Time for India to look towards the future

December 18, 2012
kohli

Nagpur, December 18: Mahendra Singh Dhoni wore a distant look while revealing his thoughts on India’s home series defeat against England. “There are not many things that will come close to the 2007 50-over World Cup loss. This is not even close to that.” In his words, there wasn’t a hint of hurt that usually accompanies such crushing defeats, especially at home.

Perhaps, Dhoni’s comments stemmed from his belief that the 2-1 defeat was an aberration. But this series, alarmingly, pointed to a different direction. India hadn’t lost a Test series on their soil for nearly a decade, and England shattered that proud record, in the process also exposing India’s lack of desire, preparation and willingness to adapt when the opponent came strongly at them.

In a strange way, the beginning of this traumatic effort by the Indians may have started in their minds itself. After the a 4-0 bashing by Australia earlier this year, Gautam Gambhir stressed on the need to prepare rank turners when teams like England and the Aussies visit India. Since then, almost every Indian player has repeated that phrase, and believed a spin-friendly pitch is the best way to take ‘revenge’ upon their tormentors.

First came England. Emphatically, we denied the visitors practice against spin in the three tour games, making them play against a few junior spinners. All England had then was artificial roughened up mats that Graham Gooch and Andy Flower used in their nets to simulate spin.

So, the first step in the conquer-England-at-home mission had been taken. But amidst all those grandstand schemes, Indians had forgotten to look at their own shortcomings.

The opening combination has been in a shambles for nearly two years, a champion batsman is set to walk into sun set sooner than later and there is no right replacement for him, and the bowling cupboard – pace and spin alike – looks almost empty, and of course, the retirement of two legends’ has left a huge void in the middle-order, and their replacements, however talented they are, need time to settle down in top-flight cricket.

But Indians were least bothered by those facts, and continued to believe in their supremacy on doctored pitches. One bad session England had at Ahmedabad also fed their conviction about their invincibility, and in sports, such notions often lead to perdition. While the Englishmen continued to work hard at the nets, the Indians preferred ‘optional nets’ even a day before a Test match.

That lack of preparation was quite evident in Mumbai when English spinners, especially Monty Panesar, harrowed them. They weren’t up to the mark when Panesar spun the ball around them in the mid-90 kmph, and it was quite a muddling sight to see them hopping and edging around against a type of bowler they should have dominated with ease.

Everything in Mumbai was in India’s favour – pitch, toss and even runs in the first innings, a 300-plus total to be precise. Still they slipped into a defeat, and you would naturally expect an effort to deal with the situation. There wasn’t any. Dhoni kept on insisting on the need for more such pitches to suit India’s game plan, revealing the state of denial in which the Indians have been inhabiting for a while now.

What Indians need to do now is to look in the mirror and accept that they have become — an ordinary Test side. They perforce have to look at the positives such as the form showed by Cheteshwer Pujara and Virat Kohli (in the final Test), and realise that the time has come to move forward rather than falling back upon past records. Just that they need to have the courage for an honest introspection!



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News Network
March 4,2020

Mar 4: The BCCI has decided to implement strict cost cutting measures with the notable decision being IPL 2020 champions' prize money will be halved as compared to 2019. In a circular sent to all IPL franchises, the BCCI has notified that instead of a whopping Rs 20 crore, the IPL champion team will now receive Rs 10 crore only. "The financial rewards have been reworked as a part of the cost cutting measures. The champions will get Rs 10 crore instead of Rs 20 crore. The runners-up will get Rs 6.25 crore from earlier Rs 12.5 crore," a BCCI notification, in possession of news agency, read.

The two losing qualifiers will now get Rs 4.375 crore each.

"The franchises are all in good health. They also have multiple ways like sponsorships to bolster their income. Hence the decision on prize money taken," a senior BCCI source said.

However, a state association hosting IPL games will get Rs 1 crore each with franchises and BCCI contributing Rs 50 lakh each.

It has also been learnt that mid-level BCCI employees won't be allowed to avail business class flights like earlier times for flying to the Asian countries (Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, UAE) where the flying time is less than eight hours.

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News Network
July 26,2020

Chennai, Jul 26: Indian Grandmaster Viswanathan Anand suffered his fifth straight defeat in the USD 150,000 Legends of Chess online tournament, going down 2-3 to Peter Leko of Hungry.

The former world champion got off to a good start and won the first game of the best-of-four contest. The next two games were drawn before Leko levelled by winning the fourth.

The Hungarian then claimed the Armageddon (a tie-breaker) to ensure Anand remain winless and at the bottom of the points table.

Anand, who is making his maiden appearance on the Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour, had earlier lost to Peter Svidler, Magnus Carlsen, Vladimir Kramnik and Anish Giri.

World no. 1 Carlsen bounced back strongly to avoid an upset, beating veteran Vasyl Ivanchuk 3-2 to stay on top.

Legends of Chess is a unique event where Carlsen, Liren, Nepomniachtchi and Giri, semifinalists at the Chessable Masters (part of the Magnus Carlsen Tour), received an automatic invite and are up against six legends aged 40-52, who have been at the top of world chess at various points in their career.

The tournament is part of the Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour. The winner of this event will qualify for the USD 300,000 Grand Final scheduled from August 9 to 20.

Results of Round 5: Peter Leko beat Viswanathan Anand 3-2; Magnus Carlsen beat Vasyl Ivanchuk 3-2: Vladmir Kramnik beat Ding Liren 2.5-1.5; Anish Giri beat Boris Gelfand 2.5-1.5; Ian Nepominiachtchi beat Peter Svidler 3-1. 

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News Network
January 6,2020

Jan 6: Former India opener Kris Srikkanth on Sunday said he would prefer K L Rahul over Shikhar Dhawan in the T20 World Cup later this year.

Former India opener Kris Srikkanth on Sunday said he would prefer K L Rahul over Shikhar Dhawan in the T20 World Cup later this year.

Dhawan is returning to international cricket after a long gap. During the senior left-handed batsman's absence, Rahul has emerged as one of the top contenders for the opener's slot in limited-overs cricket.

"Runs against SL (Sri Lanka) don't count. If I was chairman of selectors, I won't pick Dhawan in the T20 WC squad. There is no competition between him and Rahul. Only one winner," Srikkanth said on Star Sports.

Before the series, the 34-year-old Dhawan said that he is looking forward to a "new start" in a new year and wants to win the World Cup for India.

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