another cricket thread.

Discussion in 'The ChitChat Lounge' started by jamhead, Jun 15, 2007.

  1. jamhead

    jamhead Unknown Legend

    exerpt from an article -


    Consider the following true story. In October 2004, the Australians, on their ‘revenge’ tour of India, arrived in Nagpur leading 1-0 for the crucial third test, expecting a dry turning pitch on which Kumble and Harbhajan would eviscerate them. They found to their amazed delight a greentop on which their pace bowlers massacred the Indian batsmen. The wicket had apparently been prepared by the groundsman on the orders of the secretary of the Vidarbha Cricket Association in defiance of the pleas of the Indian captain, Sourav Ganguly, for a pitch that suited his team rather than the visitors. The expected result was achieved. India were routed, Australia secured an unassailable 2-0 lead and the revenge they sought for their previous defeat.

    A year later, Nagpur and the Vidarbha Cricket Association were again hosts for an international match, the first ODI against Sri Lanka. On precisely the same ground in precisely the same season, the groundsman on the orders of the VCA secretary produced a pitch on which the Indian spinners captured seven wickets for next to nothing and Sri Lanka collapsed to a crushing defeat from which they never recovered.

    Undoubtedly, the VCA secretary, now a very big wig of the BCCI, effectively controlled the game on both occasions. The loss to Australia smashed the larger-than-life images of the Indian team, its captain Ganguly and his patron-in-chief Jagmohan Dalmiya with whom the VCA secretary was then locked in a bitter power-struggle. A year later, Ganguly had been ejected, Dalmiya was on his way to oblivion, a new coach and a new captain had been installed, whose success would proclaim to the world that Indian cricket was better off without its former captain and his mentor. Both the outcomes on the field exactly matched the personal interests of the VCA secretary. No doubt, the match was entirely coincidental.

    Controllers and bureaucrats understand and sympathize with each other; of course when there is no conflict of interest. No surprise therefore that the one person with whom the BCCI could find no fault after the World Cup disaster was the coach. Greg Chappell was appointed by the BCCI, despite a resounding failure in his only previous coaching stint, on the basis of a ‘presentation’, a concept much loved by bureaucrats if bizarre-seeming to sportsmen. He distinguished himself throughout his tenure by seeking an imperial role for himself, sidelining all rival centres of influence (such as seniors other than the most pliable and selectors who disagreed with him), manipulating the media by calculated leaks and ‘off-the-record’ critiques of players whose confidence he wished to undermine and other such stratagems well-known to controllers and bureaucrats.

    In any other country, a defeat like the World Cup debacle, climaxing a long string of failures, would precipitate instant dismissal of the coach. Not so in India. The BCCI claimed that the coach had no role in team performance (presumably, his princely salary, palatial house and other perquisites were merely courtesies by the board) and invited him to make yet another ‘presentation’ on what ails Indian cricket. This presentation was a bureaucratic masterpiece: it blamed everybody except the coach — senior players whom he could not totally control, selectors who defied him, even the board which had not restructured itself according to his ‘vision’, presumably on the tacit pretext that he was just the coach and not the CEO. The board loved it and offered him a new position as consultant to its cricket academy. Luckily for our young cricketers, he declined.

    Yet even today, Chappell’s demand, echoed by various BCCI dignitaries, for an iron hand visibly controlling the game and its players strikes a chord in many a bureaucratic Indian heart. Fortunately, the invisible hand of the market is already at work, deflating any would-be dictatorial designs. Endorsements and advertising revenues are drying up; their revival requires some outstanding displays, for which we need the best possible cricketers and coach, chosen on the basis of performance rather than the whims of some tinpot Napoleon.


    read the whole article here -
    https://www.telegraphindia.com/archives/archive.html
     
  2. shsnawada

    shsnawada Cyborgs & Pasta

    Get a life.




    Soon.
     
  3. jamhead

    jamhead Unknown Legend

    meanwhile you could learn how to read maybe.
     

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