Saturday, 28 March 2015

For an Indian cricket fan: Is it about NZ winning or the Aussies losing?

#Bleedblue is now #BleedBlack! How much has that got to do with Brendon McCullum’s enticing letter to Indian fans? When was the last time one heard a Pakistani skipper, leave alone a fan from the rival nation, rooting for India in a semifinal of a World Cup? India out. Australia vs New Zealand at the MCG.
So, come the final: Enemy’s enemy is your friend. Isn’t it? #GoKiwis, #BleedBlack, #Bazbash, What not?
Why the Aussies – among a common cricketing fan in India (which yours truly assumes to be and it has been the case going by social media posts) – don’t deserve to win the final for the fifth time? One can be sure an opinion poll in India to predict the winner would end up with NZ being the favourites. But the recorded statement would have been: ‘Aussies shouldn’t, let New Zealand win, Oz should lose, Why not NZ please?’
Envy the Aussies? Fifth title. No! Then what? Let someone rule the cricketing arena. If it ain’t going to be India, then it should definitely not be Australia.
Is the ‘annoying’ (if you aren't an Australian cricket team fan) Aussie-aggro on and off the field got anything to do it? Is it the war of words, the ‘hoooo…hooooo’ sound from behind the stumps at the fall of a wicket from a great wicket-keeper, kicking the ball after pulling off a stunning catch, bowlers throwing the ball at a batsman to disrupt his rhythm, a win at any cost approach, rattling the umpires, even a night-watchman scoring a double hundred, never say die attitude?
What does the mind of an Indian cricket aficionado recollect at the very word Australia, atleast in the last decade or so? Don’t worry. This ain’t going to be match report or the summary of the moments of some of the ‘Final Frontiers’
The key words are enough to depict the story: McGrath, Sachin, Nairobi, 2001, Kolkata, VVS Laxman, Rahul Dravid, 2003 WC final, Sachin, pull, McGrath, 2004 loss at home, 2007, Bucknor, Sachin, Symonds, Bhajji, Sydney, Pup, Ponting, Dada, The Wall, Kumble, Pup three wickets, Perth, M.S.D, 2008 CB series, 2011 WC, QF, Ahmedabad, victory, 2012 whitewash, Kohli, bigchases, 2014, Tests, Kohli, Johnson, 2015 WC, Again LOSSSSSS!
Phew! Isn’t the blood boiling hot underneath for a patriotic Indian? The visuals of most of the key words are quite disheartening.
The ‘win at any cost approach’ of the Aussies, which many perceive here to be an act of violating the rules of the gentleman’s game, could probably be one of the biggest reasons why only a few support the men in yellow. 'Playing hard' in Aussie terms is termed differently here. 
Maybe, if India follow their style of play, there could be more trophies to show for the future generation!

—S. Bagawati Prasad






.



Friday, 27 March 2015

The Ra-Ra’s (Raina & Rahane) never arrived at the SCG!

It was Melbourne. Imran Tahir was running amuck after sending back Virat Kohli. Arrived a calm Ajinkya Rahane with India at 136/2 in 27.1 overs. 18. 4 overs later, one of the greatest pacers of the modern era – Dale Steyn – was tonked right over his head at the MCG. Though Steyn got the Mumbaikar the very next ball, Rahane - without breaking a sweat - had nailed the Proteas with a 60-ball 79 making them fetch leather round the dial. One assumed a ‘silent assasin’ was born.
Move to Auckland. Arguably the toughest challenge the Indian team had faced from an opposition in the league stage in the Cup. Zimbabwe had taken apart the Indian bowlers on a relatively smaller ground and then reduced the then reigning champions to 71/3, defending 288. The ever-jubilant Suresh Raina walked into bat knowing there was only his skipper left in the tank. And soon captain cool arrived with scoreboard reading 92/4. A couple of hours later, Raina thanked the Zimbabwean attack and Hamilton Masakadza for letting him smash his maiden World Cup ton and India won 6-0! The middle-order seemed to be in form with the knockouts set to be played.
Come Sydney. Yes. Enough said about Steve Smith’s greatness and his romance with Indian bowlers. Then there wasn’t any flying kiss from Virat Kohli this time around. But it was time for the ‘silent assassin’ and Raina to step up.
But it wasn’t the ‘choking’ Proteas or the Zimbabweans who were running in to bowl. It was Starc, Hazlewood and Johnson.
At 91/3 with 32 overs more to go, MSD sent his trusted lieutenant to face the music instead of taking up the responsibility as he did in the 2011 WC final. Which, in hindsight, one could term it a disastrous move knowing Starc and Clarke would rub their palms in eagerness at the sight of Raina.
Just a couple of months ago, Raina’s red-ball conundrum was exposed by Starc in the same venue in the fourth Test, which India survived narrowly. He got a pair. And what’s more, it was Starc whose fiery in swinger trapped the southpaw for a blob.
As expected, Starc went under the skin of Raina by throwing one at the batsman and even appealed for obstructing the field.
The moment a hot under the collar Raina struck one over the top off Faulkner, one knew something was about to explode. Edged and taken! Someone was saying.
Maybe, maybe…MSD’ strategy failed. The probability of Raina scoring 160 runs in 15 overs was higher than him batting 30 odd overs against Australia.
What can a WC match can do? Ensure Klusener ran Donald out, leak 15 runs in the first over of a big final, minnows beating champions, Duminy collided with Behardien – It can choke even the best!
 Rahane – who had played several match-winning knocks under pressure in Tests - seemed not the one to wilt under pressure, as he arrived. But he, uncharacteristically, felt the heat under his helmet in the big match.
The number ‘4’ in the wickets column ensured Rahane let Maxwell get away without applying counter pressure. One felt Rahane was batting with a stump in hand! Not one struck the middle of the bat and the dab strokes weren’t helping his confidence either. The drives weren’t finding the gaps.
The diminutive batsman, who was pulling and hooking fiercely in the Test series and even against South Africa, was hurried by the barrage of bouncers hurled by Johnson and Starc.
Smith, Haddin and Maxwell would be wondering whether they had missed a lot of snicks before finally referring one to see the back of Rahane!
The Ra-Ra’s (Raina and Rahane) never arrived at the big stage. However, there is no shame in losing to a champion side like Australia. Even the most experienced and greats have choked in World Cups. This inexperienced (in WC's) but talented batting unit needed such a failure to achieve success in the future.


                                                                                               —S. Bagawati Prasad

Wednesday, 25 March 2015

Blunderful/Wonderful semifinal? - Eight and half hours of blunders!

It was the match of the ‘chokers’. Fortune favours the brave, theoretically atleast that’s how it is put across. After watching the Tuesday’s semifinal, yours truly took the knife out for a post-mortem as to which among the two teams were brave enough for the fortune to swing their way and what differently did New Zealand do for the lady luck to be smiling on their side at the end of it all. One thing: The blunders from both the teams made the match one of the wonders of the ongoing WC.
Let’s rewind to 6:00am (IST) on 24/32015 and the sequence of errors from both teams that marked the match.
Ø  ABD wins the toss and decides to bat first. So there was no pressure of chasing, which had earned the Proteas ‘Chokers’ tag.
Ø  Boult has been the bowler of the series so far. 2nd over of the day, got the edge of an out of form Quinton de Kock. And put down by Ronchi!  Oh!! Lady luck with South Africa finally. #Gogreen should be the norm.
Ø  Soon, Amla skies one over the top off Southee and falls narrowly short of a diving Boult at fine leg. That’s it, for sure ABD has fortune by his side.
Ø  By 7:15am, SA two down! Kiwis in red-hot form with four slips and gully! Baz on the charge with his black caps. The mind thinks 151 and Australia. Is that on the cards?
Ø  When was the last time one saw Daniel Vettori bowl a wide four down the legs of a batsmen? For now, it was the semifinal of the 2015 WC. Off day for Vettori, who had been chasing leather in the previous over?
Ø  Roussow and Faf kept going and Williamson and Grant Elliott were introduced in the half-way mark stage. Pressure. Brendon McCullum for the first time had to think about reserving his strike bowlers for the ABD assault.
Ø  You think 400 on the cards! Suddenly the ‘two toes’ Guptill flies one and pulls off a stunner with two fingers at point. 237* and now a ripper. This is going to Guptill’s night. He is going to see the Kiwis through
Ø  ABD – first ball – Dear! Shuffles across and tries to dab one to fine leg. Ball catches the gloves and fortunately the ball goes over the stumps and on to the keeper. Skipper set for the charge and he does.
Ø  35th over: Powerplay – A slap through the covers from ABD. The ball in the air. A flying Williamson puts it down off Anderson. ‘You dropped the cup mate’ moment . Expect ABD to score 150+ in the next 60 balls. And was batting like set for such an innings
Ø  RAIN! RAIN! RAIN! RAIN! RAIN! RAIN! RAIN! – Nerves in the SA dressing room. Auckland weather rescues NZ, shortened game and SA never go hand in hand.
Ø  Play resumes: KILLER MILLER has surely nailed McCullum & Co. with his ‘in the arc out of the park and in the V out into the tree’  stuff.
10-minute break
Ø  ABD & Co.  have the luxury of knowing that if the Kiwis are to win, it would be a record chase and chasing 298 in 43 overs in a SF is no joke. But McCullum felt so it was actually a joke.
Ø  Baz blasts 59 off 26 balls six overs – 71 runs. And for sure the Proteas have choked much early than the expectations were.
Ø  Tahir bamboozles Guptill in the PP. Morkel gets rid of McCullum and Williamson. Panic sets in the Kiwi batting unit. This is South Africa’s moment.
Ø  But a ‘part-timer’ Duminy, who took a hat-trick in the QF against Lanka, ensures Ross Taylor finds his feet. Head down and Guptill is up and running with a six!
Ø  How could one get Guptill out? Run him out. And it did happen. Amla strikes on the field. Guptill is out. And Taylor joins Guptill in the dressing room later.
Ø  Anderson and Elliott. Stats say NZ have never lost when Anderson scores in excess of 30. He was on 33. And Proteas failed to capitalize on an opportunity to rewrite history. When ABD missed a chance and by now you can visualize the moment. Mr. ABD the bus has left.
Ø  Still the Kiwis GRANTed SA another chance. Maybe they pitied at SA. De Kock was in such a hurry to see the red light flash, he failed to collect the ball! – Grant Elliott survived. And South Africa were crest fallen!
Ø  The skier which Faf held on to off Anderson was nullified by this error. After 8 hours, there was no guessing who the winners would be and one couldn’t decide who were the fortuitous ones.
Ø  Even as Elliott’s slogged and balls started landing in between three converging SA fielders, Ronchi found the lone fielder at deep square-leg Rossouw, who took it as if his last breath depended on it
Ø  Sprawling dives, some necessary and some showed the nerves, from South African fielders ensured the equation came down to 14 off 7 balls.
Ø  Probably the choke moment of the day, Elliott took the aerial route and thank you South Africa. – Duminy and Behardien stared at each other. ‘You surely dropped the cup’
Ø  But still, still and still….Steyn bowled two crackers to give just two off two balls and NZ needed 10 off 4 balls.
Ø  History, stats, search….Steyn had defended a few in the last T20 WC against the same opposition. But this time he was suffering from cramps or a hamstring pull.
Ø  Boossss…Ahhhhss..from the crowd.
Ø  Vettori – who had struck a six to put NZ through against Bangladesh, whose leaping left hand saw the back of a dangerous Marlon Samuels in the QF – with his typical trigger movement and as the flashing blade made contact the ball the roof came down. FOUR! Six needed but 5 for NZ to seal final berth
Ø  1999 WC – No tie please. Scamper for a bye to the keeper. De kock twice missed to hit the stumps in the same over.  
Ø  2 balls 5 to win. Still no favourites. Tim Southee under the helmet. Cameraman was spot on to catch the tension in the Kiwi dug out.
Ø  Steyn to Elliott - BOOM! Six…Finally NZ won.


So – Who deserved to be in the final? Who was brave enough for the fortune to smile at them? Fortunately or unfortunately came up with no reason! Still, figuring it out. 

                                                                                            - S. BAGAWATI PRASAD

Thursday, 19 March 2015

‘Champions stuff’: India set to conquer Australia’s tag, Why so?

Ruthless is one word you would associate with Australia ever since Steve Waugh kissed the World Cup trophy in 1999. From then on the performances of the Aussies on the field have been deemed ‘champions stuff’. And they did deserve it, for they had pulled off wins from near improbable situations on quite a few occasions. They never succumbed under pressure. Never gave an inch to the opposition. And if at all there was an odd game where the opposition – most likely India, South Africa or New Zealand – gave them a scare, they had someone out of the blue coming up with the rescue act.

Let’s not talk about numbers. Because the number of matches Australia have been unbeaten in  WCs are firmly rooted in the minds of every cricket lover. Let’s surf through situations for a change in the last four WC editions.

Before that:

Why time to replace Australia with India? Why not others?

Just take out India from the equation. Had it been 2007, Starc would have cleaned up the No. 11 Kiwi batsmen to register a famous win in the three balls he had before Williamson stroked a six. Had it been 2007, the Aussies wouldn’t have been bowled out for 151! There isn’t a saviour in this Aussie batting unit. Though Smith looks one, he hasn’t yet proved it in the World Cup. And finally on a number of occasions, the rub of the green, which was with them eight years ago, hadn’t gone their way either.

South Africa amassed 400 against West Indies and Ireland but faltered in a chase of 240 odd runs against Pakistan.

Misbah’s team luckily found the last step of the bus and foot-boarded into the quarterfinals.

Though New Zealand have won every match like India, there isn’t enough conviction in their wins. Losing a heap of wickets in a small chase against Scotland, literally throwing away the game against Australia and the manner in which the Bangladesh batsmen took on their bowlers was there for all to see.

With the West Indies you know they score 400 one day and get bowled out for 150 the next day. They are always in but they are always out as well.

England – Japan cricket had trolled them enough.  

Sri Lanka, they are out of contention. Bangladesh will cherish this World Cup forever for their great show and they deserve a pat on the back.

India, the Oz of the 2003 and 2007WC

2003 WC – Shane Warne, a star of the previous edition, had to miss out with a ban and there was unrest in the Aussie camp. Out came Andrew Symonds and blew away Pakistan in the tournament opener. The Aussie campaign endured its share of nerve-racking moments. Every time the opposition – England and New Zealand - had the Aussies on the mat, Michael Bevan, the predecessor of the modern Mr. Cricket, took on the mantle and saw his team through. From then on there was no stopping the Aussies and even India’s attempts – once in the league and the other in the final – to do the unthinkable ended up with a whimper.  

2007 WC: Four years later, the Aussies walked into the Caribbean islands having lost 0-3 in an ODI series to New Zealand. There was a lot of talk about the Aussies being not at the peak of their prowess. South Africa were as always in contention. India had earned themselves a tag of being good chasers under Dravid. New Zealand had chased down huge totals in the lead up to the WC. And the biggest worry for the defending champs was the poor form of Matthew Hayden, who courtesy his 181 in the final ODI against NZ made the cut.
Come the event, Australia trounced opposition after opposition in the league phase, gave South Africa a pasting in the semifinal and Gilchrist revealed what a squash ball can do on a cricket field in the final against Lanka. A month and a half later, Ponting lifted the trophy for the second time in a row and Hayden ended up the highest run getter.

The Aussies defied the law of averages! They won matches as easy as cracking a joke.

The rise of the men in blue

2011 WC:  The Aussies who had won in England, South Africa and West Indies entered a zone which could be called their most uncomfortable one to defend their title - Asia. The pressure on them was as much as it was on the Asian heavyweights India, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. And all eyes were on Sachin Tendulkar, as it was his swansong Cup.
India never played like champions until the knockout phase and for a change the Aussies too flinched as they suffered their first defeat after countless number of wins in World Cup.
For once the rest of the world began to feel, this was their best chance in overhauling the Champions. The onus was on India to push the Aussies out of the Cup in the quarterfinals.
Having tied against England and lost to South Africa, the Indians were blowing hot and cold just like the Aussies of the 1999 WC and to an extent in the 2003 WC. Yet they managed to make the final eight thanks to Sehwag’s brilliance in the opener against Bangladesh and beating the minnows and the Windies.

Up against Australia, India were certainly the underdogs. New stars turned up on the big stage. Suresh Raina held on to his nerve along with Yuvraj and the reigning champions were dethroned as India set up a SF date with Pakistan.
And enough has been written about the clash of the arch-rivals and the inspiring move of Dhoni to push himself up the order and claim glory in the final against Sri Lanka. New heroes were found. A finisher evolved, couple of match-winners were unearthed and the team had a swagger in the way they played their game.

India were the World Champions, but they weren’t playing the way for one to stamp their game as ‘champions stuff’. However, they were in the process of building one for 2015.

2015 WC:
The World Cup was down under. What was the preparation? A tri-series sandwiched between a gruelling four-Test series and the World Cup. Much like Australia did in 2007 against New Zealand or even worse if one were to be harsh, Indians were chasing leather on the field from dawn to dusk and the pattern continued till the tri-series. But the young Indian batsmen had got a taste of the Aussie pitches and it was the bowlers who were running in and bowling long hops.
Next was the tri-series with England being the third team. India couldn’t win a game and lost even to England and by now the stress on even has more clarity than ever before.
The bowling unit looked jaded. Batsmen were under pressure. Opener Dhawan’s form was the biggest concern. Rohit Sharma had a niggle. Dhoni had quit from Test cricket. All off the field stuff took centre stage. There was more confusion than cricket.


Then came the ‘Mauka’ to win their first official match in Australia, as India had already won a warm-up match against Afghanistan. Pakistan it was. Who else but Kohli firing along with Dhawan, who seemed to have found his bearings a little bit.
Yet, India weren’t displaying ruthlessness, an inherent quality of a champion side.

Turn Melbourne and the pace of Steyn and bounce of Morkel awaited India. Seven hours later it was a mismatch as India ran the South Africans down just like the Aussies did to do the Proteas in the 2007 WC with a scintillating show.

The manner in which India crushed the West indies, UAE, Ireland and Zimbabwe underlined their ruthlessness. Bowling out the opposition every single time they played suggested how the bowlers have risen up to the challenge. Indian batsmen and fielders running hot on their South African counterparts was probably the tipping point of the Cup journey so far.

And except for Rahane and Dhoni, who both played major roles in the wins against SA and Zimbabwe, the rest of the top-order batsmen have scored hundreds in this WC.

The quarterfinal victory against Bangladesh could well be put across as the starting point of a new Indian juggernaut.

Two more wins and there are enough evidences that have been listed above to brand India’s ODI cricket as ‘Champions stuff’.


All India have to do is beat the law of averages to be crowned champions.  


                                                                                                                                  Bagawati Prasad 



Wednesday, 11 March 2015

ICC, why not 1G, 2G, 3G?

This is purely imaginary!

Apologies, if you happen to be a techie just because the ‘G’ tag had lured you into having a quick peep at this. This is about the gentleman’s game, which pundits perceive to have become brutal on the bowlers. And to an extent the runs amassed by teams and the manner in which they were scored by the often punctuated term ‘modern’ batsmen in the ongoing World Cup justifies the above statement.
The batsman walks in with a tag ‘right-handed batsman’. The fast bowler understands it’s the beginning of the 36th over. The batting team has no option but to go with the powerplay. And the bowler knows there are only three men guarding the fence to protect him from destruction.
The pacer has a look at his field at the start of his run-up. He knows he has plan in mind to tackle the right-hander. Runs in and delivers. Outcomes the reverse scoop! Four! They call him AB de Villiers. Now what has the bowler done wrong here?
Experts term it, “Outrageous shot making.” For a change, the bowler is stumped.
The world needs no introduction to Glenn Maxwell. Maybe cricket aficionados need to be reminded of his nickname ‘The Big Show’ in his own backyard.
Every time the Aussie dasher walked into bat in the WC a graphic pops up in the televisions set. What is his most productive stroke?
Guess what? Reverse-sweep, Slog-sweep, slog over deep mid-wicket.
It is followed by a tongue-in-cheek statement, “Coaches will ask you not to follow this.”
Maxwell, a right-handed batsman, invariably hits his one out of his first three balls batting with his wrists reversed.
What can the bowler do? His hands are tied. How? He can’t bend his elbow. He is deemed chucker. He can’t bowl more than two bouncers. Penalised with a wide. He can’t hurl a beamer more than twice. If so, the umpires would thank him for the day. And worst, a dissent earns him a ban or a fine!
An off-spinner can’t run in and bowl left-arm orthodox. He can’t bowl under-arm either. What a pity?
To be fair to the batsman, the counter-argument will be: “You have 300 balls to get 10 wickets. Which one has the highest possibility and probability?”
This will be a never ending debate.
Now the serious part of this is over. Here comes the imaginary part.
People in India, irrespective of age, would certainly have experienced playing gully cricket. Alright you are in the groove. Strolling back to the days of you playing in an oval shaped thorn-filled empty plot, on the roof-tops, street lanes, dead end roads, where not?
Five friends begin. One hand, one pitch catch. The guy who faces the most number of balls would be declared the winner.
Two more join. More excitement. But how to score runs?
Hit the first half of the wall, behind the wicket, a run is granted (1G).
Second half of the wall 2runs granted (2G).
Late cut, the hardest shot with two slip fielders protecting the 1G, and 2G, fetches you three runs (3G).
You hit the wall on the full – You are OUT! (Oops that’s harsh, but that’s how it is always)
Straight drive earns you a four. But the bowler can’t bowl a full toss. Because the rule states, “one pitch catch.” Doesn’t this sound great as a bowler?
Now, apply this during the batting powerplays!
ABD scoop over third-man or fine leg earns three, a Maxwell reverse fetches him three. Whack it out of the park you earn a six. And no need for the four. Split the ground into zones! ICC, why not 1G, 2G and 3G?
Jokes apart, hats-off to the batsmen for their courage and innovation. As Sachin ‘paaji’ said, “God save the bowlers.”