Sunday, December 29, 2013

Virus Installation Successful-Dale Styen

The  Indian Batsmen, who until landing in South Africa for the 2013 bilateral cricket series were rich & fat, both; in form & class need to be flatten at the initial round itself. Dale Styen began the campaign with an outstanding spell of fast & furious seam bowling to Rohit Sharma in the Johannesburg one dayer.

Rohit Sharma who landed in South Africa with a circle of cricketing excellence around him & prime form, struggled to connect a single delivery from Styen up until the 17th ball one which he edged. That hostile stuff from Styen has dented the confidence of Sharma and has shattered his batting skills to such an extent that he is found himself into a black hole of cricketing prodigy.

His dismissals in the recent Test innings has raised questions over his ability as a front line batsman in the team & that his exceptional debut century against the West Indies seems to be like a forgotten dream.

The need of an hour for South Africa was to install a self-doubting virus in the strong Indian batting line up. Styen with his fabulous seam bowling that not only has pace but also has vicious swing was able to grab his kill in those initial 17 balls to Sharma.

If weather permits the second & final Test match is slowly moving towards an anti-climax where each team has enough of a chance to get better over other. The question is which team takes that initiative and who chocks under pressure first.

Monday, December 16, 2013

Tame thy beast!

Whole of India, and it's numerous die-hard Cricket followers would stay awake and wish good luck to the national team that would take on mighty South Africa in their own backyard in the most anticipated test series of the season that begins on 18th of this month. They call it ‘entering the Lion’s den’ here. And never has Indians survived the brutal assault of the beast and have always returned gruesomely injured if not killed.
 
Dhoni and his warriors have already lost battle in the one dayers; dreadfully to be honest and the wounds have puke blood ferociously. The entry of young blokes into the national team, and since being inexperienced, is expected to continue bleeding during the war of test matches. Africans have, and wisely choose, the tallest amongst the tall lethal fast bowlers that can fright the opposition camp even before the battle begins. Although their batting line-up remains circumspect to post huge scores, but they would rely on the fact that Indians have carried a rigid pace bowlers in their camp.
 
Clearly the strength of Indian team lies in their batting, which in the last decade or so has been the reason behind their overseas success. Dhoni with all his experienced mind and cunning utilisation of resources would like to turn table on the African’s through shrewd yet hostile ways. The equation of ‘Win the toss and bat first’ would come-in handy since their lies the strength of Indians.
 
Open with Vijay (as he is the only option) alongside Dhawan; Pujara next followed by Rahane and the burden of scoring huge numbers to be carried by the young shoulders of Kohli and Sharma assisted by Dhoni and Ashwin in that order. Zaheer, Ishant and Yadav must accept the responsibility to bowl out the shaky batting line up one which Africa posses.
 
The encounter between Zaheer-Smith and Steyn-Sharma appear to bring crowds inside the stadiums in the sport savvy country of South Africa, while we would cheer for team India seating far away here in India. 
 
Although it appears tough but I would put my money on India’s win!

Sunday, December 15, 2013

My Guru – Vishwas Karulkar

I have been living a life of influence. All the decisions in my life so far have been affected directly or indirectly under an influence of a person or two. One such person who has directly strike imputes on my personality through enriching my thoughts is Late Mr. Vishwas Karulkar. He was in his retiring years when we came in contact of each other. He lived a simple yet fulfilling life that is reflected in strong bounds of his family and the circle of influence he was able to generate around his charming personality.

His two most out-spoken ideologies were ‘Self-appraisal’ and astute belief in ‘Dharma’. On the subject of religion he preached that the ‘Dharma’ is a theory that explains to an individual the ways to live human life. Do no harm; accept no harm were his two principles that were installed slowly but steadily in all his disciples. He devoted his entire life for the holy work of ‘Dharma’, which included the Godly work done by ‘Vishwa Hindu Parishad’ for the educational wellbeing of the deprived teenage children. Our annual share in this gigantic work was mere a monetary help that couldn’t even help an individual to buy a Burger in a multinational’s outlet. He gleefully accepted that without any complaint and always bowed for our contribution.

Throughout his life he advocated the importance of accepting the self with all the shortcomings and being loyal to once strengths. Being a simple man, his example too were lenient and one which we could easily relate with. To simplify the concept of self appraisal he utilised the example as follows. He would say “when we expect a guest in our house, we generally make our home appear beautiful. The corners are cleaned, the furniture and rubbed, the curtains are washed and the bed sheets that recline on our beds are colourful and new. On other days they are shoddy, shabby and are torn in places.” He continues “for the guest who visits our house once in his lifetime, we transform the appearance of our house to make him feel pleasant, while we spend our entire lives in an untidy, perhaps tattered condition in our own house. We do this as we think that we do not deserve to live in a better house.”

How else can one justify the reason behind an individual’s low self esteem in our society today?


The great soul passed away exactly two years ago on this day. I am and will always be loyal to the teachings of my Guru, Late Mr. Vishwas karulkar.

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Save a dime now, loose dollars later.

Wise man advises that 'if you are about to buy a shirt, you must always stretch your limits and reach deep in your pocket and spend a dollar extra and purchase a better brand'. Few days back we understood the rationale behind this holy message and chiseled the learning deep into our hearts.

In March this year we renovated our newly purchased flat. The colouring overshot the initial schedule by couple of months squeezing the already tight budget. We began to cut the corners on other least priority things. Electric wiring faced the initial jolt as we decided to ignore the expert advice and bought the cheap material for it. The electric boards hung attractively over the newly coloured walls and made there presence felt with switches that would glitter. We felt happy for 'saving a dime'.

Few months down, on an August rainy day,  the switches that glittered over one of the attractive electric board suddenly refused to obey our order and revolted by not allowing the fan, the tube light and the night lamp to function for us. This helpless situation attracted immediate attention and monetary means to attain resolution. This happened again in chilled December on another attractive board hallowing us with 'few more dollars'.

One cannot reap long-term rewards if the aspect of 'quality' is ignored either by choice or due to lack of foresight. The lesson is learnt once for all.

Monday, December 9, 2013

Quinton DeCock – Emergence of a quality batsman



In our age of Cricket, the cricketing prowess of a batsman is established by his hitting powers while the skills such as temperament, determination appear to have become a distant history. In such times of fast-food Cricket the heart of an ardent cricket fan that looks for quality softens a bit when he/she sees the emergence of a batsman who satisfies his inner thirst which defines the very purpose of his existence. The 20 year old South African wicketkeeper-batsman Quinton DeCock has acquired the focus of that keen follower who is craving to watch quality over quantity in this fast paced world.

DeCock’s recent centuries in the one day arena has proved that he posses those qualities required by a batsman to climb steep mountains in his international cricketing career. Couple of things that stand out in his batting are; a) his technique & b) his heart.

In the technical department DeCock has exhibited maturity above his age. The most difficult stroke to play technically is the cover drive that requires a fabulous hand-eye co-ordination besides a steady head and exceptional body position through nimble foot movement. In his short international career which span about a year or so, he has shown that he belongs to the class of Tendulkar and Richards while playing the cover drive. Also his wrist that generates enough power allowing the ball to gather momentum towards reaching boundary line has all but class written over it.

Although the inner mantle i.e. ‘Heart’, of DeCock is yet to be tested as the Indian bowling attack is not the one which can prove his competence in this area and also he needs to establish himself in test matches too. Still one can credit him for the matter that the South African team is going through a rough patch that has now lasted for more than a year and DeCock has answered all the critics in the best possible manner. 

Coming years would prove whether this little cricketer who has raised high hope in the mind of the astute cricket follower will acquire higher lengths in his cricketing career and while doing so would be a blessing for the cricketing fraternity itself, or else would be lost in the ‘speed of lightening’ like cricket played in his generation.

We await and wish Quinton DeCock to become and be known for the former.    

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Unwarranted Change

Back in 2004, when Irfan Pathan entered the International cricket arena, the entire Cricketing fraternity cheered as they saw in him a rebirth of ageing Wasim Akram. Irfan was deemed to be the incarnation of the master. He briefly lived to the expectations and performed exceptionally with the swinging ball as well as with the handy bat lower down. Irfan was India’s answer to world as a genuine fast bowler who would swing the cricket ball on will, left or right, with pace, during day or night, on hard or crunchy surfaces. One did felt that the next Kapil Dev, who can contribute to Indian cricket for years as an allrounder was unearthed.

The in-swinging yorker which uprooted Adam Gilchrist’s stumps in Irfan’s debut test played at Sydney has made a permanent place in the memory store of an ardent Indian cricket fan. Then came his magical first over hat-trick against Pakistan which demonstrated his control and command over the cricket ball. Meanwhile he gathered few important runs lower down and his crucial cameos did provide India some historic wins against better nations.

A lot changed for India during the regime of Coach Greg Chappell who believed in squeezing more out of every individual, sometimes more than he could offer. The ill-effects of Chappell’s theory deteriorated the Indian team and hung the cricketing careers of some exceptionally talented blokes in jeopardy. Ganguly resisted. He was shown the door soon. Dravid followed coach’s advice; reluctantly. Irfan’s performance took a toll as he was burdened with batting responsibility up in the batting order, a load which his shoulders could not sustain long enough. Step by step his performance with the ball began the troublesome march towards south. Soon it reached the tip and the name of Irfan Pathan, who was here to entertain Indian fans with his magical swinging deliveries that lured the batsmen to drive only to fall in his trap, vanished away.

A seed that was supposed to become a giant tree in years to come was destroyed by the infertility of the soil around. A change in action, a drop in pace, teachings from Wasim Akram and the TV serial entry which broke his Cricketing focus did not help him either. The injuries kept following that worsen the matter. The Cricketer who was destined to become Great; one who had the ability to become ‘The Best’; slowly and steadily was put to disturbing Rest.

Irfan Pathan lost his focus on the thing which he could do best, i.e. swing the leather ball at pace, and didn’t resist the outside forces that damaged his entire career. The Indian Cricket fan has sobbed during many restless nights while this all was happening.

Have we learned anything at the cost of an exceptional talent?