiple nations with fracture lines of regionalism, religion, class and culture. It is only in cricket triumph that Shah Rukh and a street dweller rejoice with indistinguishable joy.

Yesterday night, we did see identical celebrations within and outside the Wankhede. Maybe the suits were absent, but the body-painted revelers' joy on the streets was far more cherishable than the joyful applause of the suited VIPs at the Wankhede.

Now, lets have a look at the actual match - It was worthy of a final. India were the favorites (notice the contrast with 1983!!) but Sri Lanka almost pulled it off when the Indian chase was reeling at 31 for 2. It was a final contested but two teams with relatively weak fast bowling attacks. Sri Lanka were touted to be the better fielding side and India by far the better batting outfit. As the game panned out, a few issues were set right.

For once, the over-rated opening partnership of Dilshan and Tharanga felt the pressure of the final and went on the over-defensive. Sri Lanka paid a 30 run penalty for their nervous start. Looking at the first five overs of the Sri Lankan innings, I thought it was a good toss for Dhoni to lose (albeit in a farcical manner what with the double toss!!) Both Zak and Sreesanth started well but Sanga showed his class by dismantling Sreesanth with two gorgeous fours. The Indian fielding was outstanding and they 'lifted' themselves as Dhoni so wanted them to. Watching the Indian fielding effort, I felt they saved about 30 runs and I felt the Sri Lankans would struggle to match the Indian fielding effort. As it panned out, my hunch turned out to be correct.

For most of the first half, we were blessed to watch an exquisite ODI innings by Mahela. It was, simply put, a 'Touch of Class'. Mahela's knock reminded me of some of Sachin's centuries - no slogging, just pure batsmanship. Some would question Sreesanth's selection but I reckon Ashwin would have struggled as much against a classy Mahela. There was pace and bounce on the wicket and Dhoni's call was correct given the technical nous of the Sri Lankan batting against spin. In the latter half of the innings, the Indian bowling wasn't bad, Mahela was just too good and so was the pitch - it had true bounce and was coming on quite nicely. Whenever a lower order bat like Perera comes in and hits Zaheer through the line, you just know that the wicket is true and not stopping.

At the half way stage, given how the wicket was behaving, I felt 275 was tough but achievable. However, when Sehwag was dismissed, I was nervous and then Sachin went at 31. Strangely, I felt calmer at that moment. All the expectation was lifted. Sachin was gone and if India were to pull it of, it had to be the next Gen!

Kohli and Gambhir were exceptional in playing risk free cricket at nearly 6 runs an over. Then came the man - Dhoni. The comment of the day was by Ravi Shastri. Shastri identified Dhoni's calm and determined look as the biggest threat to Sri Lanka. When Shastri said it, I was thinking exactly the same thing. I wasn't surprised when Dhoni walked in. In fact, I knew he wouldn't let two left handers face off against Murali if he could help it. Again, it was a move backed by sound cricketing logic as Dhoni has demonstrated throughout his career - that the move came off is solely due to the character of the man.

As they say, Cometh the hour, Cometh the man. Gambhir wasn't a surprise - he is the understated giant of Indian cricket and reminds me a lot of Justin Langer who quietly compiled his runs in the shadow of his more limelight-hogging teammates. Dhoni, however, was Da Man - he was not quite the surprise package since he has the most enviable record against the Lankans but he hasn't been in his pomp in this tournament. He has never looked out of nick and it wasn't a surprise at all to see a reprise of his Captain Courageous act.

All said and done, it wasn't the mammoth run chase but the manner of it that makes this India's greatest triumph. We heard the "We played like Champions" comment repeated in the presentations and I feel it was an apt description. Sri Lanka were gallant but India were nerveless and epitomised by the two men who were there at the end - Dhoni and the Prince - Maybe the prince is now ready to be king after all!

As for me, I can now declare - WE ARE WORLD CUP CHAMPIONS - More importantly, I now have my own cricket story to tell - I know now what it feels to win the World Cup - The Cup that counts!

Friday, April 1, 2011

FINAL-ly..... the final!

If a cricket fan were to undergo sensory deprivation for an year and, at the end of it, be given the information that "at the business end of a multinational tournament, India had beaten Australia and Pakistan back to back", the fan's question (while battling fatigue of course!!) would be - 'What silverware did India win?'

Yet, as far as WC2011 is concerned, the fan would be wrong. India are just in the final, up against the team with the best "performing balance" in this tournament. To assess the strengths of both teams going into the final, let us recap a little bit more ...

My pre-tournament favorites were South Africa due to their excellent all-round form and balance. However, their most important skill seems to be lacking between their ears and I, along with many millions more, was proven wrong in backing South Africa. I had predicted that Australia would not make it to the finals because I thought India would clash with them and beat them in the semis. As it happened, India hastened their departure, a stage early!

Given the quarter final clashes, my favorite for the final was an India v South Africa clash. When South Africa lost to NZ, I firmly believed we would have a Ind v SL final in Mumbai. After South Africa, the team with the next best balance for playing in the subcontinent is Sri Lanka (with Angelo Matthews or Perera in the playing eleven). It is for this simple reason that I put Sri Lanka as slight favorites (55 to 45) against India in the final. As always, there's more to my assessment that mere team balance, but I feel its the balance that best encapsulates my assessment!

For starters, Sri Lanka have knocked India out of world cups on two occasions. One of them was the gut wrenching, heart breaking semi final at the Eden Gardens in 1996. The other, more recent one was the group clash in 2007. In addition to this, India have been beaten by Sri Lanka in finals such as the Asia Cup final. Right now, they have three quality spinners who have that extra dimension called mystery to their bowling.

Of course, the Indian batting will not be mystified by Murali or Mendis. Herath, on the other hand will be a slight mystery to the Indian batting because, I don't think the Indians have faced him in the last couple of years. Having seen how the great SRT failed to read Ajmal in the semis, I am a little worried by the Sri Lankan spin attack. Who can forget that famous match when Murali skittled the famous Indian batting for an abysmal 54?

Now for the permutations - If Sri Lanka do not play 3 spinners and choose to go with Malinga, Kulasekara and one of Matthews or Kapugedera, India will be happy because that will mean - no Herath and hence, no novelty for India.

Both India and Srilanka have struggled with a quality 2nd and 3rd seamer. The good thing for Sri Lanka is that their 2nd and 3rd seamers are better batsmen than their Indian counterparts which lends the better balance to Sri Lanka.

India, for their part, need to decide their combination after looking at the pitch. Seeing the NZ vs Sri lanka match, I feel, 3 spinners including Yuvi is the way to go. I would risk Piyush Chawla over Ashwin because a leg spinner is the only bowler that Sri Lanka do not have. If Piyush is ready to open the bowling, he could play!

I know what I just wrote sounds a bit blasphemous but Dhoni is known for his blasphemous masterstrokes as captain. Ultimately, the game will come down to the composure of captains and their charges. Both captains are evenly matched with Dhoni starting to become just that shade more attacking than Sanga and this is good news for India. When it comes to the teams, I must say, that middle order wobble against NZ and India's composure on the field against Pakistan tells me that India, as a whole, have the edge in handling pressure and nerves.

The Toss and Match Dynamics
Given that India has not played in the new Wankhede, I reckon, Dhoni would do well to lose the toss! If India bat first, they will have the opportunity to put the match out of Lanka's reach in the first half itself ala Australia in 2003 and 2007. If Lanka bat first, they will have this privilege against a weak Indian new ball attack.

My player pick
Sehwag treated the opener against Bangladesh as a revenge match from the 2007 world cup. If that is so, he should remind himself that it was Sri Lanka who actually eliminated India in that world cup. I am sure he will treat this final as another revenge match. For this very simple reason, I pick him as India's player to watch. He has the ability to put the game beyond Sri lanka and help SRT en-route to his maiden world cup triumph. Moreover, Sehwag has the experience of big runs in his previous World Cup final in 2003.

The Bottom line
As I wrote at the beginning of this tournament, the silverware belongs to the team that wants it a wee bit more. I still hope my heart wins over the mind and overcomes slightly skewed odds to help me declare on the 3rd - We are world cup Champions!!

O India, May the fours be with you ..... always!