Saturday, September 4, 2010

Ten Seconds with God: A Life time spent!

There are some days. Some days which do not begin as normal days. And the normalcy never returns.

The most coveted moment was closing in and the anticipation was brimming. The expectations, the ecstasy, the reverence… everything was palpable as I took off this morning to a function where the Lord of Cricket, (now) Group Captain in the Indian Air Force, Sachin Tendulkar was to interact with a chosen few from the bank I work with. My nomination, as I am told was the easiest one. “Send him, and he would be indebted to you for life…” someone making a decision would have said – and I agree.

Like a devotee, the morning saw me rise early. Nice bath, close shave and without a breakfast later I was on merciless Delhi roads, amongst the relentless traffic to meet my deity. Some one on google map played a nasty joke as it led me to a wrong address five kilometers away from the intended destination. The infamous Delhi roadside navigators did their bit to send me to different albeit opposite directions. Angered and frustrated, I turned to my agony aunt – Shailesh. Surprisingly, I found him with a cool mindset, which decided to focus on the sole purpose of getting me there. He googled the telephone number of the intended address and gave it to me rather nonchalantly. A life saving performance in retrospect!

An hour late, I managed to find myself in the same room and a few feet away from the Lord. Clad in blue denim and a white Tee, he was patiently and honestly answering the questions that inquisitive devotees were putting up. I realized there were a fifty more like me in the room. Humbled by the occasion, I stood there watching him – Sachin Tendulkar in flesh and blood, not more than six feet away.

It was like being in front of a Deity, something like what I feel at Vaishno Devi cave or Shirdi temple… after enduring the difficulties of the route, you just stand there and wonder – should you waste your time in asking something or just register the presence? It wasn’t a choice in the end as I stood captivated by the visual. A few flashes of cameras around me instigated me to click some photos from my own camera packed in my backpack for the occasion.

He talked about the difficulties at the start as he pursued cricket seriously, of how he almost thought that Test match cricket was too demanding for him before Kapil Paaji and Mohammad Azharuddin guided him. Of how losing his father in middle of a world cup was the most difficult time for him and how lucky he is that his family revolves around him and his time. The questions were endless and the answers were honest, but like all good things the Q&A came to an end.

Almost as a cue from a cliché, one good thing led to another better thing. There was an opportunity to interact with him one on one as he signed autograph for every one present. I clicked some more pictures as I waited for my turn. Finally, came the moment as I stood next to him and congratulated the Group Captain for the honour he was to receive during the day.

He smiled and said “Thank you” and took my hand which I offered for a shake.

“So, all set for 2011 world cup”, I asked hesitantly.

“Yeah, sure” he smiled as he began to sign his autograph.

“Can I have a photograph?” I was getting greedy.

He looked at my camera, which was now in hands of my friend in the crowd and struck a pose.

That was it. An interaction, no more than ten seconds but it was as if the time had stretched to an eternity. A desire fulfilled, a contention set in and a moment frozen in time. All the questions that I had in my mind, everything that could have been asked, all those inquisitive curiosities rendered irrelevant.

We have known time in two parts, BC and AD. For me, time will be recognized with two new dimensions: Before meeting Sachin and After meeting Sachin. Normalcy…? Well, it will never return. Ten seconds with Sachin Tendulkar does that to you. Ten seconds with God: A life time spent!

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Sportman-spirit… the gentleman’s sport has completely lost it

Yesterday, during the 3rd ODI in the tri-series being played amongst India, New Zealand and Sri Lanka, an ugly incident happened on the last ball of the match. The scores were level, and India, chasing, needed just one more run to win the match. Virender Sehwag, the man on strike was on 99 and needed just one more to reach his century. Suraj Randiv, a new-comer in the Sri Lankan side, bowled a huge no-ball, that even his best defenders would find hard to explain as accidental. Sehwag lofted the ball for a six, but because the no-ball had been bowled, and by virtue of the same, India had already won the match, the six weren’t counted in Sehwag’s runs, and he was stranded on 99.

Both Sehwag and the Sri Lankan captain, Kumar Sangakkara played down the incident in the post-match conference, but immediately thereafter, both expressed their real view – Sehwag openly claiming that it was a deliberate no-ball to not allow him to reach his century, and recalled a similar incident when last year Sachin Tendulkar was similarly denied the chance to reach his 100 when during the Cuttack ODI, Lasith Malinga bowled a huge wide on the leg side, which went for 4 byes, and India won the match, leaving Sachin stranded on 96. And Sangakkara demonstrated by his actions thereafter that even he wasn’t convinced enough that the no-ball wasn’t so indeliberate.

The question arises, why do such incidents happen? Are cricketers so unsporting? School-boys are likely to resort to such tricks to gain an emotional high, but national cricketers? Well, the real reason we may never know – but I can only say that this is the killer instinct of the sportsperson that comes to the fore in an ugly manner – win at all costs or lose but deny moral victory. Without a doubt, such incidents are in very poor taste. I am sure no IPL team (specially Delhi Daredevils) will want to touch Randiv for the next season – so, while sportsman-spirit and the game of cricket has definitely lost due to this incident, the ultimate loser could well be Randiv himself, and befittingly so, if you ask me. In fact, Sangakkara publicly rebuked him in front of the dressing room immediately after the post-match conference. So, clearly, even his captain believes that Randiv did not show the right mettle on the field.

However, such incidents are not new to cricket, or to any other sport. Sportsmen, howsoever big they might be, have a cheating streak in them. We saw the Hand of God of Maradona in 1986, and very recently (this year itself) Henry’s hand goal in football. In fact, soccer players are actually the greatest actors on the field, the way they feign injuries to try and get a yellow or red card awarded to the opposition and increase their chances of victory. But they are not alone in this world of cheats. Ben Johnson, the Canadian sprinter who created a world record of 9.79 seconds in winning the 100 meters race in the 1988 Olympics, was found to be on steroids, and his Olympic Gold medal was taken away and his records erased. Cricket has its own moments of infamy, and I’d like to recall some of them just so that we do not feel this is the first time such things have happened, of that they happen to us Indians only.

Let’s go back three decades to that day in 1981, and an Australian cricketer named Trevor Chappell. Australia and New Zealand were playing the final of the Benson and Hedges World Series Cup. New Zealand needed to score six runs to tie the match from the final ball. Not wanting to chance this, Greg Chappell (yes, our very own not-so-famous national team coach, Guru Greg), Australia’s captain and Trevor’s brother, asked Trevor to roll the ball along the ground to batsman Brian McKechnie so that he could no way hit it for a six. A visibly agitated McKechnie could do little but block the ball, and Australia won the game. Although it was not illegal to bowl underarm at the time, it was widely accepted to be contrary to the spirit of the game. It was described as “the most disgusting incident I can recall in the history of cricket” by the then New Zealand Prime Minister. Such was the outcry at the incident that, immediately thereafter, the cricketing rules were changed to make underarm bowling illegal.

While on Australians, we all know how, despite being a world champion side, they are sore losers. I am sure every Indian will recall that boxing day match of 2008 against India, when Andrew Symonds refused to walk on 3 occasions despite being clearly out, just because the umpires (Steve Bucknor and Mark Benson) did not give him out, just so that Australia reached a world record of 16 continuous test victories. I have nothing against Symonds (in fact I adore him as a competitive cricketer), and he was well within the rules of the game to not walk if not given out by the umpire, but talking of sporting spirit… well that one lost out.

Incidentally, that match is momentously filled with incidents of blatant cheating by Aussies, ably assisted by the umpires. Adam Gilchrist claimed a catch off Dravid that nobody in the world (and in the least possible way, Gilchrist, who I think normally had a very good head & heart – contrary to team tactics, he always walked when out) would have claimed; very clearly the ball touched thin air only and the bat was always far away from contact. Ponting and Slater refused to walk despite being clearly out. In the very same match, Ricky Ponting became a self appointed ‘third umpire’ in giving Sourav Ganguly out!

But, before you start imaging that Indians are always wronged, let me point out that in that test, even Ponting got it on the wrong side. Mark Benson was the first to get into the act of such bloopers, when he ruled Ponting not out when the Aussie skipper got an edge to a Sourav Ganguly delivery drifting down leg. Ponting stood his ground and went on to make 55. The next day, visibly under pressure after the replays gave away what the umpires were up to, Benson decided two wrongs will make a right and ruled Ponting out lbw to Harbhajan despite a thick inside edge.

The other umpire in the test, Steve Bucknor, on the other hand, has a history of such fortuitous incidents going against India, and the list is so very long that I will refrain from putting it up here. I’ll mention only one incident which amply depicts Bucknor’s mindset and deeds against India, when Steve Bucknor’s huge blooper cost Sachin Tendulkar at Brisbane in the previous tour – when he was given leg before even as the ball thudded against his helmet!

England have had their own moments, when Nasser Husain, the then England captain asked his bowlers on an India tour in 2001 to continuously bowl a negative line to India to deny them a victory in Bangalore. Not illegal; but unethical nonetheless.

Pakistanis have had their own flirtations with ball-tampering (including Afridi chewing the ball) and have even forfeited a match when Australian umpire, Darrell Hair imposed a 5-run penalty on them for ball tampering which they refused to accept and decided not to walk back on the field. That notwithstanding, I need not remind anyone of Darrell Hair’s open bias against sub-continental teams; in fact, he did not give Pakistan a fair trial in the same match where he declared that they had tampered the ball and branded them cheats. Out of 26 Sky cameras installed at The Oval, none picked any tampering. The Pakistan captain, Inzamam, wasn’t asked to explain. He was not shown the original ball that was allegedly tampered with. They were just handed down the sentence.

Another incident involving umpiring bias and the Indians which stood out blaringly was the ban on three Indian players (including Virender Sehwag) by match-referee Mike Denness on a tour to South Africa in 2001 for ‘over-appealing’. In fact, Sehwag was fined 20% of his match fee in the same match for celebrating a dismissal before conferring with the umpire! Such behaviour is strange to interpret as umpires have no stake in the match outcome and the result, and they are there to ensure fairplay; but such incidents show that they can also be biased… after all, they are also human.

Former England captain, Marcus Trescothick claimed in his autobiography that England's players achieved their prodigious amount of reverse swing in their successful 2005 Ashes series against Australia by using saliva sweetened by eating mints – something that the rules do not allow. Even the God of cricket, Sachin Tendulkar, has had one incident (I know I am fishing in troubled waters here), when he was accused of ball-tampering on the basis of TV evidence in South Africa. In the second test match between India and South Africa at St George's Park, Port Elizabeth in 2001, match referee Mike Denness (surprise, surprise… he features once more) suspended Sachin Tendulkar for one game in light of alleged ball tampering when television cameras picked up images that suggested Tendulkar may have been involved in scuffing the seam of the cricket ball.

So, there is no saint in the game of cricket, which sadly, is no more a gentleman’s sport.

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Muralitharan...boldly goes where no man has gone before, and finally calls it a day.

I think it’s got something to do with the month of April. The two cricketers at the summit of all records were born in that month – Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar and Mutthiah Muralitharan. Today I, much like the whole world, will focus on the latter – the person who had announced a week ago that he will retire from test cricket after the first test between India and Sri Lanka.

It does take courage to make such an announcement, with 8 wickets still to go towards a landmark that could forever be etched as ‘the unbreakable record’, and something the whole world wanted him to reach – 800 test wicket. But when you’re the world’s best bowler and still going great guns, I guess you’ve got enough confidence to take that decision even against purportedly the world’s best spin playing team.

Mutthiah Muralithan – 800 wickets, not a scalp less and not a scalp more. Need I say more. Period.

A cricketer who has had many mosts to his name – the most no. of test wickets, the most number of ODI wickets (from which he hasn’t yet announced his retirement, and he can only add to the tally of 515), the most no. of test wickets on a single ground (in fact, he holds the world record for the top 3 such instances – 166 at Sinhalese Sports Club Ground, Colombo; 117 at Asgiriya Stadium, Kandy; and 111 at Galle International Stadium, where he played his swansong test innings that concluded today.

Murali, also, is the first and only Tamilian to represent the Sri Lankan side, and in a country battling with radical Tamilians fighting for the cause of their own land (rightly or wrongly, I will not get into that) that is something to talk about. He has more than proved his match-winning abilities to his nation, and any side would’ve loved to have a champion like him playing for them.

It’s not just the good things that he’s achieved in cricket; he’s also been hounded by controversy the most. He is the ignominy of being the one bowler who has been called for chucking the most number of times, including by players of such reputation as Michael Holding, Adam Gilchrist, Martin Crowe, Dean Jones and Bishen Singh Bedi, who even likened him to a ‘javeline thrower’ and a ‘shot putter’. He was continually no-balled by Darrel Hair, the Australian umpire, in the Boxing Day test at Melbourne in 1995, which prompted a series of tests on him at Australia as well as Hong Kong, which finally cleared his action, and also prompted revision of rules about bending the arm while bowling.

Never one to give up in the face of adversity, Murali always came back stronger. His resoluteness is not just demonstrated in his achievements, but also in the fact that his captain could rely on him to bowl 45 overs in a day, without change, from a single end relentlessly without complaining and without giving even 1% less than what he was expected to give. It has often been said that he can spin a ball even on a glass surface, and I am sure he’s demonstrated his skills to the fullest to devastate many a batsman. 10 wickets in a match on 22 occasions out of the 133 matches that he’s played and 5 wickets in an innings on 67 occasions (including one in his very last match) from 230 innings show his class as a master beguiler, and a bowler most feared.

With his retirement, the spin era seems to have come to an end, but it is no mean feat that the world’s top 3 test bowlers are spinners, who’ve held onto their own and made the batsmen dance to their tunes – Mutthiah Muralitharan (800), Shane Warne (708) and Anil Kumble (619).

As I end this piece, I think no words are enough to pay a tribute to such a legend. All I’ll say is this – Well played Murali, and thanks for enthralling us for almost two decades.

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Friday, July 9, 2010

The science and art of making a cricket bat

It's been a long time since I've written. Not for any reason but for the fact that there was nothing worthwhile to talk about.

Today, I came across a video link about the making of a cricket bat. Got interested and found some more links that explained the process in excellent detail. Thought this would be pretty nice info for all us cricket buffs. So, posting the same herewith.

There are 3 videos that, I am sure, will be of interest to everyone:

i. How the Gray-Nicolls bat is made

ii. Inside an Indian bat making factory

iii. Salix Super GLX bat making process

The Gray-Nicolls bat



The Indian bat factory



Salix Super bat



Just want to mention that these videos are taken from YouTube, and the copyright of these exist with the original owners, as credited on YouTube.

Enjoy!

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Let’s re-build the IPL

Dhoni thinks the parties that come with the IPL are to blame. The other experts feel that the timing of the IPL was a massive blunder in the sense that it gave the Indian team no prep time for the World Cup. And Arnab Goswami, a host on one of the Indian news-channels kept reminding everyone yesterday that this was a national crisis of sorts. The last might be excused as a TRP generator, and the first as a lame excuse from a captain who suddenly found himself and his team in the middle of a World Cup.

None of the above rants is the reason for the note. However, this is a good chance to look at keeping the IPL alive, albeit on ‘my’ terms, for it is a pioneering effort in cricket.

A conversation with a friend a month ago threw up the fact that the IPL is the way it is, so that the battle of the remotes in Indian homes does not happen. Granted, but what exactly is it that makes the woman of the house, who is a peripheral cricket fan hopefully, to gracefully hand over the remote?

Mandira Bedi in designer sarees? Porn-ready hunks as anchors? Cheerleaders shaking their booties? Or shots of Preity Zinta waving a flag or Shah Rukh Khan looking intense while chewing gum? I grant the middle-Indian wife far more brains and taste. Does she see herself as a mindless bimbo who will watch a game she doesn’t really give an eff about, just because it’s glitzy and has a few of her favourite Bollywood personalities? I would think not.

On the other hand, if one builds on the fact that T20 as a format has enough cricketing excitement in it to lure the peripheral viewer, we could end up creating more knowledgeable fans out of such viewers.

Much as I hate giving Bernie Ecclestone any credit, Formula One combines glamour and sport intelligently. Yes, there are the so-called paddock babes. But once the engines start, it is just pure sport. What if the 2011 IPL was built in a similar manner?

We would start off with a pre-match show with sports presenters and genuine experts. Anjum Chopra is a genuine expert – she has played the game at the highest level and is good-looking in an intelligent sort of way. She reads the game well, and no, she wasn’t discovered by the IPL machine. It was the dowdy DD that first featured her as an expert.

Having cheerleaders shaking their best bits is like a promotion campaign for God. The game is a religion here, and this format is just right as far as driving Indians into a two-hour long frenzy. You don’t need stunts to fill stadiums here in the sub-continent. Just the promise of good cricket gets the queues forming up.

You want breaks between matches? Well, don’t waste it on a gum-chewing Khan, a Preity Zinta dimple and the like. There are enough fascinating, funny and interesting facts about the game to keep everyone watching.

Why do you think a woman will not want to know more about the game? It just could be possible that she doesn’t watch the game because no one’s taken the time off to point out the finer points to her. Okay, if you feel that she will be more comfortable getting her fundas from a woman, get a woman cricketer to host those portions.

There are ways and ways of making cricket more appealing. The way the IPL is headed isn’t one of them. If it continues this way, the bubble will burst. As surely as night follows day.

We are proud to announce that this is the 50th article on cricketcetera (our half century), and has been contributed by Nandu Narasimhan (catch him @ http://www.facebook.com/nandu.narasimhan)

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

How the BCCI should play the short ball

Started this note last night after listening to cacophony on the news channels about how India have dug themselves into a hole in the T20 World Cup.

As far as the use of the short ball is concerned, the strategy was not a shock. Steyn, Kallis and Nannes amongst others, were using them regularly against Indian batsmen in the league with some success. The deficiency is an old one, and is compounded by the fact that batsmen generally prop themselves on the front foot before the ball is delivered, in this format of the game.

And as far as the bowlers go, they don’t really look to bounce, but put the ball in that area which is marginally shorter than the ‘back of a length’ spot. Which means the ball reaches the batsman at the chest or the throat level. Add to this the fact that the front foot movement shortens the distance the ball has to travel, and you have a problem on your hands. Also, unlike a Test match situation where the batsman is not looking to attack every ball, here the backlifts are bound to be higher.

So where’s the remedy? It is now a well-publicised fact that all batsmen at the top level practise against bowling machines to get used to the speed. It is good, but the machine doesn’t have the cunning of the bowler, the false field adjustment and the pressure of the situation.

My mind went back a few years when I had the pleasure of shooting a commercial with the former Indian quick, Javagal Srinath. An erudite man, Srinath was soft-spoken and curious (about film-making techniques), and pretty strong in his views.

He got very excited when I shared with him a proposal that I was putting together to present to large corporates. It was about equipping every major Test venue in India (the ones with some real estate to spare) and the national Cricket Academy with facilities for drop-in wickets. The way it was, it looked at replicating wickets in countries from across the world. Theoretically, it is possible to ‘manufacture’ a Perth track from the mid-seventies, or a Headingley grasstop.

We exchanged mails for a period of three months while I spoke to a few of my clients who had the money to spare and a bit of passion for cricket. Sadly, none of them wanted to take it further up the organisation, as it was not backed by big media coverage.

Let’s face it – this scheme is a long-term one and does not have cheerleaders shaking parts of their anatomy and bright uniforms. This does not have that little whiff of potential controversy for news channels to pick up. It remains a dream for me.

On another note, around six years ago, there was a programme on Zee Sports where Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi was the resident expert in a conversation on the ‘short ball’ topic. I had called in to ask him about a batting academy, on the lines of the MRF Pace Foundation. The Nawab drawled that all it needed was batsmen going to the pace academy and playing the bowlers there.

Now the pace academy is for bowlers to perfect their craft. Imagine a scenario where a batsmen gets into a net to get his hook shot going. And the bowler being told by Dennis Lillee and T.A.Shekhar to work on his outswinger.

Unwilling corporates, a callous expert and a dream that is destined to gather dust. And another generation of Indian batsmen squaring up against a short ball and fending it into a waiting gully fielder’s hands.

Guess that’s the way Indian cricket will be.

This article has been contributed by Nandu Narasimhan (catch him @ http://www.facebook.com/nandu.narasimhan)

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Monday, May 10, 2010

It's the lack of imagination & courage that will push India out of the World T20

A loss to Australia followed by a loss to West Indies in the pre-semi-final stage has led India to a curious situation. All but out, and praying for a miracle.

Theoretically, India can still make it to the next stage. What they have to do is win against SL either with a margin of 20 runs if India bats first, or with 14 balls to spare if they chase. And then, pray and pray and pray that Australia win their match against Windies.

The second task is much easier, and something that I am sure everyone in India is already doing. For once, every Indian is praying for an Aussie victory.

It is the first task that makes me worried; the task is not just difficult, it also needs Dhoni to really start rethinking about the team needs. So far, at least in this World Cup, he’s lacked imagination & courage, and has to an extent tried to be defensive rather than attacking. None of these have ever been his hallmarks, and therefore it surprises me. If you want to win, you can’t just try and build a cocoon around yourself and hope to win. You have to get out of your safe zone and try to shake things up a bit, so that you can then take strides towards success. Sadly, Dhoni was too concerned about preventing the team from losing, and therefore couldn’t win.

There are many examples of this. Take for instance the fact that R Vinay Kumar is cooling his heels, when he should have been firing down a few in conditions that favour pace bowling. Take for example the fact that yesterday Windies bowled just 3 overs of spin vis-à-vis India which bowled 12 on a bouncy wicket. Another thing to ponder over this is the fact that given that both Vijay & Gambhir are not clicking (especially Murali), it might be a good idea to bring in Dinesh Karthik, who’s equally good at opening the innings, and pairing him with Gambhir, since both play together in domestic cricket as well. And what about playing either himself or Pathan so low down the order at times, that by the time they try to do something, the task is well beyond them.

I am particularly surprised over Jadeja’s selection for the World Cup. Jadeja might be a find as an all-rounder, but probably for ODIs only – though given his figures in that format, I even doubt that. If his highest in 31 T20 innings is 42, average is 21.96 and his scoring rate is around 7/over, then he’s not the finisher we’re looking for. Also, if we look at his bowling, he gets a wicket after every 30 balls and concedes 37 runs before he gets a wicket, and his economy rate of 7.4 is not bad but not too flattering either. And if we discard his domestic figures in T20s (including IPL) and just look at his international match figures, they are worse than what I just mentioned. So, why will you play Jadeja instead of a specialist bowler or a specialist batsman (if Karthik can be called that)?

It seems that by trying to play safe all the time rather than be inventive, we’ve become too much of a single trick pony, who cannot compete in a horse race. There have been times in the past when I’ve wondered why Dhoni keeps pursuing with something or somebody despite indications that it may not work always (Joginder Sharma being case in point), and I guess the time has come for some fresh thinking to be infused, or we will keep sliding down the slope.

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Friday, April 2, 2010

Kolkata Knights fend off the Charge of the Deccans

Kolkata, Kolkata... don't worry Kolkata; hum hain tumhare Kolkata. KKR were in a must win situation, as Varun had pointed out in his pre-match update, and this song would probably have been going through the entire team's mind. The Korbo-lorbo-jeetbo spirit had to come to the fore, and where else but in their home town. Dada started doing the right thing by first winning the toss, then electing to bat, and then going on to show why "On the off-side, first there is God, then there is Ganguly". With some good starts but no conversions, Ganguly was itching to get into the groove, and today he came good finally.

A total of 181, even with a batting depth consisting of Gilchrist, Gibbs, Symonds & Rohit Sharma was always a tall ask, and with the Kolkata crowd solidly behind their team, the Deccan Chargers' initial charge was completely subdued the minute they lost Gibbs & Sharma in quick succession. Till then they were ahead of the asking rate, and post then, they were just left searching for answers against a disciplined bowling spell by the KKR bowlers.

If you ask me, DC lost the match when KKR reached that total. Not that such a total has not been reached or chased in Kolkata, and not that DC did not have it in them, but quite frankly, I fail to understand why they are playing Roach instead of Vaas, who, the way he is conceding runs, seems to be a gift for the opposition. Why on Earth would you rest your best bowler, who's been grabbing early breaks for you and has decent economy, for crucial matches? Probably DC underestimated KKR and have paid heavily.

As regards us Cricketcetera Masters, this was a unique game in many respects. It was the 30th game of the league - exact mid-point. It was a game that saw many strategies from various teams, and as many as 3 MoMs being shown faith in (it was tough choice from all those 3, and Varun & Manish correctly picked the cherry). It was also unique in the sense that as many as 8 players chosen by various Masters did not feature in the final 11.

Lloyd took easy top honours, with I and Varun slugging it out for 2nd & 3rd respectively. Manish & Ramnik had a keen contest for 4th & 5th. Adrian & Mohit took rear guard at 6th & 7th.

The most unique aspect of this game was the final standings. 3 of us (yes 3 of us!!!) - Ramnik, Manish & I have exactly the same MPs (136 each) at the top of the table. This sure is a hotly contested league. Incidentally, our earnings from top 2 appearances are also exactly the same!!! Whew! Could it get any closer than this mid-way. Tells me that we're in for a big fight in the remaining half of the contest.

Varun occupies the middle position at 4th with 124 points, with Lloyd at 115, Mohit at 106 and Adrian at 90. They all will be yearning to make some reversals over the next 30 matches, and I won't be surprised if we have a completely new leader at the end of the championship.

Attach the scoresheet at the end of the match, and my best wishes to all for the balance half of the insanity.

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Friday, March 12, 2010

Cricketcetera Masters - let the games begin...

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Only hours to go! Battle lines are drawn! Another five hours to see who draws the first blood! The tension is palpable...

First of all, many thanks for all of you for sending your teams in time. A few afterthoughts resulting in few changes received before the cutoff time and have been duly updated. As expected, most teams are circumspect and one can see some experimentation in team selection across the board. A general feedback is that it is difficult to pick the teams as most good players are highly priced - agree, but did anyone promise an easy ride?

If the history of Cricketcetera Masters is to be believed, first few matches hardly make any difference to the final leader board, but in this new version of Cricketcetera Masters there is cash to be won in each game. So the interest begins from the first match itself. First few matches are also most difficult to take an informed decision as the player forms, ground conditions and playing elevens are all unknown to all the masters. A win here is as probable as getting six in the throw of the dice - so luck will remain the major factor in standings after this game...so...ALL THE BEST!!!

The status file in excel has been sent to the Mastesr and they can use it to do an online update of scores (in 'scoresheets') as they unfold at DY Patel Stadium, Navi Mumbai. The official version will be sent to you after the match (either tonight or tomorrow morning).

All future updates will be sent to the Masters on their e-mail IDs only.

Cheers and Good Luck

Monday, March 8, 2010

100 hour countdown to Cricketcetera Masters

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Less than 100 hours to go before the first ball for IPL 3 is bowled at Dr D Y Sports Academy in Mumbai where last year's champions 'Deccan Chargers' take on the Knight Riders from Kolkotta. If results of the last two seasons are anything to be referred to, Kolkotta Knight Riders are the likely favourites - that is because the least favourites are the favourites to win. Sounds like an oxymoron - but that's T20 cricket for you…

I have sent the famous (or infamous) excel sheet to the confirmed participants on email, which you will receive more than anything else in your mail box for next 45-50 days. New joiners, please do have a look at it cause you will live (and die) with it till late April. The oldies of these game, may look at it to reignite their sleeping strategic senses and expect those lovely memories to come crashing back at you.

In the interim, please note the following very very important fine prints relating to this tournament and the attached status file:

1. Selecting Your Team
A) Please ensure you use the sheet 'Players' in this excel to select your teams. Pls update 'Y' in the select column and the top part of the sheet which gives you Value totals and reminders. Use the 'filter' tool liberally to assist appropriate selections.

B) Please ensure you select a minimum of 4 batters, 1 Wicketkeeper and 2 Bowlers in your team of eleven. Please check that this requirement is fulfilled before you send in your teams. If these requirements are not fulfilled, your team for the match can and will be disqualified.

C) Please do remember to select one player as your 'Man of the match' (MoM) by entering "y" in the MoM column. Fifty percent of his scoring points will be added to your score. You will miss them if you don't update this, though your team will not be disqualified for this reason.

D) Copy-Paste your selected team into a separate (fresh) excel sheet and send it to the coordinator.

2. Sending Your Team
A) I will be the co-ordinator for this game and all teams should come to me on my gmail id (varunkhan@gmail.com) - Yes, my name is Khan and I am the Coordinator! However, this is not a fixed position. Any one of us can don this role if desired. I am doing it right now because no one else is willing. There would be situations when I am not available to do this task, in those situations one of us will take over this mantle and rest assured, information about him and his contact details will be provided to you in advance.

B) All teams for the matches during a day should reach the coordinator at least two hours before the first match of the day. Please note two hours before the first match of the day is the 'cut off time' and not the 'start time'. In case of two matches being played in a day, cutoff being two hours before the first match of the day is applicable for teams for both the matches. For example there are two matches scheduled for March 13th (match # 2 & 3), so both these teams need to come to the coordinator before 1300 hours IST. This is applicable even if you are not playing your team for match # 2.

C) Please carefully see the match timings mentioned in the 'Schedule' sheet and adhere to these cut-offs because the teams received after the cut-off time can and will be disqualified for that day's matches. Also, please note that there is no limit to number of times you can change your teams before the cut-off time - so be prudent and send your teams well in advance to avoid missing the match completely.

D) For all team logins and changes you will receive a confirmatory mail (as a reply all to your mail) which will say 'noted'. If you do not receive this mail, please do call up the co-ordinator on his mobile and confirm receipt. Remember, the onus of getting your team logged in is on you.

3. Status file timings
A) After the cut-off time, all teams will be updated on the status file and sent to all of you before the match starts. As the match progresses the happenings on the cricket field will be updated in the sheet 'scoresheets' only. All other relevant sheets are linked and will get populated automatically.

B) The scorecard at Cricinfo.com will be the source for all these updates irrespective of any other official/unofficial score cards being maintained anywhere else.

C) An updated status file will be sent again to you after the completion of the last match of the day and before the start on the next match. It will be our endeavor to send it to you as soon as possible. In the meanwhile, please feel free to update the status file sent to you to check your and/or others' standings.

D) All of you are requested to keep validating the updated scores and revert in case you find some anomaly. Cricinfo sometimes changes the scorecard after the match to align itself with official scorecard.

4. Status File
Along with the sheets mentioned above, you will also find the following updated sheets every time you get this status file:

A) 'Standings' - this sheet will show how much money are you (and others) winning or losing in the tournament so far. It will also give you snapshot of number of matches you've played, number of times ranked '1' or '2', total Scoring Points, total match points as well as overall rankings in the tournament.
B) 'Rankings' - this will give a match by match account of whether your team has been logged in, scoring points, match rankings & match points.
C) 'Teams' - this will give you player by player account of scoring points earned by each of your players in a given match.
C) Keep looking in the 'Players' sheet for any new addition of players and 'Schedule' file for any change in schedule of the matches. This happens sometime. Due care is normally taken to advise all participants whenever any such change happens.

Those who have played this game earlier are already aware of the above and are also requested to add any point I have missed out.

Cheers & See you soon at Cricketcetera Masters playing field...

Thursday, February 25, 2010

Cricketcetera Masters - Rules of the Game

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Many thanks for the overwhelming response. As of now, we have the following nine confirmed participation for this amazing contest:

1. Varun Khanna
2. Shailesh Nigam
3. Lloyd Ireland
4. Kartikay Krishan
5. Ramnik Mehra
6. Mohit Pandey
7. Manjunath Vishwanath
8. Adrian Ross
9. Manish Gupta

There are some additional tweakings in the format - only to make it more interesting and lucrative. Given below this are the detailed rules and regulations for this tournament.

Please note the last date for sending your confirmation of participation is 28th Feb 2010. Any request received after this date will be subject to availability and with a registration fees of Rs 1000/- instead of Rs 500/-. Similarly if any of the nine people above (who have already confirmed participation) wants to withdraw, he needs to do that before 28th Feb. Any withdrawals after that date will still have to pay Rs 500/- as registration fees.

Cheers

Rules of the Cricketcetera Masters

1. Each Master will select one team of eleven players for each match from the list of players provided for this tournament. Each player will have specific value points which will remain static during the course of the tournament. (Additions, if any can be made if new players are added in any of the IPL teams during the course of the tournament).

2. The total value of the selected team should be more than 800 value points and less than or equal to 1000 value points (VPs).

3. Each team must have at least 4 Batters, 1 Wicketkeeper and 2 Bowlers.

4. You can also choose one player from your selected team as ‘my man of the match’. Half of the scoring points for this ‘MOM’ would be added to your scoring points.

5. The teams for the matches during the day should reach Varun Khanna on varunkhan@gmail.com, latest 2 hours before the start of first match of the day.

6. Each of your selected players will earn the Scoring Points for you basis what they perform on field during the particular match as per the following scoring rules:

Batting

Run scored: 1 Points

Runs bonus
25 -49 runs : 10 Points
50-74 runs : 20 Points
75 - 99 runs : 30 Points
On reaching 100 runs : 40 Points

Strike Rate bonus
100% - 125% 10% of runs scored
125% - 150% 20% of runs scored
150% - 175% 30% of runs scored
175% and above 40% of runs scored

Bowling

Wicket (dismissal of bowler): 25 Points

Maiden over: 30 Points

Economy rate bonus (for bowlers bowling 2 overs or more)
Between 00.00 and 02.99 runs per over: 40 Points
Between 03.00 and 03.99 runs per over: 30 Points
Between 04.00 and 04.99 runs per over: 20 Points
Between 05.00 and 05.99 runs per over: 10 Points

Wicket bonus
On taking 2 wickets : 10 Points
On taking 3 wickets : 20 Points
On taking 4 wickets : 30 Points
On taking 5 wickets : 40 Points

Fielding
Catch (Fielder): 15 Points
Catch (Wicketkeeper): 15 Points
Stumping(Wicketkeeper): 15 Points
Run out (for each player from fielding team involved in the run out) 15 Points

Masters' Bonus
50% of VPs less than 1000 would be added to the scoring points (SPs).

7. After the match(es), all player performances will be updated as per the scorecard available on www.cricinfo.com and the score card on this site will be considered official and final.

8. Post the updation and basis the total score for the team, the super selectors will be ranked ordered and they will earn match points basis their rank. This is explained in an example below:

Example:
• Suppose there are four players for this tournament namely P1, P2, P3 and P4.
• Based on their Scoring Points they would be ranked 1 to 4.
• Player ranked ‘One’ will get 4 Match Points (MPs), player ranked ‘Two’ will get 3 MPs, player ranked ‘Three’ will get 2 MPs and player ranked ‘Four’ will get 1 MP.
• However, the player who has not sent a team for the particular match (i.e. ‘zero’ SPs) will be ranked ‘zero’ and will earn ‘0’ Match Points.

9. At the end of the tournament the player with the maximum Match points will be the winner. In case of the Match Points being equal, the leader would be decided basis the Scoring Points.
10.In the event of match on field is officially called off/abandoned due to weather or any other reason, the points scored during the duration of the match will not be counted for any of the masters. The scoring sheet for such a game will reflect ‘0’ for all.
11. Fees: Each Super Selector player will be charged the following fees:
• Participation Fees: Rs 500/- per player for participation in the tournament for participation confirmations received till 28th February 2010. (Any addition/new participation after this would be subject to approval and attract participation fees of Rs 1000/-).
• Match Fees: Rs 100/- for each match played by the Cricketcetera Masters.

12. Winnings: The Masters can win the following in the tournament.
• Rank 1 for each match Rs 200/-. If there are multiple Rank 1s in a particular match (equals SPs), Rs 200/- will be distributed equally between each winner.
• Rank 2 for each match Rs 100/-. If there are multiple Rank 2s in a particular match (equals SPs), Rs 100/- will be distributed equally between each winner.
• Loyalty Bonus Rs 1000/- for every player playing 55 matches or more in the tournament.
• Jackpot Kitty: All the excess amount after the distribution of match winnings and loyalty bonus will accumulate into a Jackpot Kitty, which will be distributed to the overall winners as per the following:
i) 44% of the Jackpot Kitty for the overall winner of the tournament (as per point ‘8’ above)
ii) 33% of the Jackpot Kitty for the overall 1st runner up of the tournament (as per point ‘8’ above)
iii) 23% of the Jackpot Kitty for the overall 2nd runner up of the tournament (as per point ‘8’ above)

Note: No amount will be collected upfront or during the course of the tournament. However, the account of wins and losses will be shared along with the results of each match in the status file. A final settlement will be done at the end of the tournament. This is explained by way of a simulation in the Annexure attached below.

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Great, Greater, Greatest...

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar creates history by being the first human on mother earth, to ever score a double hundred in a One Day International Cricket match…

Is it the first time he has re-written history books? Did anyone have any doubt that he had the ability to do it? Will this record never be broken by anyone anytime in future? To me the answer to all these questions is a resounding ‘No’. I am reminded of few lines from my favourite poet, Sahir Ludhianvi who once said:

Kal Aur Aayenge, Sapno ki khilti kaliyan chunne waale,
Mujhse behtar kehne waale, Tumse behtar sunne waale…

And then there are those, who relentlessly try and instigate a debate. Sachin Vs Richards or Sachin Vs Bradman. Perhaps Sahir Saab wrote these lines for Sir Don Bradman and Sir Vivian Richards. I am just extending it for My Little Master.

In a country obsessed with worshiping the legends - often building temples for their idols, I stand as a typical metropolitan and educated individual, who believes it would be inappropriate for any human to ever be equated to perfection that God is believed to be. But then, Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar comes the closest, almost worthy of the supreme association. So if he is God or closest to God, then He is there to be worshiped, only worshiped and nothing else. Nothing irritates me more than the debate between Great, Greater and Greatest. In our religious Hindu belief, where we have loved to worship multiple Gods, has there been any debate on which God is better than the other?

I'd rather just thank Mr Sachin Tendulkar for everything. Everything from scoring this double century, to saving that one run in the match at Jaipur which eventually became the difference between a win and a tie, for all the matches he has won single handedly, for making those 175 runs against Australia and almost winning that match for India, for winning the Commonwealth Series in Australia, Coca Cola cup in Sharjah... the list is endless. So Sachin, thank you for lifting the whole country and giving us an opportunity to be proud of you for the player you are and for the Indian you are!!!

There is only one mission left to be accomplished, only one Everest to be climbed and only one dream to be lived – Sachin lifts India to win the ODI World Cup 2011. I will drink to it tonight, will you?

What a batsman, sirji!

200 runs in an ODI match - that's what teams used to score... and not just in a 50-over match, in the earlier avatar of the ODI, which was 60 overs long. And at times it was good enough to win the match. Why, India won the 1983 World Cup Final against West Indies scoring just 183, before being all out in 54.4 overs (of the allotted 60 overs), and just when everyone and their mother believed that the Windies were going to do a hattrick of world cup victories, bowled them out for 140 in 52 overs.

So, when a batsman scores 200* in a 50-overs a side match, it is a moment to stand up and applaud. Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar, and as only he could, becomes the first man in the history of the game to score a double hundred in an ODI match. This man has so many records to his name that he possibly also holds the record for holding maximum records, and he still has the hunger in him to keep going on and on and on. And when other around his age (and even much younger than him) are hanging their boots, this man keeps mellowing with every passing day. At almost 37 years, he has today achieved what 17 or 27 year olds have not been able to ever.

I am one big critic of the man, and was specially harsh towards him in the past couple of years, when I thought that his body was tiring and he was no more capable of leading India to victory. My criticism of Sachin became even more sharp after Sourav Ganguly (in my opinion the world's second best ODI player after Sachin) was forced to announce his retirement, despite being in a decent form (and not in any way worse than Sachin) at that juncture. I genuinely believed that having achieved so much, he should have gracefully made way for the others in the team (after all, who can dare tell Sachin to retire).

My friend and co-blogger, Varun, always felt that I was far too impatient with Sachin and a disbeliever (atheist would probably be his chosen word, for the God Sachin is), who did not understand the greatness of the man.

Today, I partly agree with Varun (I still believe that even Sourav should be playing for the team, which he does not), and humbly bow my head to Sachin.

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Afghanistan - the new cricketing force of Asia!

The highest 4th innings total by a team winning a test match is 418/7 by West Indies against Australia at Saint John’s in 2003. There are only 3 more instances of teams scoring 400 plus runs in the 4th innings to win the match. South Africa’s 414/4 against Australia at Perth in 2008, India’s 406/4 against West Indies at Port of Spain in 1976, and Australia’s 404/3 against England at Leeds in 1948.

I checked up the record books for all kinds of International matches, where 2 nations played in a two-innings-a-side game, and found not a single team raking up over 500 to win in the 4th innings. Afghanistan – yes, Afghanistan – did that yesterday, when they chased 494 against much more fancied (at least against them) Canada, to hit 494/4, after trailing by over 300 runs in the first innings, and after Canada declared their second innings at 191/4, setting Afghanistan an almost unachievable target of around 500 runs.

All I can say is that it is extremely heartening to notice such big scores being chased down. But I’d also like to add that probably Canada played it too safe by not enforcing a follow-on and resultantly lost the game that they should’ve won.

For Afghanistan, this is a day of reckoning where everyone stands up and applauds them for their heroics. For a country tormented by war and terrorists, this is a shining example of the glory the youth can achieve for their nation by treading the right path.

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Saturday, February 20, 2010

Unravelling The Southpaw Batsman

Growing up playing club cricket, one would watch the team's resident left-hander bat, and listen to the grey hairs of the team talk about something called 'left-hander's grace'. I would resent it, being a fairly cavalier strokeplayer myself, and that too against the new ball. But almost immediately, the teen-age green monster in me would nod its head at the irrefutable fact that there was indeed something other-worldly about a left-hander's cover drive.

It would remind me of my days as a kid, watching a Ranji Trophy match between TN and Delhi. Coming away with the impression that Venkat Sundaram, the leftie Delhi opener, had something that the rest of us right (or wrong) handers did not.

Over the years, watching left-handers like Kallicharan, Gower, Lara and the comparitively less sung about Aussie Graham Yallop merely confirmed that. Batting was definitely easy for these guys who batted the wrong way 'round.

And of course, the legend grew when older players spoke about Sobers and Ajit Wadekar. I started trying to unravel this great mystery, the day I gave my trusty Super Tusker and Slazenger away, in an effort to make the game richer by my departure from it.

The penny dropped one day when I was watching Saeed Anwar bat. The reason was so simple. Having kicked myself in the fundament for not having spotted it earlier, I sat down to watch Anwar bat via a mirror (it's easy to decode when you can watch him bat right-handed!). There was ample opportunity, as the classy Pakistani tore into the Indian attack.

The reason was simple. The left-hander's footwork was different. The body balance was not always into the ball, but slightly away from it. In common parlance, it is what commentators refer to as 'playing away from the body'. But the best thing was the leftie's technique to the ball pitched short of a length. They don't really get behind the line. Rather, shots are played from 'beside the line'. My brother told me about this, referring to Gundappa Vishwanath's game, years ago.

And over the years, I have watched via the trusty mirror, Sadagopan Ramesh, the Indian left-hander, Saurav Ganguly, Adam Gilchrist and Yuvraj Singh all demonstrate this approach to footwork. They all could flay through the off-side. All vicious cutters to balls that would to a right-hander, be too close to the off-stump. And yes, they were all exponents of playing away from the body. But the textbook be damned, they all looked bloody elegant.

The only departure from this style of batting who still not only managed to look elegant but also had results to show for it was Brian Charles Lara. And we will leave him out of the discussion because he was and is Brian Charles Lara.

But take a look at all the left-handers in the game today. With the exception of Yuvraj Singh and Sangakkara, none of them can be called elegant, nor can the term 'left-handed grace' be applied to them.

A possible hypothesis is that a majority of the finishing school coaches are right-handed, and therefore think right-handed and pass this on. And the coaches who leave a batsman's batting alone are a dying breed. Control and adherence to theories are the order of the day.

I have no data. But I have a hunch that this might be the case. And somewhere deep down, hunches aren't as dreamy as they seem.

***** This article has been contributed by Nandu Narasimhan, an ardent cricket fan and a writer par excellence. He & I work for the same organization, and I stumbled upon his writings on cricket while discussing the recently concluded test match between South Africa & India, and found them really interesting. He joins Varun & me as the 3rd blogger on this site. Welcome to Cricketcetera Nandu, and here's to the good times ahead. *****

© Shailesh Nigam, Varun Khanna (for respective articles)

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Cricketcetera Masters is back - Are you game?

Controversies, Celebrities, Passion, Money, Betting and bit of Cricket too - that is what IPL is all about.

The madness is set to begin all over again and the cricket freaks like us can't wait to be part of it. Well, IPL is back and so is the magical Cricketcetera Masters - in it's new Avatar - hope James Cameroon doesn't sue us for this. Who cares anyways!!!

This year's CM will be the one as you've never seen or imagined. Some of the changes/highlights for this CM V3.0 are:
a) You can play for as many number of matches as you want (100% participation for all 60 games is not mandatory),
b) You can win money for each match for which you rank first and
c) There is a jackpot for the top three masters at the end of the tournament.

How will this happen?
Fees: Following playing Fees will be applicable.
- Registration Fees for you to be able to play SS V3.0: Rs 500/- (this will go straight to the Jackpot Kitty)
- Match Fees for each match where you send in your teams: Rs 100/- per match

Nitti grities:
• The top scorer for each match (Rank 1) will get Rs 200 and Rank 2 will get back his 100. The balance will go to Jackpot Kitty. For example there are five teams received for a particular match, the total collection will be five hundred rupees. Three hundred will be credited to the two rank holders in the match and the balance rupees two hundred will go to the jackpot kitty.
• At the end of the tournament the jackpot kitty would be divided into the top three super selectors where 50% of the kitty will go to the player ranked 1st, 30% to the player ranked 2nd and 20% to the player ranked 3rd.
• The ultimate winners will be decided basis match points (similar to the last Cricketcetera Masters rules).
• Scoring Points system will be more or less same with minor changes, which you will hear from me soon.

So, if you think you still have it in you, send in your confirmation by return mail.

What say…are you game?