The Buzz

Botham helps Cameron connect

When the British Prime Minister is visiting India the best way to strike a chord is to talk cricket, the quintessentially English game that now has a distinctly Asian flavour

When the British Prime Minister is visiting India the best way to strike a chord is to talk cricket, the quintessentially English game that now has a distinctly Asian flavour. Addressing employees of a software firm in Bangalore, David Cameron connected by mentioning Ian Botham, whom he called his childhood idol. “Many of you in this room would have grown up revering Kapil Dev. I did the same with Ian Botham,” Cameron said. Then, possibly just to be safe, he mentioned the T word. “And Sachin Tendulkar, the Little Master, is so talented that wherever you’re from, you can’t help but admire him as he hits another century.”
And though the seat of cricket’s power has shifted, for all practical purposes, from Marylebone to Mumbai, George Osborne, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, showed his knowledge of the game’s nuances by quickly correcting an analogy. According to the Wall Street Journal, one business leader thanked Osborne for making his trip to India within 10 weeks of taking office, likening it to hitting a six in the first over of a Test. Osborne’s response was swift: “A batsman hitting a six in the first over of a Test isn’t likely to survive at the wicket for too long. I have every intention of staying the long haul.” He obviously isn’t a Sehwag fan.
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No blood or biography, says Tendulkar

Apparently the 37kg, metre square, 852-pages-edged-in-gold-leaf book on Sachin Tendulkar won’t contain any of the batsman’s blood after all, and it isn’t a biography either.

George Binoy
George Binoy
25-Feb-2013
“There is no truth in my blood being part of the book. The book is basically a photographic publication that celebrates my life and is not an autobiography or a biography," Tendulkar told Times of India. “I understand this information came out during the Test match. As I was focusing on the game, I only got to hear about it yesterday.”
The Guardian had quoted Karl Fowler, chief executive of the book’s publisher, Kraken Media, as saying that the “signature page will be mixed with Sachin's blood. It is what it is – you will have Sachin's blood on the page.”
However, Fowler reportedly told the Times of India that he had been “misunderstood”. "The Opus will not carry any blood as mentioned in the several articles/TV reports that have appeared over the last few days,” he said in a statement. “I believe that my thoughts on this have been misunderstood."
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How much would you pay for Tendulkar's blood?

How much would you be willing to cough up for a special edition of Sachin Tendulkar’s biography

George Binoy
George Binoy
25-Feb-2013
How much would you be willing to cough up for a special edition of Sachin Tendulkar’s biography? Before you decide on a figure, you should know that these particular books measure half a metre square, weigh 37kg, comprise 852 pages edged in gold leaf, one of which has been made with Tendulkar’s blood mixed into the pulp, and include unpublished family pictures and Tendulkar's thoughts about his career. They cost $75,000 each, and only ten copies are being printed, all of which have been pre-ordered.
"The signature page will be mixed with Sachin's blood – mixed into the paper pulp so it's a red resin. It is what it is – you will have Sachin's blood on the page," publisher Kraken Media's chief executive Karl Fowler told the Guardian. "It's not everyone's cup of tea, it's not to everyone's taste and some may think it's a bit weird. But the key thing here is that Sachin Tendulkar to millions of people is a religious icon. And we thought how, in a publishing form, can you get as close to your god as possible?"
And there’s more. The book will also contain Tendulkar’s DNA profile, obtained from a saliva sample, giving those who want to know a look at his “genetic makeup”.
There are around 1000 cheaper bloodless versions of the book as well, which will cost between $2000 and $3000, but will include the DNA profile.
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Hayden does his bit for the Tiwi Islands

Matthew Hayden fondness for the Tiwi Islands dates back to 2004, when Australia played Sri Lanka in a short Test series in Cairns and Darwin

Siddhartha Talya
Siddhartha Talya
25-Feb-2013
Matthew Hayden fondness for the Tiwi Islands dates back to 2004, when Australia played Sri Lanka in a short Test series in Cairns and Darwin. Now, after his retirement, he has chosen to devote his energies to promote development among the indigenous population there, using cricket as one of the means. "This project is really to facilitate what this wonderful group of people want to achieve in their own community," Hayden told The Weekend Australian. "It embraces all the facets of life which I think are important to a growing child. Sport and the great role it plays, understanding food and the importance of diet and also wellbeing and development through education, which creates self-esteem."
Hayden has visited the islands – just off the coast of Darwin – each year since 2004, and this time he has the company of Allan Border, Michael Kasprowicz and Andy Bichel, former Wallaby Matthew Burke, and 13 prominent corporate executives who have raised AU$200,000 between them for his project. There will be a cricket match on offer, between Hayden XI and Border XI, with an expected turnout of 1000 people, half the islands’ population.
The project also involves a sustainability program, involving planting fruit, vegetable and grain crops, as well as introducing poultry for consumption and sale across the islands.
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