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India succumb to .....Spin

July 28th 2008 09:11

India suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of the hosts here at the SSC ground, Colombo. In many ways, this victory could be considered seminal. This was probably the first time, in my memory, that another team comprehensively out-bowled Indians in the spin department. Kumble and Harbhajan - as spinners - were not even in the same ballpark as the Sri Lankan tweakers. We always talk about the Sri Lankan spinners' mystique. Because that is interesting and riveting. But mystique is nothing if not combined with discipline, good sense and consistency. And on the 4th day (3rd effective day if the rain hit first day can be discounted), it was all there for us to see.

While the attention was on Mendis, his variations and his stock deliveries - Murali ran away with it all. His 10 wicket haul in this match was just reward for an exemplary spin bowling performance. For an off spinner to come around the wicket and to have the ability to secure a leg before wicket decision against a right hander - that defines Murali as a spinner. To my mind, there has been no other off spinner who has been consistently capable of doing this. That said - the decision to give Sehwag LBW was horrendous. It was as clear an indication as any that technology is far from being correct all the time. It also raises the question as to how should the usage of technology be for LBW decisions. But that is a subject for another discussion.

While all forms of praise may indeed rightfully be heaped on the spin twins of Sri Lanka, the Indian batsman - those collossal giants, with reputations and records to match and even best the best in the history of the game, did not do themselves any favour. Laxman stood out for resolve, surefootedness and skill in the first innings and very briefly in the second. Tendulkar's approach against the spinners in both the innings was very refreshing and he was actually stroking the ball well in both innings before he got out. I thought he was very unlucky to get out in the second innings - with the ball slowing down after hitting his pad and bobbling up at the right time to hit his bat which was completing its follow through on the sweep. However, it must also be mentioned that Tendulkar was bamboozled by Murali in the first innings - with an around the wicket doosra which the master saw and recognized but could not pass the message on at the right time to his hands so that they could move out of the way. There was a slight question in my mind as to whether that could possibly mean a gradual slowing down of his reflexes. But that is too early to consider right now.

Ganguly had a very poor match. His dismissal in the second innings was one that was forced by the bowler and the captain. Murali, around the wicket with two slips is not a man to be guided around the gully region. That shot spoke of deseration on Ganguly's part. He would have been better advised to leave that alone but in order to do that, the ball must have been picked up from the hand so as to avoid the possibility of leaving a doosra and being castled. I got the distinct feeling that Ganguly was not picking the bowlers off the hand but was playing them off the wicket - just like the mere mortals (those non Indian batsmen who we have always found it very easy to criticize against spin).

There was a very nice line in today's Hindu on Dravid's approach against the spinners. He approached the contest as if he were playing against a bunch of vipers. Absolutely true. The surefootedness that has long been a hallmark of this man deserted him in this match. Dravid against spin has always typified a particular approach for me. He would stretch forward and more forward so that he stifles the ball - so much so that it would barely get up off the ground after it bounced from his bat. The bemused bowler would draw his length back ever so slightly. Not short enough for the back foot, but not exactly a ball that you could reach on the front foot. The coveted spinner's magic length. What Dravid would do though was bordering on surreal. He would skip quickly away towards the legside, clearing his front foot and pushing back into the crease and thereby creating the length and the line to play a backfoot cover or square drive. One of the hardest shots to play in cricket. That used to be a hallmark of the man. It was sad that there was not one of those shots on view in this match. While the Sri Lankan spinners bowled very well indeed, it was not too much of us to expect Dravid to counter them with resolute defense and silk laced and subtle offence. But here Dravid failed - as did his illustrious partners.

That leaves us with the opening combination. Sehwag and Gambhir have started off well. Briefly in the first innings and very briefly in the second. Sehwag threw his wicket away with an absolutely senseless shot in the first innings. A hook shot against a shorter ball which was directed well outside the off stump and was at least as high as his head. It is appreciable and noticeable that the man has worked on his pull and hook shots in recent times. We saw evidence of that in the recently concluded IPL. But judiciousness is something that is called for in the highest order in Test matches. And on this count, Sehwag failed in the first innings. In the second innings, he was most senselessly cut down by the erring technology (Hawk "blind" eye) and the failure of the umpires (Rudi Koerzen on TV and Mark Benson at the crease) to interpret the images properly. India is suffering a huge disadvantage when Sehwag does not get to face the spinners. If there is one person who can be expected to throw the spinners' length and control into disarray, it is Sehwag. However that was not to be. Better things and even better temperament will be expected of Sehwag in the next Test. A dismissal against the faster men would be a sacrilege in the context of this Test series. He needs to save himself for the spinners and attempt to take them on to bring a turning point to this series. And considering that this is a 3 Test series, the turning point has to come pretty soon - in the next Test to be precise.

Gautam Gambhir has sorted out his errant front foot technique against the faster bowlers. However, his nemesis continues to be Muralitharan. The elegant left hander is not a wimp against spin. Far from that. He is enterprising, fluent and aggressive. But sometimes one does get the impression that he is far too aggressive. For example there was no need of that saunter down the wicket to try and deposit Murali over cover. Driving Murali inside out is not an easy thing to do! And Gambhir paid the price. This was in the second innings. In the first innings, Murali simply blew Gambhir out. The curling ball (drift actually) dipped and turned to beat Gambhir's on drive, getting a leading edge to be consumed at cover. Maybe Gambhir needs to start looking at playing Murali straighter and later. One gets the impression that Gambhir's hands are far too hard and fast. He has to slow his bat speed down and delay it so that the possibility of leading edges and false strokes are cut down.

Before we go to the bowlers, we need to focus on one man who had quite possibly the worst match. Dinesh Karthik - the keeper who is standing in for M.S.Dhoni. In both the innings, he proved patently unequal to handling Muralitharan. The first innings saw a wild swing which was duly collected by Murali himself and the second innings saw a desperate attempt to cover for the doosra which failed and got the outside edge. Kathik too has the same tendency as Gambhir to harden his hands and play far too early. In addition he has a very definite forward thrust which makes it harder to defend securely. Gambhir's forward movement is more measured however and that allows him to rock onto the backfoot when needed. Karthik however likes to pull off the front foot. While this is OK against the faster bowlers on slower wickets, it will not stand him in good stead against all types of bowlers on all types of wickets. In this Test though, he was throughly exposed by Murali. His spot in the team is under question now - not just because of his poor showing with the bat. His two drop catches off his captain's bowling will figure hugely when it comes to the choice of keeper in the next Test. I have seen Parthiv Patel play with great assurance off faster bowling but I have not had the opportunity of seeing him bat against quality spinners. If the team management figure that he can play spin bowling decently, then I would support his inclusion in the team ahead of Karthik in the next Test. But Kumble is one captain who has been known to infuse confidence in his wards and it would not be a surprise to see Karthik don the keeping pads again in the next Test. It is not that Karthik is not a good keeper. It is just that he needs to be more consistent. He is brilliant at times and lacklustre on other occasions. That is not what is reqiured. We need consistency along with that flair. In contrast Dhoni is comfortingly steady. He is not brilliant by any means but you know that he is not going to drop straight forward chances. If Karthik continues this tendency to pluck astonishing catches but drop easy ones, the decision on the keepers is going to be an easy one. And, for sure, it is not going to favour Karthik.

Lastly, a word about the Indian bowlers. On hugely unresponsive tracks, our fast bowlers - Zaheer and Ishant- toiled for long. They bowled conventional and reverse swing - well, at least in the case of Zaheer. Ishant is more of a seam and cut bowler. They tried their heart out on this featherbed of a wicket while the men who ought to have burdened the lion's share of the responsibility could not put their hands up. This was not a pitch where the faster bowlers needed to be flogged so mercilessly. It was very poor thinking on Kumble's part. But to his defense, this became evident only when we saw the Sri Lankan's approach the game on the 3rd day.

However, Kumble is no fledgling at this level. With his awe-inspiring experience he ought to have understood the conditions better and utilized his resources better.

Talking of utilizing resources better, India can only do that if the resources are effective. Our spinners, at no stage looked menacing. There was occassional fizz from Kumble and the rare zipping delivery which bounced and bamboozled the batsmen. Unfortunately though, the couple of occassions that Kumble managed to confound the batsmen and get their edge, he found that Karthik, the keeper, too was beaten and was not equal to the task of completing the formalities. The catches were not easy but then they do not have to be at this level to be classified as a drop. And there are no decent drop catches. There are only missed opportunities. However it cannot be denied that Kumble did not look like getting a wicket for most of the time he bowled. So even the occassional fizz, it can be said, fizzled out. The less said about Harbhajan Singh's bowling the better it would be. Too much of limited overs cricket seems to be affecting his bowling adversely. The part time off spinner Sehwag was consistently achieving more turn and drift than Harbhajan - which is not new, by the way. The problem with Harbhajan Singh is that he hardly gets any drift on his bowling which makes even the turning ball predictable and easier to play. It is with drift that the seeds of doubt are sown in the minds of the batsmen. Harbhajan Singh's doosra too was conspicuous by its absence in this Test match. The scorecard would say that the Sardar got 2 wickets to Kumble's none, but that is not necessarily a true reflection of the bowling on display.

Murali outbowling Kumble and Harbhajan is not hugely disappointing - while it is still not a heartening thought. However, a debutant spinner showing more skill, resolve, discipline, character and plain old common sense than these two seasoned professionals has to rankle. And rankle badly at that.

In the end, this match would be remembered for the peerless batting group's abject failure. But people who saw this match will know just how important and seminal the failure of the spinners to take the game by the scruff was. The difference stares us in the eye. 19 of 20 Indian wickets were picked up by the Sri Lankan spinners! In contrast the Indian spinners took 2 out of 6 wickets to fall in the Sri Lankan innings - at a combined economy rate of almost 3.5 runs per over.

The jury might still be out on which set of batsmen are the best players of spin, but the unanimous decision has to be that the best spin bowlers in the plant have been spotted. And they are wearing the Sri Lankan colours.
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Bullies are Cowards (LINK)

June 25th 2008 09:54


Bullies are Cowards

Younger brothers are the best 'made to order' bully material, aren't they? They are weaker, maybe shorter, lighter and probably don't know as much as the elder brother does - about life, love, brotherhood or even the truth about bullying. Every elder brother has, at one time or the other, bullied his younger brother into submission. That is no surprise. But there is a time and age for everything. And there also is a line beyond which the playful bullying of brothers metamorphoses into something really ugly. Into planned ostracizing, into scheming skulduggery and eventually even ruthless extermination. The moment the bullying starts turning into something ugly is when the parents need to step in.

Now to put it all under context, the BCCI and the ICL are the brothers in question. Brothers by their association with the same game even if not by blood. And the parent of course is the supremely negligent and famously indolent ICC. Let there be no question about who the bully is in this case. It is our BCCI, of course.

Credit where it is due

To understand more about this bullying by the BCCI and the continual shut-eye policy by the ICC, we need to look at the whole issue in closer detail. A question to the readers here: Was the IPL successful? Did you like it? Did you like T20 leagues with players from different countries playing together? Are you for more involvement of technology in the cricket action so that erroneous decisions can come down? Well, if you answered in the affirmative to any of the above questions, then ladies and gentlemen, we must thank the Indian Cricket League, aka ICL. This Subhash Chandra (Zee Telefilms) backed league is what gave the world a taste of these systems first hand.

It is one thing to not give them credit for all these innovations and more. But it is completely another to copy the concepts from them and then to try hard to push them into oblivion. Which is what is happening right now. To the BCCI's and Lalit Modi's credit, they will come back and tell you that Mr. Modi was the original proponent of such a league type system almost a decade back. But the truth is that the BCCI rejected the idea and turned their back on the league system - until the ICL made it a reality. This pricked the BCCI into action and act it did. It acted big - on scale and scope. The IPL resulted and it was a massive success - among the playing fraternity as well as with corporate sectors and the spectators. The difference ladies and gentlemen between the two leagues is one word - the tag of 'rebel'. And this tag was gifted to the ICL by none other than the BCCI.

Tagging the rebel

People will rightly point out two things. Subash Chandra/Zee did not float the ICL for philanthrophic reasons. They did see it as a profitable business venture. It was also a culmination of Subash Chandra's frustration at not being awarded telecast rights for home cricket matches inspite of successful bids. The bidding process was of course conducted by the BCCI - lest you ask. The second aspect of the league was the less than enthralling quality of cricket. One look at the rosters in the league would tell you the reason. The top cricketers were missing. And when you ask why the top players are missing from the league, the answer again leads us back to where we started. The 'rebel' tag.

A good, close look at the premise of the two competing leagues - ICL and the IPL - could also be interesting. The ICL backed by worthy cricketers such as the charismatic Kapil Dev, the doughty Kiran More and the outspoken but knowledgeable Tony Greig does not lay all its eggs in one basket, unlike the IPL. The small and garish and therefore attention-grabbing basket of T20. The ICL has always said that its aim is to work towards getting the league teams competing in T20, ODIs as well as longer duration matches. Now that is a concept worth pursuing. The IPL has given us a taste of how saucily interesting contests between two countrymen playing for different leagues can be. Now, if we could take such fiery contests between undeniably great sportsmen onto the next level - that of the ODIs or even 4 or 5 day matches - the game would be the winner. And the spectators would be treated well too. No doubt about that.

A matter of national shame

It is a matter of national shame that cricketers of the calibre of Kapil Dev and Kiran More are not being given their rightful due simply because they chose to support an innovative cricketing idea that they felt would surely benefit the game. Surely the creators of the IPL themselves would recognize that much - that the league format can only benefit the game. Because when we talk about these grand old cricketers not being given their due, there is no pun intended whatsoever. It is quite literal. These people have been cut off from the BCCI's rolls. The monthly pension that was due to the players has been discontinued. While a cricketer like Kapil Dev may not be hit hard by the revocation of the pension amount, it is worth noting the gesture which reeks of snobbery, ill will and an impatience towards anybody who does not toe their line. So, if it was not about the players tarnishing the game or bringing disrepute to it in any way, then what is all the ostracism and targeting about? It is obviously about competition - one feels. Or to be specific, an aversion to have anybody compete with them as far as cricket in the country is concerned.

Does the BCCI own Indian cricket? The legal answer is 'No'. They are simply a private body functioning at their whim and running the whole business of cricket for quite a long time now. Can another body step into the fray and offer the spectators and the cricket world in general another choice? Absolutely. But it is not the legal answer that we are interested in right now. It is the real world answer. The real world answer is given to us by two august bodies - the ICC and the BCCI. And their answer is that the cricket world - at least that part of the world which belongs to India - cannot have competition.

The market as Judge

Many have been the arguments in favour of the IPL that the market is the best judge of the worth of this form of the game. Well, should we not then extend that concept to this ICL/BCCI wrestling match? Do we not feel that the market is intelligent and perceptible enough to separate the grain from the chaff and offer their support to the best in the market? Would it not be beneficial to the game of cricket as a whole? Or even accept both of them if each have definite and individual strengths? Let's take a look at a small example in this context. Let's wind the clocks back by a couple of years. This was a time when the BCCI continued to function in its dithering, plodding way - just as an absent minded Wooster would in a Wodehouse novel. Though it is eminently arguable whether the warmth and good intentions of Wooster can be matched by the BCCI! The players were still getting pittance for pay and many were the news reports of a team like the Railways being made to travel by train for gruelling distances and being made to put up with substandard boarding and lodging facilities. And this, by the way, was the state of the country's largest and most prestigious tournament - The Ranji Trophy. Entry the ICL. Firm and attractive payment contracts were offered to players. Life, in general, seemed to be on the upswing for the players. The BCCI woke up; smelling the ICL. First thing it did was to brand the ICL as the 'rebel league' and issued ultimatums to the player community at large that any player opting for the ICL may never hope to represent the national team again. It then proceeded to revamp the payment systems for the domestic players in a big way. All this worked out to the players' benefit. Suddently cricket, once more became a logical choice for youngsters to pursue as a career. But amidst all this, let us not forget that but for the ICL, all this might never have happened.

Our responsibility as fans

Forget the different players here. Forget the fact that this is all a result of the TV-broadcast-rights wars. Lets even forget the fate of promising players like Ambati Rayudu or Abhishek Jhunjhunwala. Lets swallow pride and forget the demeaning treatment meted out to our one and only World Cup winning captain, Kapil Dev. Lets ask ourselves this one question. Can we, as conscientious and proud cricket fans, afford to have monopolies in the game? In a game which treats the young and the old alike, in a game which treats spin and pace alike, in a game which rewards both the biffers and the artists alike, can we let this festering monopoly take root?

To go back to the theme espoused in the opening lines, this is bullying at its best. Done expertly by the BCCI to undermine and eventually extinguish the ICL flames. The parent body, the ICC too has washed itself of its responsibilities and asked the ICL to get recognized by the BCCI first. The BCCI, I am sure, is smiling at this all and demurely whispering to the ICL - 'over my dead body'.

Bullying is not a display of strength. It is not even a display of confidence or bravado. It is fuelled by fear. Fear of being overtaken, of being overmatched, of being dethroned,. It is the expression used best by cowards in order to prevent a confrontation. To avoid a fair fight by preventing it even before it has a chance of ensuing. If the parent body is not in a position to understand this or if its hands are tied because of the colossal wealth and support that the BCCI possesses, it is time for us to rise up and be counted as passionate cricket fans.

Folks - there is enough room in the world for the IPL and the ICL to stay. Room enough in our hearts to appreciate the pioneering efforts of the ICL as well as the grand scale and scope of the IPL. Let nobody arbitrarily decide to deprive you of what is rightfully yours to enjoy - quality cricket action. Cricket democracy demands a petition on this subject and that is exactly what we have here. Please vote - ye who are against monopoly and ye who would like to see the game improve as a result of fair market competition. You are not voting against the BCCI or the IPL. You are not voting for the ICL. You are simply voting for the improvement of cricket as a game as a result of fair competition.

Online Petition:

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The IPL 2008 - Grand Finale

June 2nd 2008 14:46

After two damp squibs of semifinals back to back, great things were expected from the finals. And did it offer that and more! It was a heart stopper, a gut wrencher, the seat edge thriller that haunts our dreams.

In the end the Peacock blue pipped the Yellows to the post. But the team from Chennai competed magnificiently. They were in the contest till the very last ball of the match. And that in itself says a lot about the team and most importantly the man in charge of the Yellows - Mahendra Singh Dhoni. We will come back to dwell on Chennai and Dhoni very soon.

But to understand the seesawing contest from start to finish, one has got to go back to the start of the finale. With Chennai's Parthiv and Vidyut at the crease and Sohail Tanvir raring to go with the new white cherry. The first ball of this final had a heck of a good appeal from Tanvir where I thought Parthiv was a dead duck to the bowlers' in dipper - for the second time in this tournament. Billy Bowden though thought otherwise. And from then on, Parthiv played fluently and with far more authority than he had shown in the earlier part of the tournament. Even though Tanvir was taken off after a single over at the start, Vidyut continued to struggle and was eventually out for 16 runs which were more due to his hook or crook approach than too many meritable shots.

This brought in the victorious pair of Raina and Parthiv Patel from the last semifinal. Immediately, the two showed their form in proceeding to score crisply off the Rajasthan bowlers. Watson was briefly threatening while Munaf was just about effective. However it was again that impressive all rounder, who has been selected to the national team based on his showing, Yusuf Pathan. Yusuf while picking up 3 wickets also ended up finishing his quota of overs with an economy rate of less than 7 an over. An outstanding performance. I also thought that he did not get a close LBW shout - again against Parthiv.

The match was about to change just then. Shane Watson got the breakthrough that the team wanted and this brought in a surprise package. Beefy and holding the bat confidently in the left hand. Albie Morkel, for the first time in the tournament walked in at the fall of the 2nd wicket. I think it says a lot about Dhoni's confidence in Morkel as also his confidence in his tactics and reading of the game. The other reason why I thought that was a great move from Dhoni was that Warne and Yusuf were bowling together and it might not have been the easiest of the beginnings for Dhoni who had already had a rough time of it against Warne earlier in a league game.

The move seemed to work for a brief while where Morkel smote a huge six. But Yusuf it was who again had the last laugh in getting Morkel to hole out. At this ponit of time, they had the free stroking Raina at the crease. And in walked captain cool M.S.Dhoni. Dhoni with 29 off about 16 balls along with Raina who added yet another half century to his tally got their team beyond 160 - which I thought was quite a good total considering that momentum was sucked out of the innings in the middle period when Yusuf was operating with Warne. Credit should go too to Dhoni in confidently countering Warne for an over or two and also collecting a sparkling sixer off the genius' bowling.

The complete Chennai innings was also a showcase of Warne's ideologies as regards limited overs cricket. The usage of the deep cover and fine third man against specific people was exemplary. No doubt that it meant the difference between 2 or 3 singles and 2 or 3 boundaries. His bowling changes were as ever crisp and the team had no problem resopnding to his directions. Towards the end of the innings one got the feeling that the Chennai team were short by 10 to 15 runs. But a total of 160 plus in an all important final in a T20 competition has to be competitive and creditable.

With the Rajasthan team, Asnodkar and Niraj Patel walked briskly out to meet the Chennai new ball bowlers. I am sure they had not bargained for coming up against an inspired Ntini who literally breathed fire. He was hitting the low to mid 140s and his length was just about spotless. Niraj Patel found that out to his disadvantage as Ntini again bullied the left hander into venturing into an unwise pull shot and got that inside edge to hit the stumps. Viewers were reminded of the same bowler's mastery over Shaun Marsh just a day back. Goni from the other end too bowled with the same control and steady pace that has characterized this man as a lion hearted performer all through this tournament. Despite all this though, Asnodkar still seemed to find the gaps. And in the event, he did not find the gaps, he created them for himself - through the ground or over the fielders. Kamran Akmal and Asnodkar were motoring along until that fateful Morkel over where Asnodkar square drove a full loosener of a delivery straight to Raina. This brought in Watson to the crease. And he was solidity personified in his stay at the wicket.

Morkel today had shifted up a gear and it was really really interesting to see him hit speeds as high as 140 kmph on a regular basis when he was bowling in the finals. I am pretty disappointed that the same bowler was mostly in his 120s for most of the tournament. When talking from the outside one never knows what the true situation of a bowler is, but if he was fit, he ought to have been putting in the same kind of effort throughout the tournament.

Well, coming back to the spirited chase of the Royals, Kamran Akmal succumbed to pressure and ran himself out to a nonexistent run to mid on. Ntini at mid on fairly threw the stumps out so hard that they almost danced and tumbled their way off the playing square! Which brought Yusuf Pathan in to partner Watson.

Together they plundered runs at will from the Chennai attack. At this point, it feels really hard to point out a captaincy mistake from Dhoni. He had done most other things right in this game. But what he did not get was the timing of Murali's bowling stint - yet again. Balaji - still working his way back into top competition - was allowed to bowl a couple of overs at Watson and Yusuf Pathan, who promptly used this duration to get used to the pace and bounce of the wicket and get his eye in. If Murali had been introduced up front to this combination, one never knows what would have happened.

On his way to a swashbuckling half century, Yusuf Pathan smote 4 huge sixes. En route he was also dropped by Suresh Raina off Murali. To Raina's credit he gave the chance all he got, ran back from mid wicket under that steepler and almost got it in his palm. But it did not stick and Yusuf just grew from strength to strength. And in the meanwhile Watson simply cut out all risks and attempted to play the perfect limited overs game in punishing only those balls that asked for it and picking up the ones and the twos. It had come to a stage where there were only 8 or so overs remaining and the runs required were about 20 more than the balls remaining. At that stage, Murali was still on. And in his penultimate over, Watson managed to york himself.

Warne again pulled a rabbit out of his hat in sending the woeful and out of form looking Kaif in. Mohammad Kaif may have scored just 11 runs but he did not disappoint. He countered Murali beautifully and even stroked him for a really valuable sixer between long on and mid wicket. That is what confidence does to men. The captain's backing goes a long way towards influencing your performance - no doubt about that. Eventually he perished to a doosra from Murali. But then, the situation had tilted definitely in the Royals' favour - it seemed like. But this was before, Yusuf was run out - courtesy a sizzling pick up and throw from Raina. At that point, it seemed like he had made amends for the earlier dropped catch.

Even the normally ice cool Dhoni was jumping with joy and excitment at the fall of Yusuf's wicket - who departed after a stunning and brutal haf century. And soon after that , Ravindra Jadeja the talented U - 19 youngster threw his wicket away first ball in trying a wild heave.

This left Warne with Tanvir to negotiate the final 3 overs and get 20 odd runs from them. Dhoni did not have too many options even as Balaji did not seem to be at his best today. Very correctly he used Ntini in the penultimate over who started off really well. But Shane Warne again seemed to change the match by producing a cover drive of rare beauty off the last ball of that over to bring down the runs required to just 8 off the last over.

And Balaji it was who was going to bowl the last over. Tanvir was on strike and it was expected that the match would be finished with a big hit. But contrary to such expectations, the match went right to the wire - the last ball. A run required off the last ball. At that point, Dhoni could still smile. This, after Balaji had just messed things up with a wide off a slower delivery gone wrong. And to add to this, Parthiv had not collected cleanly thereby allowing the Royals with 2 runs and an extra ball. That the Indian ODI captain still could smile said a lot about his temperament and his leadership style. This man is simply amazing. But then it gets better too!

Tanvir duly got the single required off the last ball. But what was amazing after that was not the Royals' victory celebrations. I have been watching cricket for some time now and Indian cricket in particular for a majority of that time. What I had not seen till that time was the losing captain initiating a huddle and pepping his boys up and telling them he was proud of them and their performance.

That gesture in itself is enough to convince anybody that Dhoni is the right man to lead India. And this presentation of a united front continued onto the post match conference where Dhoni refused to blame any individual - Balaji for a rather inspid spell, Parthiv for a very costly fumble or Raina for a crucial drop chance.

To sum it all up, one feels that the best team in the tournament have won the inaugural IPL. But the Chennai team's performance invokes the infamous hitch in the throat phenomenon. Warne might be the winning captain. He deserves it every bit. But India, in Dhoni, may just have found the right man to take the team along - through thick or thin.

A fitting finish to the dazzling IPL tournament, one feels.
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This matchup was eagerly expected for more reasons than one. The earlier semifinal turned out to be a damp squib when Warne's team summarily squished the Delhi Daredevils while barely breaking out a sweat. And this was also the matchup where the present Indian national team's ODI captain clashed with the vice captain of the same team. Two big hitters. Two hugely influential batsman in the shorter format of the game.

And the verdict is out. We know who is the captain and why he is the captain. Mahendra Snigh Dhoni - ladies and gentlemen, in no small measure proved that he was by far the better man for the mantle of leadership of a cricket team. Where Yuvraj looked lost and hapless and completely out of ideas, Dhoni never made a wrong move. Every move that he made was well thought out and what is more - the Yellows seemed to be jumping effervescently to grab the opportunities on offer. No pressure. No panic. Simple, no nonsense cricket.

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The first semifinal of the IPL was a total damp squib. For all the presence of political bigwigs like Sharad Pawar and Laloo Prasad Yadav, there was not the spiced battle that we expected from two of the top 4 teams in the league.

Amendment - there were indications of a spiced battle until Delhi took guard. Then it all went haywire and all semblance of a contest between the two teams was abandoned about halfway through the second innings.

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My Indian T20 team

May 22nd 2008 11:23


1) Virender Sehwag

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The Chennai Super Kings were trounced, mauled and summarily annihilated. All this not by an opposing team. No, sir - the Mumbai Indians needed just one man, the marauder from Matara to decimate the Chennai team.

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People talk about how winning generates momentum and it helps your spirit and bolsters you for future contests. In much the similar way, I think losing too generates its own momentum. Except that it is force applied in the opposite direction. If winning is accerlation then losing is like braking force.

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The IPL opening ceremony

May 5th 2008 10:44

[This is a long overdue comment on the IPL opening ceremony and my impressions of it]

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Surface Tension

April 18th 2008 12:15
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No excuses for the poor performance. And there need be none. The batsmen need to be held guilty and accountable. But interestingly, our bowlers too were far from matching their South African counterparts. Where the SA bowlers could find that extra bit of bite and movement in the pitch even late in the 3rd day, the Indian bowlers could not.

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Debacle at Motera, Ahmedabad

April 7th 2008 15:20

Ahmedabad was a debacle. Nothing short of that.

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Morne Morkel is replaced with Dale Steyn. And his first ball is delicately sliced all along the ground between point and 3rd man for yet another boundary. Brilliant batting sustained. To bat brilliantly is one thing. But to sustain it for such long periods is simply a mark of a complete package of supreme skill, tenacious temperament, voracious desire and ocean-deep concentration.

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Sehwag's seemingly Alexandrian reserves of concentration keeps his simply marching on. The hapless Harris drops one short and looks on with disgust as Sehwag pulls the ball between mid on and mid wicket for another powerful boundary.

Off the next ball, Harris almost showed that he was not all that hapless. He bowled that ball much quicker and slightly fuller. Sehwag tried to create room but was beaten for pace. One of the very few occasions that has happened in this match. In fact the only one that I have witnessed as far as Sehwag is concerned.

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