Saturday, May 15, 2010

The Indian Cricket

Indian exit from current T20 World Cup has created furore. Everybody is unhappy about the manner in which we lost three straight matches in the super eight round. Mr. cool MSD has suddenly become a poor strategist. Once glittering IPL has become a prime villian. The players, who are called matchwinners because of their single handed victory in the past are called loosers. The ads, parties, razmataz that we people enjoyed watching on the TV or reading in the tabloid is a strict NO NO. We again look at Cricket Australia and heave a big sigh! If only BCCI would function like CA and then we would also have such consistency, committments, bench strength and so on. Now, whats the truth? I guess every one bit, but not in isolation...that looks to be the key.

Cricket in India is neither a mere sport nor only a passion. It is way of life, an integral part of our culture. Each one of us feel so close to the game, the team and to individual players. Our technical knoledge level in this game is very high and we are always involved in the game. Now whatever sells in masses in the country like ours is...of course...an opportunity of a mega business, publicity and power. And there lies the format of our cricket schedule, IPL and what not. Everybody wants to earn money large and fast.

Since way back, we tend to worship individual personalities and not a team, society, state or for that matter, the nation. For us, the winning is not as important as individual glory, individual efforts, and individual well being. For Cricket Australia, winning matches and tournaments is of paramount importance. Their Society is more aggressive and result focused. They put the collective efforts and the victory ahead of individual gains, for they know, the wealth and prosperity follows the winners.

Our players are also human beings. When new players enter the world of Cricket, they are care free, out of politics, pure cricketer, and extremely passionate about cricket. Then they perform with the bang and that is where they become a part of the Cricket System. This system teaches them to be in good books of authorities, sponsors, advertizers. The system teaches them that they must play all the time without a break, because if they do take a break, some one else from this country of a billion population, would knock his place out, as there is no formal rotation system. The system teaches them not to be instinctive and dare devil, for if they do and fail even once, we all (public, media, authorities) will pounce upon them and forget their umpteen good performances in the past. The system teaches them that whether the team looses or wins, an individual must keep an impeccable record so that he gets selected the next time. The system teaches them that reward is there for individual excellence and not a collective performance.

This puts a tremendous pressure on the players. Come on, even you and me need a break after working hard for six months in the office. For players, it is more difficult for each match has only two options..win or loose. Our mind and body needs rest, introspection, recovery. Everybody does...even machine needs a preventive maintainance and annual shutdown. But we believe in only breakdown maintenance for the players.

But again, the cricket is only a reflection of all of us, our way of work, our way of thinking, our value system and our vision. Till, as a society, we do not share a common vision and purpose over individual, isolated benefits, such sporadic wins and losses will keep coming..not only in cricket, but in any field.

No one likes to loose, late alone players. but then in order to win consistently, we have to pay the price in the short term, take hard decisions, be more pragmatic and resist knee jerk and hasty decisions, digest few set backs with an eye on the end. Then not only in cricket, but we will be the winners on many many fronts, for our society is extremely intelligent, sharp, open, tolerent and empathetic. We only have to look up and see beyond now and here.

5 comments:

  1. Good blog. You express very well. Hats off for finding time, taking interest and expressing your views in your busy schedule

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  2. Abhay, you do write well. Cricket for India is just not a sport; it is a unifying agent, like Hindi movies, cutting across regions, languages, cultures and religions.

    Continue with writing.

    APKulkarni

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  3. Very nice blog Abhay dada. Your blogs are thoughtful. The only thing I'd like to add, if I may, is the fact that here in Australia cricket has to compete with so many other sports in order for the masses to sustain their interest in following cricket. All sports get pretty much the same amount of attention from the public and unlike India, where cricket is the most popular and followed sport, cricket here has to be competitive and winning-orientated for it to survive public interest (lest follow in the path of England which is having a hard time getting the English to watch their cricket). Australians, generally speaking, are passionate about cricket but not crazy. Their most popular sport here is footy (Australian Rules Football) and all other sports come next. But there is a good balance in sports following here (unlike India where cricket dominates). One of the things I liked in your blog is the fact that you are backing óur boys' despite India taking a beating. This is exactly what the people and the media here do to Australian teams. It is ok to lose. But taking knee-jerk actions and being negative in response to the loss just doesn't happen that much here (unless Australia gets consistently beaten like they used to be by the West Indies in the seventies). In fact, I can confidently say that of the 10 years I have been here, very few times have I seen even the local media reporting in the evening news when Australia has lost. If they win, it is big news and is shown first when the Sports part of the News begins. But if they lose, it is not even shown or mentioned (or if it is maybe just a one-liner). Some call this first-world hypocrisy. As a society in general, they choose not to be negative and tend to focus on their positives. Having said that it is also worth mentioning that they are also at times arrogant and tend to consider themselves better than anyone for that matter. Although there are differences on various levels when comparing sports in our two nations, your last para in your blog is very apt and true. We definitely have the potential to be winners on many fronts like you have said. It was nice reading your blog. Keep dishing out good stuff.

    Girish

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  4. Abhay,

    Hope all is well. Here is my view on this in one line -

    All real religions in India divide people...cricket and Bollywood films UNITE people and are the true religions of India!

    Raju (Rajeev Kulkarni from one floor below.)

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  5. With all due respect, cricketers are 'overworked' is a fallacious notion.

    Take a snapshot of the last 3 years. India has played 33 test matches, 93 One day games and 24 T-20 internationals.

    Assuming a player specializes in all three formats, and is actually included in the team for all three formats it would roughly come to about 260 days of actual cricket in 3 years....in other words just about 1 day of 'work' in every 4. This can hardly qualify as overburdening or tiring.

    Indian cricketers are without doubt the best paid in the Cricketing world. Their equipment is second to none. The resources available to them are second to none. They have the finest sports-doctors, physiotherapists, consultants that can be available. Most of them do not 'waste time' playing in any local/domestic circuit games unlike their Australian/English counterparts. Yet they complain of fatigue.

    What they lack in, is the consistency in intensity. What makes them the most mercurial team around, what makes them perform like Gods on one day and go utterly begging on the other, is that for some reason the fire doesn't burn with the same heat every day that they are on the field.

    That is what separates the Australians from the rest.

    The incentive for performing with the same intensity as the previous day does not and should not lie in monetary benefits/returns. Basis of any play should be pride, and the Indian cricket team is simply too distracted and undisciplined to put pride ahead of everything else that comes with success.

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