Deep Backward Point

Blog against the machine.

Tag: Cricket

Zaltz

Andy Zaltzman is back blogging after a month of cricket detoxification:

In an effort to make the pre-Twenty20 era of cricket retrospectively more exciting, the IPL is being officially backdated. The 1976 IPL has been won by the now defunct Visakhapatnam Visigoths, led by Indian Test legend Gundappa Viswanath and part-owned by legendary film director Satyajit Ray and Scottish pop stars the Bay City Rollers. In a tense final in Madras, they defeated the Delhi Daredevils, for whom Geoff Boycott scored an undefeated 23 off 65 balls as his team narrowly failed to chase down the Visigoths’ total of 93 for 4, an imposing total for the time. The losing semi-finalists were the Punjab Pranksters and the Chennai Benevolent Dictators, later rebranded as the Super Kings.

IPL: 100% Recycled Material, Dispose Without Guilt

Tariq Engineer reports for Cricinfo:

[A] cumulative total of 146.4 million viewers have watched all the games so far, a number that exceeds the 143.7 million that saw the entire 2010 season (60 games). This suggests that while the IPL continues to attract new fans, they are watching each game for shorter periods.

Two reasons come to mind:

  1. If you train your audience to respond only to the thrills, and not the sport, then sooner or later they will only tune in for the thrills. The IPL becomes one of the many programs to channel-surf through, between musical reality show #31 and political shouting match #33.
  2. Even in this short, thrilling format, most games are one-sided and decided early.
Of course, there’s always the possibility that audiences are just suffering from cricket or IPL fatigue.

The Kirsten Era: In Numbers

The Duncan Fletcher era is upon us. The Gary Kirsten era in Indian cricket has been quite something to watch. Especially when coupled with Mahendra Singh Dhoni. Here are some highlights, as I’ve been combing through the statistics of the past few years:

Test record:

  • India played 33 tests under Kirsten, won 16, lost 6, drawn 11.
  • In the previous 3 years, India won 11, lost 6 drawn 13.
  • Basically, India learned how to convert potential draws to wins. What Australia learned under Steve Waugh.
  • At home: 10 wins, 2 losses, 7 draws. Away: 6 wins, 4 losses, 4 draws.
  • Sri Lanka and South Africa are the only test teams to have beaten India in the Kirsten era.
  • Only 1 out of 12 series was lost (Sri Lanka in ’08). No test series have been lost under Dhoni.
  • In the previous 3 years, 3 out of 11 series were lost.

One Day record:

  • India played 93 ODIs under Kirsten, won 59, lost 29 and tied 1.
  • In the previous 3 years, India won 48 and lost 42. The win percentage has gone up dramatically.
  • India won 14 out of 21 ODI series, including the World Cup.
  • Home: 24 wins, 7 losses, 1 tied. Away: 35 wins, 22 losses.
  • In the previous 3 years, India lost more away ODIs than they won. This is where their improvement has been most obvious.
In a way, this is merely a continuation of the 21st century revolution.

The Objective of Playing in the IPL

Ducking Beamers asks: what is the objective of a domestic player in the IPL?

But does it ever really translate into something more meaningful for these players? [..] Is it worth it for most of these players? Look at the top run getters and wicket-takers of 2009 — not many no-names there. A cursory look at the other seasons shows the same trends — a few low-fame players (Vinay Kumar, N. Ohja, A.T. Rayadu) — but not much else.

So, what is the objective?

Short answer: to increase your salary next year.

Long answer:

  • There’s an off chance they make it to the internationals.
  • They make a considerable amount of money.
  • It’s not like they don’t contribute to a win, just because they don’t figure in the top 10 wickets/runs. Just take a look at today’s RCB v. DD match: Ojha, Rao, Mithun, Mohammed all played significant roles. And that’s where it gets interesting– if they do well this year, even if they don’t get selected for India, their IPL salary next year will go up considerably.

In fact, I would argue that in a tournament like the IPL where there is no real allegiance to the team, the goal of every single player is to be worth more next year.

How the IPL Helps the International Game

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Image by Dhammika Heenpella / Images of Sri Lanka via Flickr

Malinga on his return to the international game in 2009:

“Because of the IPL I got a chance to come back to the national team,” he said at a media conference in Colombo. “After the injury nobody looked after me and I was not offered a contract. But thanks to the IPL I didn’t lose anything but I improved my cricket a lot. I’m saddened the way I was treated but not disappointed.”

The IPL takes a lot of heat for ruining the international game. Malinga’s retirement has been held up as an example of everything that’s wrong with the IPL, but without the IPL he may not have had a career to retire from.

Yorkshire v. England

David Hopps on Yorkshire:

One of the oddities of English cricketing life is the underlying hostility felt towards the national team from a section of the Yorkshire cricket-loving public. The assumption is that supporting England is somehow not entirely wholesome, and is likely to be followed by other errors of life such as marrying someone from Kent and buying a four-bedroom detached in Tunbridge Wells.

Any guesses why:

  1. Yorkshire is my favorite county cricket team?
  2. Tunbridge Wells cricket ground has a mythical quality?
Hint: The answers to these questions had a batting partnership mentioned in this blog post.

ODIs Don’t Matter

King Cricket makes an honorable editorial decision:

Between squad rotation, experimentation, dead rubbers and lack of interest from fans and players, we no longer see the average ODI as being an international cricket fixture. Writing about them as such maintains the illusion and amounts to tacit acceptance of scheduling that we believe is wrong. [..]

It’s not that we’ll ignore ODIs. It’s just that they don’t matter. If there is a one-day series before a Test series, it helps build the narrative for the matches that do matter – the Tests. Those ODIs have merit in that they support the Tests, setting the scene, providing intrigue. They are like warm-up matches. That’s how we’ll treat them.

While I won’t go quite as far as them, I believe it’s an excellent rule-of-thumb. This coming from the guy who just wrote a few blog posts about the IPL. I’m sorry.

How to Become an IPL Team Fan in Four Easy Steps

Ducking Beamers* wonders how to become a fan of an IPL team– the teams changed drastically year-over-year, there are only weak city-based ties and some teams are just plain bad:

This is my major problem with the IPL: why should I support one franchise over another?

In my opinion, it’s easy to pick a team. Here are my steps:

  • STEP #1: Never root against Sachin Tendulkar.
  • STEP #2: Make a list of all the players you love to watch. It doesn’t matter why you love to watch them. Maybe they swear a lot. Maybe they are good-looking. Maybe they slapped a player you hate. Maybe they actually play decent cricket. It does not matter. This is the IPL; the Filmfare Awards of cricket. It’s your license to be absurd.
  • STEP #3: Remove all the bowlers from your list. IPL is a batsman’s game. Nobody likes watching the bowlers. Nobody.
  • STEP #4: Find the team that has the most players on your list. The IPL is a cult-of-personality event, treat it as such. For me, that team is Kolkata Knight Riders, because it has Shakib, Eoin, tenDo and Yusuf. Kallis and Gambhir are just icing on the cake.

Now you have a team to root for! Wasn’t that easy?

And remember: the IPL is a Twenty20 tournament. Twenty20 is a fickle format, so be a fickle fan. If your team starts to falter, shift your allegiance to a team that actually plays well.

But until you know which team is playing well this year, my four-step program is fool-proof!

* I make it a point to attribute links to the individual who wrote the article, not their institution or company or blog (e.g. Bhogle instead of Cricinfo, Jarrod instead of Cricket with Balls, etc.). Ducking Beamers is not the name of a person, as far as I know. But I don’t know his real name.

The Day I Was Dhoni

The year was 1996. Sachin Tendulkar was already a legend. Mahendra Singh Dhoni was not even a ticket collector. The school Sports Day was approaching. There was only one question on everyone’s mind:

Would Vinay House remain the laughing stock of the school?

Let’s back up for a second.

Now that Harry Potter has taken over the world, even the gringos are probably familiar with the “house” system that divides schools across the commonwealth into groups that compete in everything from football to quiz competitions.

I wish I could tell you that my house– the mauve hued Vinay House– was the Gryffindor of our school. Frankly, I would have settled for Ravenclaw.

No, sadly, we were the Hufflepuff of our school. We were the nice guys who finished last. You know all the kids Grace said adored Ferris Bueller? Yeah, they were in Vinay House.

Enough with the pop culture analogies. For now.

Sports Day began with each house marching past the flag, the audience and the chief guest. The chief guest would be some local politician, or local sports star (Kiran More!), or, one time, when the real celeb canceled, it was my father. No, my father is not famous, unless you are a cancer cell. In which case, you’d know him like assassination-victims knew Jason Bourne.

Vinay House would march past doing a Three Stooges routine, followed by the rest of the houses in perfect rhythm to the drum beat. This would be followed by a few track and field events, the final tally of the points and the chief guest would hand out the trophies.

Yes, my father once handed me a trophy in front of the entire school. It was awkward.

Before we got to this day, every sporting event had to be complete, the scores tallied, the points allotted. Which brings us to the fateful cricket match.

Vinay House had already lost their first game, and were now in a battle for 3rd place. I was in the team. I was neither a bowler, nor a batsman, a sort of Darren Sammy without the captaincy. I came in at #10, with eight wickets down and some 12 runs yet to be chased.

And then we lost the 9th wicket. At #11, in walked a friend I had known for ten years, and neither of us were what you could call a Kevin O’Brien with the bat. Or even a Rizwan Cheema. Or even a Venkatpathy Raju.

It came down to the last few balls. I was on strike. 4-ish runs remained. One wicket in hand. One of my closest friends was bowling.

The ball was straight, and a little short, and I swung my Slazenger.

Let’s back up for a second.

Ok, sorry, let’s not.

Me "playing" cricket

Me "playing" cricket

I swung my Slazenger and the ball flew over Long On as the crowd rushed in. Six runs. Vinay House was not #4. On that day, at least.

Very quickly I was surrounded by my closest friends.

I did it for Sachin.

No, not really. Though I would have if he’d asked.

Notes:

  • The bowler and I are still close friends. Not sure if you could say the same about Dhoni and Nuwan Kulasekara.
  • One of the people who surrounded me after I hit that six is now my wife.
  • After that day, I announced my retirement from cricket. It was time to let in a new generation.
  • Also, they didn’t select me for the team the next year. So in a sense, you could say I also pulled a Ponting. “You can’t fire me, I quit!”

The Last Auction

Harsha Bhogle on the IPL auction:

For all the drama, I hope this is the last auction.

So do I.