Tuesday, September 25, 2007
For 0.42 seconds... I swear the heart stood still
The final of the Twenty 20 world cup. And the world got its cup of emotions filled to the brim. As far as the subcontinent was concerned, the cup overflowed. What a match! What an unbelievably brilliant cliffhanger. You couldn’t have asked for a better ending to a tournament, written off as ‘circus cricket’ by pundits, which had captured the heart of all its viewers. In a packed canteen, with more than 300 pairs of eyes riveted on the huge projector, and the sweat flowing free, I realized what being ‘drained of all emotion’ truly meant (no indirect reference to the sweaty masses here).
17th over. Harbhajan Singh.
18th over. Sreesanth. 2 effortless sixes by the no. 9 batsman. 2 more steps towards the cup. 2 more cracks in
19th over. RP Singh. The bowler of the tournament (Lefty’s modest opinion). Overshadowed by Irfan Pathan in the final, but nevertheless the bowler who delivered under pressure. 20 to win. A score for the Score. And yet again, with a billion hopes weighing upon his young shoulders, the young gun delivered, 18.4 ball. The stumps knocked down and Umar Gul walked back. 9 wickets down now. 1 more and the match would be ours. Asif faced the last ball with the sole aim of surviving it. The result was more than he could have asked for. An edge to the boundary, leaving
20th over. Joginder Sharma. Wide on the first ball. 12 to win. 2 a ball. Next one fully tossed. Misbah charged down the pitch and sent the ball to the hysteric crowd. A billion hopes had fallen now. The canteen stood still. Horrified looks everywhere, the famed 300 stunned to numbness. This couldn’t be happening. But after all, the valiant Spartans had also lost. Only 6 to win off the last 5 balls.
20.2 ball. Full. The shot pre-decided. Skillfully skied toward fine leg. And as it began its ascent to the heavens, my heart rose, stopped and a chill of dread engulfed me. These shots are generally sixes, if not fours. The background of the white version of the cherry changed rapidly. 0.42 seconds. The sky… The grandstand… The crowd… and then… Sreesanth. The ball had not yet reached the safety of his cupped hands before the 300 came alive. Before a billion burst into celebration. Before the young Team
Jeet gaye.
The other rooms didn't have huge screens. Observe the benefits of the urban retreat
@Rapu
0.42 is 0.4188 rounded off
@Srishti
Thanku thanku
@Mamma
You should start watching more matches. We need more victories. And the wicket fell in the 3rd ball.
I'll reply with an equally random, though ubiquitous answer- Thanks so much.
Btw, you're Srishti's friend from LSR right?
@Mamma
I know. Both the no ball thing and the limited knowledge part.
even we saw the last over of the match, 60 berserk students watching it on one TV which was behind a grill in an actually long lost town of Phalodi...and the reaction was the same.
Even you're here now? Welcome to the blogosphere.
And Phulwadi. That sounds like it might beat dear old R in the long lost town competition.
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