Saturday, June 07, 2008

IPL

I distinctly remember that morning. I opened the news-paper and read that Juhi Chawla, among others, was buying her own cricket team! Cricket, for me, died that a.m.

What the hell was wrong with the world? Why was a Kurkure-salesman buying a cricket team? And she probably spelt the game with a K! The ball had begun hurtling down the slippery-slope. Soon there was talk of million-dollar salaries being offered. That’s when I realized what IPL stood for. International Prostitutes’ League.

With each passing day, I saw with dismay how the sports-writers/television anchors/media-pundits were going into frequent orgasmic frenzies, talking (very infrequently) about how this would help the game, and frothing (very frequently) about the money being spent! And all this, in our typical way, was in some perverse fashion an indicator of India’s coming of age. The new India!!! A resurgent world-conqueror (who’d stay benign, nevertheless) who was on the march. An irresistible march. And I was reminded of the old Confucian saying, ‘Thumping chests makes ribs crack!’

And then the big stars entered the league. A pseudo-playboy who makes money out of selling hooch; a superstar whose gamut of expressions runs from A to B; a billionaire whose broad shoulders carry the mantle of Corporate-India; an ex-drug convict posing as an executive in charge of the carnival; a dimpled actress who suffers from terminal hug-itis ………the list grew and grew as I watched in fascinated horror.

The not-so-poor cricketers were photographed alongside these stars, and their discomfort was evident in the sheepish smiles they flashed. There is something completely artificial about a ‘successful’ businessman/actor that these players couldn’t fathom, yet they were taken in by the bonhomie-act that both types put on so well. Soon, the sheepish smiles gave way to an arrogant smirk as the cricketers found their feet. And I watched on in dismay.

Then the tournament began. Nearly every newspaper carried almost 4 pages of news about the International Prostitutes’ League. The stadia were full. There was talk of a new generation being drawn to the game. This new generation included boys who wore their caps backward and flashed hand-signs popularized by rap-artistes. And girls who thought saying, “He’s soooooooo delicious” meant they finally understood the game! And I watched on in anger.

The commentators whipped the crowds into a frenzy. Every ungainly shot was applauded, cheered, placarded, and no matter where the camera turned, there were the same faces. Lips drawn back in a rictus that was supposed to convey enjoyment, eyes bulging out, hands splayed in the air, and jumping up and down. All around. Everywhere. Faces mirroring faces. And the commentators droned on about how the game had entered a ‘new era’. About how important it was to ‘move with the times’. About how excitement could be so easily manufactured! And I watched on in frustration.

Till one day, I couldn’t take it anymore. And I began conducting an informal survey of my own. My questions were very simple, that anybody who’d followed the game genuinely would easily answer :

Who were the three Ws?

Would Bill O’Reilly be considered great if he were to play today?

Why was Sobers’ first test century so very special?

Have you ever been to a stadium to watch a test-match?

And a few other questions. It was simple, ridiculously so. The idiot-generation, the new-converts to cricket hadn’t a clue!!! And I smirked!

I shouldn’t have been horrified, though. I would complain about the decline of test-cricket loudly and frequently to my friends. I believe the first step was taken with the introduction of helmets in the late 70s. While everybody will tell you that the sport is about talent and stamina and patience, not many will tell you that it is also built around fear. The fear of being hit by a ball can act as a wonderful spur to a batsman to be technically correct. And that fear was lessened considerably when helmets made their appearance. The natural result of this, over the decades, is the quality of players today.

There was this wonderful novel called ‘My God Died Young’ dating back to the late sixties by a Sasthi Bratha. I think the title is perfect for my relation with cricket today. Cricket is dead. Long live the poofters who wax their eyebrows and perm their hair and call themselves cricketers. At a pinch, they could probably shed their gear and join the gyrating cheer-leaders at the boundary!!!!

There are already acrobats, fire-eaters, motor-bike riding stutmen and other assorted clowns at cricket grounds nowadays. Why don’t they throw in a couple of elephants, call it the GRC and be done with it?

GRC, you wonder? That’s an acronym for Great Rayman Circus.

And for all the morons who think this is cricket, you also probably believe in the whole ‘India Shining’ bit, too. Oh well, delusions are good. Let us all delude ourselves and live happily ever after!!!

JAI EVERYTHING!!!

By,
Bhankee

5 comments:

arunabh said...

I liked this post so much that i had to read it twice. And i totally agree with whatever you have said to the last word. IPL is nothing but one giant corporate monster that is slowly but steadily going to swallow traditional cricket. Expectedly, people thronged the stadiums in large numbers to watch this ultimate cricketing tamasha. The sad part is that a majority of the audience went there to catch a glimpse of the preity zintas and shahrukh khans rather than watch the 'Cricketing Gods' in action. Not to forget the omnipresent Vijay Mallya with the dumb Katrin Kaif in tow. As if this was not enough, there were the girls from Washington Redskins gyrating to numbers which made no sense to them. And the capacity crowd leered and cheered!
T20 is silly because you are expected to hit a six off every ball. Batters wield the bat like a sledgehammer throwing all cautions to the winds. A bowler can only hope to bowl a containment line.Warne need not produce a "ball of the century" to snare a wicket. If he's lucky enough, the batsman will be caught in the deep. Otherwise, he is unlucky. Guys like Swapnil Asnodkar, who score runs only via edges and nicks, become instantaneous prodigies. While the real batting greats like Dravid and Kallis are subjected to public humiliation by a man who doesn't even know the C of Cricket.
Once in a while, T20 is understandable. Having a T20 spread over more than one month is only going to kill the traditional but thoroughly enjoyable forms of the game viz. test cricket and the one days. But then, T20 rakes in the moolah and in all probability, is here to stay. Meanwhile, the diehard fans should start following 'Golden moments of World Cricket' on Star Cricket

Anita said...

I am not a great follower of cricket, and sadly despite the added attraction of celebrity guests and cheerleaders, I could not care to watch the finals, which I have been informed was nailbiting.

Have been hearing a lot of anguish from cricket lovers though, on how real cricket is dead. What I don't understand is the whole lament about how businessmen and actors own the team. As everyone knows, ownership and management are too different concepts and as long as ownership employs good management, why quibble whether it is a kurkure saleman or hug-trigger actress who owns the team.

Sure having an owner who probably does not understand too much of cricket may mean all the corny ideas of celebrity guests, team songs and the cheerleaders. But ultimately, the team which did win was owned by a professional outfit with no star players to boast of and that is a lesson the rest of them are unlikely to forget in a hurry.

Anonymous said...

Aruna,
The problem lies precisely in what you say. Divorcing ownership from management is okay for business, not for sport. I must confess my views are extreme, but I can't stress enough the common notion prevalent nowadays that if something has the tag 'professional', it's a good thing. Now, don't get me wrong. There never was a golden period when cricket was squeaky-clean, but the idea that a sport has to be necessarily 'professional' is anathema to me. Put it down to the 'amateur' in me. I rue the loss of quite a few good things about cricket, not least the values it taught me, personally. These values, like fair-play, comradeship, and a healthy disregard for injury, were treasured precisely because they weren't exceptional, they were the rules to play by. And now.......aaaaah.....I could rant on and on.....

Entropy said...

Hi Anonymous,
It's Anita, not Aruna, who wrote the comment. :-)

I liked your point of view - very well expressed. Am not sure though, whether I agree with you or with Anita.

Think I am going to run your comment and Anita's together as a post to start a discussion/debate (hopefully) on the theme of 'professional' management vs. love of the game.

Hope you don't mind.

Zen.

Anonymous said...

Oye, Zen.....what's with the 'anonymous'????? I'd posted the comment. Sorry about getting Anita's name wrong, but to compensate, I seem to have forgotten to put my name to my comments about amateurism, so, I guess we're even-stevens!
Venky