Matches (14)
IPL (2)
WT20 Qualifier (4)
RHF Trophy (4)
NEP vs WI [A-Team] (2)
BAN v IND [W] (1)
PAK v WI [W] (1)

Long Stop

IPL's move is inevitable

It will be a little difficult to swallow at first

Suresh Menon
Suresh Menon
25-Feb-2013


It will be a little difficult to swallow at first. The players themselves have spoken about the confusion over ‘home and away’ matches. There is concern that crowds may not be as supportive of the city-teams when they move to play abroad. Experts on television have drawn derisive laughter over the question: ‘How do you expect a supporter in Yorkshire to get excited over a team from Chennai?’
But the fact is, Twenty20 and IPL are rewriting not just the rules of cricket, but carrying it forward into the new century.
Many years ago in an essay on the future of sport, I had written that international sport would break away from the narrow confines of nationalism, time and place. The example I gave then were the Olympic Games, which was an exercise in jingoism (the examples are too well known to bear repetition here), and thanks to the arrival of sponsors and professional athletes might soon become a set of competitions among corporate houses rather than countries. Coke and Pepsi and Adidas, and many such would be in the happy position of being able to call upon their players from across the world to participate in their colours.
This is already happening with Formula One. It is Ferrari versus McLaren versus Renault and so on. Drivers are professionals hired for their sporting prowess and not dependant on country of origin. It is Ferrari which wins, not Italy. The only concession to tradition is the playing of the national anthem, which, considering everything, is incongruous.
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No First Test Blues for aggressive India

Hamilton is important both for itself, and for what it says about the recent Indian teams

Suresh Menon
Suresh Menon
25-Feb-2013


Briefly, in the last two away series, in Sri Lanka and Australia, India seemed to revert to type as poor travellers, losing the opening Tests in Colombo and Melbourne respectively. By winning in Hamilton they have arrested that brief trend, and got back on track with their record in the five years before that where they won first Tests in Pakistan, Bangladesh, Zimbabwe and South Africa and drew the opener in Pakistan, West Indies, Bangladesh and England.
For decades, India suffered from the First Test Blues where, after losing the first Test they found it impossible to get back into the series. In this decade, they have reversed that record to a large extent, and shaken off their reputation as poor starters. Hamilton, therefore, is important both for itself, and for what it says about the recent Indian teams. Perhaps in the past, apart from the problems of acclimatisation, there was also the mindset which was happy to settle for a draw at best. Captains were reluctant to take risks, and in cricket, as in life, fortune tends to favour the brave.
MS Dhoni is an attacking captain, New Zealand have one of the weakest bowling attacks in international cricket while India have one of the strongest batting line-ups. If Hamilton is any indication, anything less than a 3-0 win for India would count as unsatisfactory. New Zealand's best bet is to prepare seaming tracks that suit their bowlers, and hope their batsmen fare better against India's medium-pacers.
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Twenty20 driving ODIs closer to extinction

The one-day series in New Zealand is testimony to the amazing pace at which this form has shed its complexity, rid itself of formula and arrived at a simplicity that might, in the end, bring about its own ruin

Suresh Menon
Suresh Menon
25-Feb-2013


The one-day series in New Zealand is testimony to the amazing pace at which this form has shed its complexity, rid itself of formula and arrived at a simplicity that might, in the end, bring about its own ruin. A couple of years ago, the complaint against the 50-over game was that it had become too predictable, with a beginning, middle and end that, like Greek drama, followed a pattern. The technical committee of the ICC then went about introducing some complexity - the revolving substitute, the Powerplay - which it hoped would shake the game up and make it more interesting.
However it is not legislation that is pushing one-day cricket now, but the influence of Twenty20 that is making it advance to the past. Rather abruptly, the game has been reduced to its simplest terms - hit into the stands. And the ease with which batsmen do this is making a mockery of tactics, field placings and bowling plans. There might be a shakeout soon enough, with bowlers righting the balance with something new - but history is against them. Bowlers haven’t had as much of an influence in the shorter game as they’ve had over Test cricket.
In a sense, this is going back to the future, at least where Indian cricket is concerned. In the 1970s, when India were reluctant players of the then new one-day format, batsmen played as if hitting sixes and boundaries was all that the game was about. Other countries had already worked out that singles were important, and by the 1980s, Bob Simpson, the Australian coach had demonstrated that reducing the number of dot balls was crucial. Slog overs were designated thus.
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The un-people of ICL

  Recently I found myself defending the principle of celebrating it, although I don’t think much of Valentine’s Day itself

Suresh Menon
Suresh Menon
25-Feb-2013

Anyone, anything to do with the ICL must be banned © Cricinfo Ltd
 
Recently I found myself defending the principle of celebrating it, although I don’t think much of Valentine’s Day itself. Likewise, without being a fan of the ICL or indeed Twenty20 cricket, I have been defending its right to exist without being harassed by the Indian cricket board. Fascism, in one form or another, makes extremists of us all!
If the Indian board had its way, it would, metaphorically speaking, dig a mass grave for the likes of Kapil Dev and anyone remotely connected with the ICL. Perhaps erase their impressive records from international cricket. Pretend they didn’t exist, make them un-people. How dare they take our copied idea and run with it originally? Anyone, anything to do with the ICL must be banned.
Grocers who supply the Kapil Dev household with their monthly foodstuff must be banned. Butchers who supply the meat must be asked to leave Delhi. Anyone seen saying ‘Hello’ to ICL players, from taxi drivers to bookshop owners to airline pilots, must have their licenses revoked. No one whose initials are ICL - Inderjit Chandra Loknath, for example, or Ian Carmichael Lewis - should be allowed to play for India, or get his meat from the same butcher as Kapil Dev.
Silly? Ridiculous? Perhaps. But not sillier or more ridiculous than the board getting all pompous and deciding that Sachin Tendulkar and Dinesh Karthik cannot play in a friendly Twenty20 game with a bunch of old timers just because a player involved, Hamish Marshall, once played in the ICL (he no longer does). What did the board achieve, apart from showing New Zealand Cricket who is boss (the cricket world knows that already), depriving the two Indians of some cricket, even if it is of the pointless Twenty20 variety, and robbing fans of the pleasure of watching them play?
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