Deep Backward Point

Blog against the machine.

Month: October, 2011

The Gayle Story, as Written for Daytime Television

Recently, a popular cable channel commissioned a team of top-notch soap opera writers to pen “The Chris Gayle Story”. After significant market research, they tailored the story to their target audience. The following is a leaked version of their notes (Note: Wickbee is an anthropomorphic female West Indies Cricket Board):

The Chris Gayle Story: Made for Television

The Chris Gayle Story: Made for Television (Click for Larger Version)

Rumor has it, the team has not yet decided on the ending. Happy endings sell, but tragedies are more memorable.

Read the rest of this entry »

In Defense of Cook (and Geeks)

I’m a big fan of Cook the Test batsman. I’m not sold yet on Cook the Test captain (though it seems inevitable). I’m ambivalent on Cook the ODI batsman, and I’m not sold on Cook the ODI captain. And let’s, for the purpose of this article, assume T20 does not exist.

But as someone who is described (by myself and others) as a geek, I can’t help but lighten-up when Minal describes him as follows:

Cook is the essential geek you need in your group to research, compile and present the project and fetch the grade so that you and your friends can play pictionary and scrabble into the night and get up early to watch cricket matches.

Yeah, that was never me. But I knew that guy too, and while I’d never let him captain my team, I would make sure no one would bully him around.

(Also, I’d call him a nerd, not a geek.)

Sometimes It Really is Trott’s Fault

Hypothesis: Jonathan Trott’s game is not suited to the 50 over game. His good batting in certain types of matches skews his figures, specifically matches where England bats first. England are setting themselves up failure when it will matter.

The above statement is my intuition. I proceeded to dig through the facts to confirm my claim. Or invalidate it.

Of course, Trott can disprove all of this in tomorrow’s match. So it goes.

The Data

The strike rates are generally not too interesting. He’s always around 80. Except when batting second and England lose.

Trott Strike Rate in ODIs

Trott Strike Rate in ODIs

The averages tell a better story: 67 when batting first 37 when batting second. And most astonishingly, when he bats first and plays a long innings, England loses. He has an average of 87 when batting first in matches that England lost. Think about that.

Trott Average in ODIs

Trott Average in ODIs

Theory

Jonathan Trott is a good batsman, on his way to possible Test greatness. In the 50 over game, he is suited to playing the anchor role. This role requires other batsmen to keep the scoring rate up. If he runs out of other batsmen, the jig is up, he needs to increase his scoring rate and he gets out sooner.

This mode of operation is especially well-suited to batting first, when there is no specific target total. When chasing a large total, the anchor role is fine a stop-gap but a strike rate in the 70s will not get the job done.

In fact, when England bats first and he makes a large score, they are more likely to lose the match. This may be because he takes up the bulk of the overs at a slower strike rate. Overs that in the hands of a better ODI batsman would have resulted in a higher score.

Conclusion, for now

This is not the last word. The broad data seems to confirm my hypothesis, but I’m open to change my mind. I am going through every match Trott has played to see which ones fit my theory and which don’t. Especially if Trott helps England chase down 350 in the next match.

Source

#ShankarFacts: The Return of Adrian Shankar

If I invented this bit of news (#ShankarFacts!), nobody would have believed it. That is the power of Adrian Shankar. Take it away, George Dobell:

[Rajasthan] Royals management have made enquiries to players in England to learn more about Shankar’s background. The question they asked was: is Shankar a fantastic, untapped talent who has somehow escaped the notice of all English scouts; or is he just an audacious blagger?

You can probably guess the answer they received.

Well, the answer is that he has neither escaped the notice of English scouts, nor is he just an audacious blagger. No, young Adrian is the pre-eminent audacious blagger. If blaggers were to be renamed, they would be called shankars.

And that’s a #ShankarFact.

More #ShankarFacts, while we’re at it:

  1. Adrian Shankar is #trottsfault.
  2. Every time Adrian Shankar sneezes, a Pakistani bowler bowls a no ball.
  3. While Adrian Shankar is on vacation, at least one active Pakistani must remain retired.
  4. Adrian Shankar does not switch-hit. He plays both-handed every ball.
  5. Adrian Shankar’s helicopter shot involves an actual helicopter.
  6. Adrian Shankar is just what the doctor ordered.

In the comments over on Dobell’s story, a gentleman named Darren Barfoot says the following:

I saw Adrian Shankar in the nets the other year at Aigburth for Lancashire and he was smashing the ball all over. I’m not saying he’s anything amazing, I’m not saying he should have made the claims he did, but there’s something there.

Well said, Mr. Barfoot. OR SHOULD I SAY, MR SHANKAR?! Hmmmm?

Star of the Moment: Mushfiqur Rahim

Spare a thought for Mushfiqur Rahim. He is 23 years old and in his first series as captain, at home against an eminently beatable West Indies. Not just a captain, but a wicket keeper captain, expected to lead a team of twentysomethings including his former captain.

And how does he handle the pressure? He is the top scorer in the single T20 for his team, and wins the game. He is Bangladesh’s top scorer in the ODI series. And at the moment, he is the top scorer in the first Test.

Take a bow, Mushfiqur Rahim.

20111019-195444.jpg

The Case Against Cricinfo

Bottom line, up front: I love Cricinfo. I have for 13 years. But they have incredible power and are increasingly wielding it in a worrying fashion. Here is a call for better, clearer editorial standards.

Editorial Clarity

One of my fundamental issues with Cricinfo deals with editorial clarity. Most respected news outlets have a clear separation between News and Opinion. Cricinfo blurs the lines in multiple ways.

Part of the problem is one of design and signals. The way content is presented on Cricinfo, you are never certain if the article you are reading is News or Opinion.

News or Opinion?

News or Opinion?

This is a subtle example. There are links to three stories interspersed here. One is Opinion, two are News. Maybe it will be clear if we click through to read the stories.

Opinion. Perhaps...

Opinion. Perhaps...

[Clicking through]

Aha, this is Opinion. Perhaps. It says “Features” on top, which probably means it’s not news, and surely Daniel Brettig wouldn’t take such a strident tone against Hilditch in a news article? Who knows for sure.

Which brings me to my next issue– Associate Editor for Cricinfo, Daniel Brettig just called Hilditch a disaster. The same Daniel Brettig also pens multiple News articles on Australian cricket. News articles that are supposed to be objective, free from biases. This may be acceptable (but contentious) if we could tell News and Opinion apart.

Take a look at this article, also written by Brettig. It’s basically the same format of article as the Hilditch story. A lot of quotes from Sutherland, interspersed with Brettig’s commentary on the coach selection process. But this one is categorized as News. Who made the call? Based on what?

It’s a subtle example, but that is why it’s important. It is the subtle cases that matter. If we can’t trust Cricinfo to separate News from Opinion, over time those lines get blurred and it’s all just Daniel Brettig. Sometimes he lets his opinions show, sometimes he doesn’t.

The blurry line shows up too often on Cricinfo. News articles that slip in an opinion about a player, administrator or institution.

Why This Matters

The reason traditional news organizations provide a clear separation between News and Opinion is that different journalistic standards apply to each.

News must be accurate, must attribute reliable sources, and multiple sources must agree for anything to be reported as fact. When reporting controversial opinions, news stories attribute this to a third-party.

These standards do not apply to Opinion pieces. Daniel Brettig can write his own opinion.

If we, as readers, don’t know which one we are reading, how do we know which standards apply? Over time, if the lines remain blurry, we expect (and receive) lower standards from Cricinfo.

In short, if we’re never sure that it’s News, it is never News. It is always Opinion.

Written by Somebody

All of this is made further problematic by the rash of articles without bylines. Let me provide a little bit of background:

Many news organizations make a choice– either they byline everything or byline nothing.

For example, the New York Times bylines everything they write. You will see the name of the journalist who wrote the article at the top and sometimes additional contributors will be listed at the end.

The Economist, however, bylines nothing. Every article is by the Economist. The effect is that the entire magazine stands behind every word. There is no journalist to throw under the bus if something goes wrong– the masthead is accountable.

Cricinfo swings both ways. Usually, as with the Daniel Brettig articles above, they byline their articles. Occasionally, but not infrequently, they put out articles written by “ESPNCricinfo Staff”. Written by everybody and nobody.

Which is fine. Except that once in a while, a little opinion sneaks in to these “ESPNCricinfo Staff” News pieces. Which makes it all the more egregious– not only is this opinion disguising as fact, but the entire ESPNCricinfo organization is backing it up. It is, effectively, the masthead’s opinion.

Want an egregious example? Here you go.

The last four paragraphs are opinion. Lines like “You can feel the gravitas”, and “He flows like a becalmed river,” and “Perhaps in his mind there was no choice at that moment. He simply had to play it.”

Yet, there is no indication at all on this page whether this is a News article or Opinion. Worst of all, it’s attributed to “ESPNCricinfo Staff”. So all of Cricinfo can “feel” Laxman’s “gravitas”.

Independence

Most respectable news organizations structurally separate the News part of the company from the Editorial part of the company. The purpose is to reduce the influence of the editorial side of the house– the Opinions– on what is reported as news. The New York Times editorial board may prefer Barack Obama, and write Op-ed pieces in his support, but they have no influence over what news stories get reported. At Cricinfo, the same writers wear both hats, thereby reducing the trustworthiness of their own reporting.

Finally, there is the issue of conflict of interest. Kartikeya Date has done a tremendous job on this recently, so I won’t reiterate his points here. But the crux of my argument is that when you have opinion writers, you must detail their financial interests in the game.

Monopoly Opinion-maker Status

The reason all of this matters is that ESPN Cricinfo is slowly ascending in to monopoly opinion-maker status. What gets reported there, how it is reported, and how it is presented has the power to change perceptions. To change opinions. And thus change reality.

This is a great power. And as Spiderman said, when you run a monopoly news organization, you should pay strict attention to journalistic standards*.

* Peter Parker worked for Daily Bugle. Editor J. Jonah Jameson’s journalistic standards at Daily Bugle were appalling. What Spiderman really said was with great power comes great responsibility. Actually, his uncle said that. So scratch that last paragraph and replace with: “This is a great power. As Uncle Ben said, with great power yada yada yada.”

Random Internet Guy Names The Best Players in Indian History

It is common knowledge that if you want a definitive answer to difficult questions, Yahoo! Answers is the place to go.

With that in mind, I found someone who asked the following question:

Why didn’t players like Atul Bedade and Sadagoppan Ramesh play more matches for India?

To which a Yahoo! user named “Human” replied:

The best players India has produced till date are – Dodda Ganesh, Nilesh Kulkarni, Sadagopan Ramesh, Debang Gandhi, Nikhil Chopra, Amay Khurasia, Abhay Kuruvilla, Debasish Mohanthy, Thiru Kumaran, Hrishikesh Kanitkar, Vijay Bharadwaj, Shiv Sundar Das, Aakash Chopra, Saba Karim, Sunil Joshi and last but not least Ravindra Jadeja.

Well done, Human. Well done.

In other news, Deep Backward Point is the #5 link on Google for the search term “Atul Bedade”.