March 24, 2007

Hunger and the weight

Everyone has an opinion, no doubt, on why an Indian cricket team failed at the World Cup. Well, for what it's worth, here's what I think:

1) We chose for this tournament a team with, as far as I can tell, only three truly hungry guys: Saurav Ganguly, Rahul Dravid, Anil Kumble. Ganguly because he lost his captaincy and his place in the team, fought his way back, and on his return is simply desperate to make a mark in top-flight cricket again. Dravid because he is made hungry, and he knows about losing his place too. Kumble because he is made hungry too, and he knows about losing his place too.

2) Those three hungry guys are all over thirty, which in cricketing terms translates as "old".

3) To go with just three truly hungry guys, the team carries too many guys riding on reputations that recent performances have not matched. I'm thinking of Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag, Harbhajan Singh, Irfan Pathan at a minimum.

Sehwag should have had an extended period out of the team, as Ganguly and Dravid and Zaheer before him had. That would have lit the fire once more -- if there was one to be lit. Instead he was kept out for a few inconsequential games with the apparent promise that he was part of the Cup plans. Not the best recipe for lighting fires.

4) At least a few players whose hunger alone should have put them on the plane to the Caribbean have instead cooled their itchy heels here in India. I'm thinking of Mohammed Kaif, Ramesh Powar at a minimum.

5) You match a team lacking hunger with one oozing it -- read "Bangladesh", a team longing to upset the big guns -- and you have the ingredients for what happened: a result that made nonsense of monumental reputations. Therefore, by no means an upset.

6) But those five points pale in comparison to this sixth and final one: the weight of Indian expectations.

The way we read too much, far too much, into inconsequential one-day games, whether won or lost. The way we expend so much passion on what is, let's remember the cliche, just a game, just a game. The way we celebrate individual achievements -- century tallies, wicket tallies, run tallies -- instead of recognizing them for what they should be: mere cogs in a team's progress. The way we refer to this batting lineup as the world's best, over and over.

I mean, I recall first seeing that description -- the world's best lineup -- on the cover of a newsmagazine just ahead of our disastrous tour of Australia in 1991. Despite that disaster, we've seen that description again and again, not least as we went into this World Cup.

I mean, give me the world's hungriest lineup over the world's best. Every time.

***

Postscript: The passion I mentioned a few lines above: for a sample, read the comments following Prem Panicker's report. (Well, not all 1600+ at last count, but check at least a few). Note how many of those comments have been "reported for abuse."

3 comments:

Doctor Bruno said...

//) To go with just three truly hungry guys, the team carries too many guys riding on reputations that recent performances have not matched. I'm thinking of Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag, Harbhajan Singh, Irfan Pathan at a minimum.//


n the 2006 - 2007 season, Sachin has played 21 Matches scored 699 Runs with a highest score of 141* Average 41.11 2 Centuries 5 fifties. In the same period, Rahul Dravid Averages 36.75, Sehwag averages 24.31 Dhoni averages 34.66 Yuvraj Singh averages 39.50. The only person with better average is Ganguly with 63.62). An almost god-like stature makes him impossible to drop even if his cricket is dismal. He is not dropped from the team because India needs 11 players for the cricket team and based on current performance, if Sachin has to be dropped, then Indian Cricket team can have ONLY ONE Player

Now I am not able to understand that he is out of form while Dravid etc are in form....

Why is that Sachin is said to be out of form from 2002, inspite of averaging over 50 in tests and 40 in ODIs...

You too... !!!!

Dilip D'Souza said...

Bruno, I didn't say and don't believe Sachin is out of form. I believe his recent performances don't match the reputation he has. I don't see anything really wrong with that: to me, Sachin is an all-time great who is past his prime.

Isn't it a great thing about cricket that we can have such differing perspectives on the same players?

Doctor Bruno said...

//I believe his recent performances don't match the reputation he has//

I too believe that his recent peformances don't match HIS REPUTATION...., but that is not a criteria for dropping him, as his recent performances are FAR BETTER than the recent performances of the guy who is going to come in his place (if he is dropped or retired).....

I repeat

He is not dropped from the team because India needs 11 players for the cricket team and based on current performance, if Sachin has to be dropped, then Indian Cricket team can have ONLY ONE Player