You Beautiful Thing

It has been said of the unseen army of the dead, on their everlasting march, that when they are passing a rural cricket ground, the Englishmen fall out of the ranks for a moment to lean over a gate and smile

Thursday, January 26, 2006

Slow - Part 2

By the time this month ends, Rahul Dravid will have played 9 tests against Pakistan in 22 months. You need to go really really far to figure out how long it has taken him to play his last 9 games for Karnataka. And that is easier than doing the same thing for Sachin Tendulkar for Mumbai. You can go further. So there you are, cut and dry, the reason our Ranji Trophy is dull, uncompetitive and, this year, somnolent, is because the stars don't play. Wrong. The reason the Ranji Trophy has been dead this year is that the teams are boring the daylights out of each other. When we were younger, we used to have a competition called slow cycling where you had to go from point A to point B as slowly as possible without putting your foot down or falling off the bike. That was a million times more interesting than the slow cricket we have had this year.

Just look at the scores: Gujarat have made 200 from 93 overs in response to which Mumbai galloped to 207 from 97. Maharashtra made 237 from 111.4 overs and in reply Railways were 98 for 5 in 54. Punjab made 316 in 136.4 overs and Andhra battled along to 185-2 from 76. Both Punjab and Gujarat batting first made less than 200 on day 1. Batsmen must be getting paid by the minute these days with points taken off for runs made! Witness this one for example, probably the saddest way to play a cricket match. Bengal play Gujarat and make 462 in 198 overs, thats over an hour into the third day of a four day match. Presumably they were hoping to knock them over twice in the remaining time, assuming they wanted a result, and, continuing in denial mode, Gujarat made 371 in 160 overs. Nobody got any points and it was the equivalent of shooing off a spectator who might have wandered close by. In fact Bengal must have thought they had done pretty well in terms of run-rate,having significantly improved it from their previous match against Karnataka when they managed 335 from 151 overs. Railways and Delhi went the other extreme, finishing off their game in two days with Railways batting first bowled out for 77; and when Delhi batted Murali Kartik took 8-40. It must have been some pitch there had it been visible.

It is only when you play positively on good pitches that you get good cricketers. There are two elements to developing quality teams: good pitches and positive cricket. By the look of it, it is a combination that is eluding us and the BCCI don't seem to have noticed it either for I havent heard anyone say that six rounds into this year's Ranji Trophy we have had some pathetic cricket. And as a continuation to my last post, Lakshmipathy Balaji hasn't been playing , and we have seen virtually nothing of VRV Singh either. Ashish Nehra has vanished and seriously Munaf Patel remains the only contender for a new ball bowler's slot. It begs a debate. It is not only good pitches that we need but good physios and trainers for Ranji Trophy teams as well.


PS: This post is produced by Harsha Bhogle

4 Comments:

At 4:13 PM, Blogger educatedunemployed said...

Very very depressed..inspite of knowing the inevitable..:(

 
At 10:39 PM, Blogger Y said...

Me too <:((

 
At 2:26 PM, Blogger educatedunemployed said...

This is not going to get any better?

 
At 6:38 PM, Blogger educatedunemployed said...

You have to read the post on form is temporary class is permanent...well if u ever get the time.Its on isbglorydays.blogspot.com

 

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