Archive for the ‘IPL’ Category

IPL Auctions 2011: The Right Decision By Kumble

Posted: January 4, 2011 by The CouchExpert in Cricket, IPL

Goutham Chakravarthi

Bangalore

4 January 2011

A sportsman’s shelf life is only so much. The travel and time away from family does take its toll, but as all sportsmen will tell you, they miss the mateship and competitiveness and the sense of battle and accomplishment on a daily basis is hard to replace. A void so deep that it lures many back into the game as experts, administrators, selectors, mentors, coaches, umpires ad referees. And some as players again in the IPL.

Anil Kumble’s decision to stand down from the IPL auctions is most welcome in that regard. When he did show the inclination of playing this season I was vocal in disagreement on some forums. He was already the chairman of the National Cricket Academy and also the president of his home cricket association – Karnataka State Cricket Association (KSCA). Continuing to be an active player after all that seemed to be complicating matters. Also, there was always the danger of him not being picked in the Royal Challengers’ squad the moment he was not retained by the franchise. Even if he was picked, he might not have been its leader considering his age and other commitments.

If anything, it would throw up unnecessary situation of him perhaps potentially not being the leader and therefore not even in the playing eleven. As the president of the KSCA that would perhaps make the younger local players not know how to deal with the situation – of having to take sides involuntarily.

With him having volunteered to mentor the youngsters at the NCA and as its chairman, he had clearly moved on as a person. Then he ran for office for his home cricket association. Countless days were spent speaking to the stake holders and the district associations in convincing them of his vision for Karnataka cricket. A clean sweep at the elections showed that people were tired of the ones running its cricket and their belief in him and his team.

His willingness to choose administration where many cricketers have tried and failed impressed the keen followers of Indian cricket. As impressive also have been the measures his team has laid out already. Among the many things that annoy locals about administrators is when people get elected time and gain and do nothing time and again.

Accountability isn’t much of thing with our administrators. Karnataka’s cricket has taken a beating from the highs of the mid-nineties. Among those proposed by his leadership is a cap on the maximum terms one can serve at the office: two. For long, it has been the bane of all sports administration in this country. This might pave the way for cricketers getting into administration. Rahul Dravid is expected to get into administration once he is done with cricket.

When Brijesh Patel and a set of cricketers took office at the KSCA back in ’96, similar expectation and the hope of change lingered. After a promising start, the inevitable daily petty challenges that administrators have to face took its toll and they became just another set of blokes who couldn’t be the change. Kumble, with his stature could have chosen far easier and more lucrative positions. That he has chosen to run office for his home state is typical of the man wanting to be associated with the game for all the right reasons.

The reasons behind Kumble opting out of the IPL auctions might be more than a clash with business commitments. In a world where excellence is a quick-fire 50 in a Twenty20 game, Kumble stands for it with deeds spanning close to two decades. Now, he pursues challenging tasks as an administrator of a state with its cricket in decline, as a chairman of young boys in the academy confused between the honour of Test cricket and the glamour of IPL. Now, as the chief mentor of Royal Challengers, he has made another impressive decision.

Many an administrator has failed duty. Many an ex-Indian cricketer has attempted and failed at administration. Kumble may or may not achieve everything he sets out to achieve, but it is the step in the right direction. Opting out of IPL auction is not a step backwards. He has moved on as a person. We won’t see him again on the cricket pitch. But, all for the betterment of the game.

Alas, the same cannot be said of Brian Lara.

Go RCB

Posted: December 30, 2010 by The CouchExpert in Cricket, IPL

Hemanth Mahadevaiah

My couch, Hamden, CT

12 March 2010

 

I miss the roar that I heard in Bangalore..
Bang bang bang, it was fun galore.

We all were possessive of a name called RCB..
For Dr.Mallya gave us a second distillery.

Still we went hammer and tong..
As Shewag tonked us long, long, long.

It was not all just bat and ball..
Kat also joined us in the interval.

With kat and khan the stars were in ground..
There was no dreath of drama when Sree was in town.

Roar, roar, roar, we all had to soar..
For cheering was taken care by the foreign imports.

India’s favourite league is back in town..
Shun the couch and catch the action in the crowd..

Bring it on, become a Couchexpert

Posted: December 30, 2010 by The CouchExpert in IPL

Hemanth Mahadevaiah

My couch, Hamden, CT

11 March 2010

 

This is my first write-up as a true CouchExpert, for I always felt like one. I always had strong views on how and why things are as they are in sports and cricket in particular.

I also have my opinion on why one can be a Couchexpert:

1) You are a couch expert if you think the best of strategies are discussed on the couch and not in the field.
2) You are a couch expert even if you have retired to the couch and cannot play the game anymore.
3) You are a couch expert if you feel tennis ball cricket never got the recognition that it always deserved.
4) You are a couch expert if you have pounded your keyboards many times taking your frustration out in various forums and blogs you write in.

If any of these sounds familiar, you are an expert like me.

Have we not felt we are a better post match analyser of the game than the Shastris and Gavaskars? We can always get as funny as David Lloyds or Boycotts in critisism, and we have as strong an opinion as Peter Roebucks or Ayaz Memons do. Yes we do!

Since we are at the door steps of India’s favourite league, I’d like to share my expert views on who can win the tournament.

The first season was won by a team that was least fancied, bought for the least amount. They not just won the cup, but went about decimating other teams. The second season saw two finalists who were the bottom most rankers in the first season, and won by the lowest ranked team. It’s that funny for it’s T20 for you.

For me, any team that garners a winning momentum in the second half of the tournament can go on to win, no matter what their rank and how many games they have won thus far.

Note that KKR and MI have made some intelligent purchases this year, also they have some very strong domestic players in their rank – Pujara and Nayar heroes this time?

Also to watch out for are the ICL recruits – Vignesh, Iqbal Abdullah and Satish to make a mark, do watch out for these heroes from the rebel league!

Punjab, Bangalore and Royals have been unpredictable for they rely heavily on their big hitting stars – does Pathan, Watson, Marsh, Yuvi and Taylor sound too familiar? Not counting Kallis’s solidity which came to Bangalore’s rescue last time.

Superkings were super solid over the last 2 seasons, but failed at the last hurdle, will they be third time lucky? Or will it be Team Delhi with the strongest batting line-up to make the most of the batting paradises on offer in India? You never know!

In conclusion, I am a true expert and I know the game called 20-20. I’ll have my opinions and not any conclusion. IPL for me is to watch out for players and not for teams, for many players are capable of single handedly winning any match for thier team.