Showing posts with label sledging. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sledging. Show all posts

Monday, December 17, 2007

Let the Games Begin!!!

The mind games have already begun. Harbhajan has fired the first real salvo targeting an individual: Bradley George Hogg!! As an isolated act, it sounds pretty cute. Here is a finger spinner who has not been among as many wickets as he would like, but before he is picked out by the Aussies as the fall guy in the visiting party, he goes ahead and dishes out a bit of Australian pie in anticipation!!

I was and still am a firm believer in the futility of mental disintegration which is almost doctrinal in the cricketing fraternity in Australia. This doctrine was first brought out of the closet in its cheapest form by Mr. Steven Waugh who, if truth be told, would have had a lot more success as an army strategist than he had as a captain. His success as captain had more to do with his team of Galacticos and feeble opponents than with his purported nous as captain and master strategist. Nevertheless, his techniques, especially the doctrine of mental disintegration (which was given full support by the Psych. arm of the ACB for obvious reasons!!), rode on the success of the Australian cricket team and rose up the pecking order of mandatory skills to be possessed by a cricket team.

Teams all over the world fell for this ruse. They started giving credibility to tactics like sledging by following the Australians. Let me quickly add that on-field verbal exchanges have been a part of cricket and most other sports since their inception. However, accepting them as a necessary skill in a cricketer's armoury is not only ludicrous but shameful too.

In cricket, like any other sport, there is an internal locus of control and a much bigger external locus of control. A sportsman can perform tasks in his locus to the best of his ability. Nothing more, nothing less. Out in the middle, every great batsman will tell you to let the instincts take over. It is quite the reverse of mind over matter, yet, it is necessary and true. Steve Waugh might disagree, but we all know where he was rated on Mr. Warne's hall of fame!!