Monday, March 18, 2019
The five day gift
Last summer, I took part in the
annual charity cricket tournament that our office organises. It was a
quintessential English corporate cricket event- whites were mandatory, we
played with a leather ball, no one could bowl more than an over each in five
over matches, we had sandwiches for lunch and scones for tea and to top it all,
every team had a pro in its ranks. We drew Chris Lewis, who most Indians of a
certain vintage would remember as the spearhead of the English attack during
the 1996 series when a certain Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid made their test
debuts. Devon Malcolm participated as well, he of the ‘you guys are history’
followed by the 9-57 demolition job fame.
The day was remarkable for the
American and European turnout that we saw. Young women and men, hitherto
strangers to terms like runs (one Swedish colleague kept calling them points),
wickets and overarm bowling donned their pads, swung their arms and kept wicket
with the best of us. Before the matches began, one such newbie said to me: ‘I’m
very excited about today. All I know of cricket is that it’s supposed to be
boring’. ‘Some people say that’, I admitted. ‘My own belief is that playing, or
even following cricket makes you a better human being’. And I’ll stand by that
belief forever.
I mean, Cricket is a sport that allows
you to bowl 3 overs for some 25-30 runs, take no wickets whatsoever yet
come back feeling on top of the world because within those 3 overs, you bowled
3 beauties. We reached the semi-finals which we spectacularly lost, I
uncharacteristically made a decent contribution with the bat- outscoring above
Chris Lewis in a 30 run partnership; and my shoulder and hamstring ached for
the rest of the week. We all had beer, made new friends, took lots of pictures and
made mostly unkept promises about playing cricket more often. On the same day,
Virat Kohli made his epic 149 at Edgbaston in a match which did much to typify
all that we love about the sport.
Cricket, particularly the long form, is setting an alarm for 5
am on a cold winter’s night to wake up in time for yet another Boxing Day
classic (and usually falling asleep over the lunch break to miss the second
session altogether). It is watching Shoaib Akhtar launch 2 successive missiles
to dismiss Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar, groaning and hearing the primal
bit of the heart guiltily say- can we have another of those please? It is the
better part of the Australian or English cricketing public watching Pujara step
out and kick Lyon’s beautifully flighted balls in as ungainly a manner as they
come and wishing for a Pujara of their own. It is the word riveting applied to
3 hours of play when the score has moved by 70 runs for 2 wickets and the
outcome of the match is as uncertain as it was 3 hours ago, with sharp intakes
of the breath following unplayable near misses and involuntary applause for a
perfectly executed drive being the only souvenirs to show for that passage of
play.
Cricket is the realisation that
while luck can give you an edge, the better team will nearly always prevail. Or
even more importantly, that you could be the better team but still not win due
to a momentous rear-guard effort or the intervention of the elements. And if
that is not one of the greatest life lessons, I am hard-pressed to think what
is. Unlike almost any other sport, test cricket does not need to end with a
winner and correspondingly, its unfairly and much maligned twin, a loser. I can
still recall Sue Barker saying to an inconsolable Andy Roddick at the end of the
2009 Wimbledon final: “… after a match like that, I just think this sport is
cruel sometimes.” Roddick got the cheers, the sympathy and the respect that may
suffice a lifetime for many but at the end of the day, cold-heated history
wrote him down as the man who lost
the 2009 final.
Sport serves two main obligations
to its audience: to inspire and to unite, and for the most part, cricket tends
to deliver on both. In the last few months alone, we have witnessed Kusal
Perera play perhaps the greatest innings every played in the game’s
well-decorated history. Watching him defy the fury that masquerades as Dale
Steyn, withstand the emerging force of Duanne Olivier and tame the beast called
Kagiso Rabada, we were all Sri Lankan. Miracles had been performed before: 153*
was already rife in the annals of test cricket as Lara’s personal signature.
281 is the name of the era that Rahul Bhattacharya proposed the most celebrated
of Indian cricket’s tenure be known as. But these had been performed by
super-humans who made quadruple and quintuple centuries when mortals dream of
the one and by magicians to whom the laws of nature, physics and Shane Warne
didn’t apply. This guy scripting history as no one imagined he would? Before
that day, he was the lesser Kusal to Mendis and probably the lesser Perera to
Thisara. Go figure.
In an alternate universe, Sachin
has caressed a straight drive off Akram to win Chennai in 1999, Lance Klusener has
dispatched the penultimate ball of Fleming’s over to the gap between gully and
point and Sourav Ganguly has decided to bat after winning the toss. While the
search for that universe continues, I can live in the one where the Eden
Gardens at Kolkata are more sacred than their biblical counterpart, where Gibbs
architects the space-age at the Wanderers and Dhoni launches a billion dreams over
long-on at the Wankhede.
And that is why Football may be
Bloody Hell but Cricket was surely Made in Heaven.
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