Little master turns twenty when Indians take on Lankans!!

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The title will not puzzle cricket fans around the world as everyone will be aware of what it means. The title will not puzzle even those people who are not cricket fans but watch Tendulkar play cricket. Yes we don’t have to be a cricket fan to admire the artwork that Tendulkar employs when he steps in the 22 yards. I don’t believe there is any other category exist other than the cricket fans and non-cricket fans, but still as a title it demands explanation.

“Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar, famously known as Little Master, joins the list of 15 other players whose international careers have spanned for more than 20 years”. This is the message!!

Cricket is a beautiful game not because everyone loves it, but because of the flavor of its own. You need to be an artist to score runs. With the advent of twenty-twenty format, cricket has become more of power hitting game. But the fact is otherwise. Can any one of us forget the knock of 175 by Tendulkar against Australia in the recently concluded one day series?? Will any one of us say that knock as a power hitting or slogging?? . If we have to seek explanation for the definition of cricket, we have to watch that knock of artistry!!

More than a cricketer, Sachin is a gentle man.

He had his tough times but showed right spirit even in trying circumstances. He said “People threw stones at me, but I have converted it into milestones”.

Such is the character of this great man. I am not saying he is the greatest of all, but he is one of those characters which we can look upon for emulation.

Records are meant to be broken and little master is doing exactly that!

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Who writes your script?

“Who writes your script?”, Graham Gooch had asked about Ian Botham, way back in 1986.

Fast forward to 2009, and the eternal scriptwriter sitting up there has written another improbable one.

Two countries, torn by internal conflicts and ethnic strife. One country facing a virtual seige by other cricket playing countries due to safety reasons, the other country empathising and agreeing to undertake a tour, and mid-way through the tour, their team bus gets attacked by terrorists!

Months later, these countries playing in a World Cup final!

How much more poetic can you get?

Congratulations, Younus Khan and Kumara Sangakkara, for the lovely game of cricket and for the spirit in which it was played considering the recent history.

A lot of us (myself included, I must confess) had not counted on Pakistan and Sri Lanka contesting the finals. But then, were we wrong? In the short history of this format of the game, these are the two best countries. After all, a 77% W/L record for Pakistan and a 70% W/L record for SL is not something to be sneezed at, is it?

Compare that to India. Notwithstanding our last championship win, we just have a 56% W/L record, and are 5th in the placings. (Count that 4th, because Netherlands with 3 wins out of 5 are statistically above us).

And yet; we eat, drink, sleep and dream only cricket.

An indication of this – on the day when the T20 World Cup final took place, another momentous event in Indian sport unfolded on the other side of the world. Saina Nehwal won the Indonesian Open Super Series badminton title beating the World No.3 in the final. Saina herself is ranked 8, and aims to be in the top 5 by the end of this year.

Here’s a little analysis of the coverage given to each event by 3 major English broadsheet dailies in Mumbai.

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Look at that – an Indian winning a major sport played across the world had much lesser coverage than a sport played by a handful of countries, and where India was already out.

I wish I could do a comparison of TV channels too, simply because I flipped through news channels for about 45 minutes this morning, and could find news coverage, scrollers etc. repeating T20 ad nauseum, but not a single mention of Saina Nehwal’s victory.

We keep mentioning about how we need to promote sports other than cricket, but when it comes to practicing what one preaches, it is obvious that TV channels and mainstream English dailies (with the exception of DNA) are way behind.

Apart from a Paes, Bhupathi, Sania and Anand, it is rare to see a mention of any sportsperson other than a cricketer. And that was also after they became too big to be ignored.

We write in salacious details about Dhoni’s and Yuvraj’s love lives, but we are mum when it comes to the sporting achievements of champions in other sports. Net result – most people would not even know the names of sportsmen who have brought laurels to the country in their sports.

Don’t believe me? Here’s a test. I am mentioning the names of 29 Indian sportspersons who are champions at their respective sports. Let’s see how many can you guess?

Abhinav Bindra, Akhil Kumar, Al Lakra, Anjali Bhagwat, Anju Bobby George, Anwar Sultan, Armaan Ebrahim, Dinesh Kumar, Jaspal Rana, Jayanta Talukdar, Jitender Kumar, Karan Malik, Koneru Humpy, Limba Ram (he lives in a garage today), Mahesh Chandran Panchanathan, Manavjit Singh, Mangal Singh Champia, Mansher Singh, Mary Kom, P Harikrishna, Parimarjan Negi, Parthiva Sureshwaren, Rahul Banerjee, Ravi Dixit, Sandipan Chanda, Saurav Ghosal, Suranjoy Singh, Tania Sachdev, Vijender Singh

I rest my case. Thank You.

The author of this post is Mubin Khan who writes regularly at http://mubinsmusings.blogspot.com/ (Please keep visiting this site for more such interesting posts)

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