Sunday, June 1, 2008

Indian cricket bonanza is massive hit

By Soutik Biswas BBC News, Mumbai

The unfancied Rajasthan team won the competition on Sunday night.Photo: Indian Express

The great Indian summer blockbuster has ended with a nail biting climax.
In many ways, Sunday night's final of the Indian Premier League (IPL), cricket's most expensive and hyped carnival, mirrored vintage Bollywood fare.

An unfancied, cut price team (Rajasthan), led by an ageing, semi-retired spin bowling wizard (Shane Warne), beat a pricey, aggressive rival (Chennai), led by one of the highest paid players in the game and Indian cricket's poster boy (MS Dhoni).
It was the triumph of the underdog over the rich and resourceful and it went down to the wire (a last-ball win).
And like in those films, some high-wire entertainment preceded and interspersed the serious business of cricket.

Kinetic kitsch
Starlets gyrated in various costumes to showcase "various cultures of India". Fire dancers, acrobats, contortionists, and guitarists and violinists gave the show a 'global' feel. The pyrotechnics were spectacular.

The entertainment was Indiana Jones meets home-grown kinetic kitsch. The packed stadium clapped and danced when brawny star Salman Khan took the stage and gyrated a little more.
That the match happened on a sticky evening in the western city of Mumbai, home to Bollywood, is no coincidence.
Nor is the fact that that cricket and Bollywood, India's biggest obsessions, fused seamlessly in the competition – two of the teams are owned by Bollywood stars who routinely cheer their players from the dugouts, and Bollywood remixes and dances dominate on-field entertainment.
It's an irresistible combination and a resounding hit, dismaying the pundit and the purist.

Open auction

The democratisation of cricket has taken a great leap forward - entire families have turned up at the grounds all over India on muggy summer evenings to dance to Bollywood remixes, gorge on burgers and pizza, munch corn, guzzle cola and even watch some cricket.

The competition has all the trappings of what Indians call a "tamasha" or an entertainment show, or a "timepass", a way to have good, cheap fun to liven up their stressed lives.
Of course, a lot of cricket has been played as well, and some of it has been very entertaining.
Eight teams, 44 days and 59 matches have yielded nearly 18,000 runs from a group of top international cricketers and promising local cricketers, all bought in an unique open auction.
Nearly 60% of the runs came off fours and sixes, offering value for money to the cricket-mad Indians who faithfully succumbed to the temptations of a daily evening fix of speed cricket on television.

"It's all a blur now. Will people remember any memorable moments as the season ends, the way they remember classic Test matches?," wonders cricket historian Ram Guha.
But can purists afford to ignore this competition?

Banned for slapping
For one, IPL has offered excitement aplenty: there were seven victories where the winners scraped through by a margin of anything between one and nine runs; up to nearly 450 runs were scored between two teams during a single game; and in an early game, a batsman smashed 16 sixes during his stay at the crease.

Although one bowler was hit for 20 sixes through the competition, three others, including a South African, achieved hat tricks or mopping up three wickets in a row.
On the margins and off the field there was abundant action as well.


A senior India international player was banned from the competition midway after he slapped a fellow national mate; and a polite official asked Bollywood superstar Shah Rukh Khan, one of the team owners, to stop hanging around the dressing room in alleged violation of code of conduct.
A police officer accused a high profile team owner of abusing him, two black cheerleading girls charged an event manager with racism and banishing them from a game, an inebriated Indian cricketer playing in the competition beat up a man in his hometown.

One team owner, known for his flamboyant ways, sacked his chief operating officer midway through the tournament because of his team's plummeting fortunes.
What more could you want from a tournament?
Great leveller

It also proved that the market - and money - does not always work. This is despite the fact that the only motivation for the competition's existence is money.

How else can you explain an low profile and cheapest ($67m) team like Rajasthan, led and coached by 38-year-old Shane Warne, rising above the hoopla to emerge as the best team of the competition?

How do you explain the law of diminishing returns taking over the most expensive teams, Mumbai ($111.9m, lost half of their 14 games) and Bangalore ($111.6m, lost 10 of 14 games)?
Both teams are owned by India's top businessmen, who have seldom experienced any failure, but the IPL has also been a great leveller.
Even Bollywood got a big jolt.
Otherwise, how do you explain the crashing out of the Calcutta team (lost half of their 14 games) owned by India's biggest brand and superstar Shah Rukh Khan?

Khan partied with his cricketers, sent them inspirational text messages, cheered lustily from the dugouts, bought his film friends to dance in the stands, and tied up neat branding deals with companies.

Despite a growing pan-Indian support - his fans began supporting Calcutta because he owned the team - his players let him down.

Changed game
So has the IPL come to stay?
By all accounts yes, going by the resounding thumbs up it seems to have received from players (because of the money) and fans (because of the entertainment).
Will it be equally successful if replicated in other cricket playing countries?
That is difficult to say, going by the lukewarm response to the competition outside South Asia.
But what is clear is that the competition could change cricket since India is now international cricket's financial capital.

So much so that the usually taciturn and reserved Indian Test captain, Anil Kumble, is also singing hosannas in the competition's praise.

"[This is] an event that is likely to rewrite cricketing history," he says.
"I'm not sure whether the game will ever be the same again after the IPL."
Source: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/south_asia/7430529.stm

Rajasthan win first IPL cricket series

Shane Warne's Rajasthan Royals have won the first series of the Indian Premier League Twenty-20 cricket.Pakistani all-rounder Sohail Tanvir hit the winning run off the final ball of the game.Rajasthan's Yusuf Pathan earned the man of the match award for his hard-hitting 56 that laid the foundation for the Royals to overtake the Chennai Super Kings total of 163.
The Indian Premier League Twenty-20 has has hosted the world's leading cricketers in its first year. [AFP]
Source: http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/news/stories/200806/s2261927.htm?tab=sport

Can Chennai halt Rajasthan's juggernaut?


And so it is that the Indian Premier League's finale will feature the team that started off like a express train, and another that has enjoyed the smoothest ride through the six weeks. The wheels threatened to come off for the Chennai Super Kings after that 4-0 start, but they regrouped from the loss of their Australian contingent to stitch together the victories that have taken Mahendra Singh Dhoni to the threshold of another major Twenty20 triumph. The Rajasthan Royals were hammered in their opening game, but have since scripted the sort of fairytale that Eric the Eel and other underdogs could only dream about. Both demolished their semi-final opponents, and there will be no shortage of confidence on either side as two of the most intuitive leaders in the game face off for the sport's richest prize.

After thumping the Delhi Daredevils to take their deserved place in the final, Shane Warne had appeared quite indifferent when he was asked which team he would prefer to face. There was little doubt though that he expected it to be Kings XI Punjab. After all,
of all the teams in the IPL, they had been most adept at absorbing pressure. The chase against Delhi in a game decided by Duckworth/Lewis had been timed to perfection, and they had also enjoyed a thrilling last-ball win against the Mumbai Indians.

But with Chennai reprising their early-season form, there was nothing majestic about the men from Punjab. With the stakes higher than ever, they took the pressure as well as a Coke can would a hobnailed boot. The established internationals like Yuvraj Singh and Mahela Jayawardene were the main culprits, and Dhoni could afford to stick to the tried-and-tested script after initially springing a surprise by throwing the new ball Muttiah Muralitharan's way.

It helped that his pace bowlers were absolutely outstanding. On a pitch that offered plenty of bounce, Makhaya Ntini was always going to be a factor, and so it proved. But it was Manpreet Gony, the son of Punjab in Chennai yellow, that took the vital wickets of Kumar Sangakkara and Yuvraj, bowling a maiden along the way. Throughout the tournament, his accuracy and consistency have been eye-catching, and in favourable conditions, he excelled by not getting carried away.

Gony and Ntini, supported splendidly by the ever-impressive Albie Morkel, will face their sternest test against a Rajasthan team that has already beaten them twice. Graeme Smith's muscular hitting may be missing, but in Kamran Akmal, Warne has a replacement who certainly doesn't lack flair or hitting ability. Shane Watson will be desperate to emphasise his most-valuable-player status in the game that matters most, while Swapnil Asnodkar and Niraj Patel will be encouraged to adapt the no-fear approach that has served them so well thus far.

The key to the contest will be Rajasthan's bowling, the most varied and effective in the competition. Sohail Tanvir has been the best new-ball bowler on view, while the heavy ball that Watson bowls was far too much for Delhi's star-studded batting to cope with. Siddharth Trivedi's changes of pace have been tough to get away, while Munaf Patel has eased back into the national reckoning with the accuracy that first caught the eye.

And then, there's Warne, the piper calling the tune. The rave reviews that his captaincy has earned have slightly obscured the fact that he also has 19 wickets for the tournament. On a helpful pitch, like the one he got in the semi-final, no one can rip a legbreak quite like he does. The straighter one has also fetched him wickets, as has the aura that appears to intimidate some batsmen even before they settle into the stance.

Both teams have got superb performances out of their Indian contingents. Suresh Raina, S Badrinath and the remodelled L Balaji have excelled for Chennai, while Warne has inspired top-drawer efforts from Ravindra Jadeja, Munaf, Trivedi and Asnodkar. Warne was insistent that it was the seven Indian players who were the real key to success. "You expect the four foreign guys to do a job," he said. "But it's the local players that can be the difference between winning and losing."

Dhoni, who has led India to victory at the World Twenty20 and in the CB Series, has had a charmed life as leader so far. But in Warne, he's up against perhaps the greatest big-match player there's ever been. It should be some contest.

Dileep Premachandran is an associate editor at Cricinfo

Cut-price Gony outshines pricey stars

Cricinfo staff

May 31, 2008

When Ishant Sharma went for US$950,000 at the IPL auction in February, Manpreet Gony's name would have elicited a blank stare from most Indian cricket aficionados. You couldn't blame them either. In five first-class games, Gony had just 13 wickets, and there were no howls of protest when he was signed by the Chennai Super Kings rather than his home franchise, the Kings XI Punjab.

On Saturday night, with a global audience watching, he returned to silence the thousands that had been given Punjab flags to wave in the stands. He had finished the league stage with 14 wickets, twice what Ishant managed, but he saved his best for the biggest game that he's ever played in.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni had gambled by opening the bowling with Muttiah Muralitharan, but after a relatively tidy over, he sensed that pace was the key to settling the contest. With Makhaya Ntini back to his spring-heeled best at one end, Gony was unleashed from the Garware Pavilion End.

It took Gony just two balls to justify his captain's faith. When he moved one away from Kumar Sangakkara, there was little response from the Chennai fielders and only a half-hearted plea from his side. Astonishingly though, Sangakkara walked, as Adam Gilchrist had in a World Cup semi-final against Sri Lanka at Port Elizabeth five years ago.

In his next over, Gony landed the big fish. It was a short delivery and when Yuvraj got into position for the pull, Chennai fans must have feared the worst. Few hit the ball harder, and most eyes had already veered towards the rope by the time Murali stuck his hands out to take a blinder. At 28 for 3, the game was slip-sliding away from the men in red and grey.

When he next stepped up to the bowling crease, Gony came up with what must count as the T20 equivalent of a tiger sighting - the maiden over. And he wasn't bowling to some chump either. Irfan Pathan can wallop the ball a long way, but he couldn't even play it out of the circle as Gony bowled the perfect length at lively pace. And though Mahela Jayawardene finally tapped one behind point for four in his final over, the match had effectively been decidedly two balls earlier, when a catastrophic mix-up sent Pathan on his way.

Gony's delight as he whipped off the bails was palpable, and his spell a true reflection of the manner in which Chennai have revived their season after a really sticky patch. His 16 wickets are the second highest for an Indian fast bowler and it was no surprise that his name came up for consideration when the squad was being chosen for the tri-series in Bangladesh and the Asia Cup.

Compared to what he has gone through recently off the field, bowling six dot balls would have been a breeze. He and his wife lost their first child, a boy, 15 days after he was born. For him, the IPL hasn't just been a chance to stake his cricketing claim, but also an opportunity to move on. Jayawardene lost a younger brother to cancer when he was a star in the making, and has often spoken of how that traumatic experience helped him to treat what happened on the field with equanimity. The man who shredded his team's hopes tonight would probably be inclined to agree.

Losing the plot when it counts

Cricinfo staff

May 31, 2008





Kings XI Punjab had been the in-form batting unit of the tournament. Slogs and heaves are commonplace in the Twenty20 format, but Punjab's batsmen, especially Shaun Marsh, had used conventional strokes to bisect fields and take apart opposition attacks. However, when it mattered the most, Marsh was the biggest offender among a string of batsmen who chose the rash over the reliable.

Marsh was Man of the Match in five of his ten games, and Punjab sailed into second spot thanks primarily to the strong platform he laid at the top. However, with Marsh accumulating the runs, his more illustrious team-mates in the middle order hadn't faced much of a challenge in the tournament.

Tom Moody, their coach, had brushed aside those fears, confident his batsmen were in good nick. But the likes of Kumar Sangakkara, Yuvraj Singh and Mahela Jayawardene fell apart in the face of some hostile, accurate bowling by Makhaya Ntini and Manpreet Gony.

Pressure, athletes tell us, is something they thrive on. But adrenalin used wrongly can backfire. Just as the Delhi Daredevils batting order had crumbled the previous evening, Punjab lost the momentum early on and kept faltering. Ntini and Gony pitched it short and the Punjab batsmen, instead of trying to survive the early barrage, attempted ill-advised, expansive strokes.

James Hopes flailed unconvincingly at a wide one, handing an easy catch to the wicketkeeper. Marsh had already been surprised by Ntini's pace on the bouncer as a top-edged pull sailed for six, but didn't learn his lesson and played-on another sharp shorter delivery in Ntini's next over. Sangakkara was undone by a good outswinger from Gony but he had committed to go for a flashy drive and in the process offered the faintest of edges. All batsmen of class, but each one failing while trying to force the pace.

Moody later blamed the defeat on his batsmen, who he admitted suffered from nerves, to execute the plans. "It was the first time this has happened, the top order failing so badly," he said. "We faced a critical stumbling block today from which we could never recover."

Yuvraj was disconsolate and left the left the post-match presentation mid-way. For him the match was lost in the first phase. "We didn't do well under pressure. We lost too many wickets too quickly in the first 5-7 overs.

"We lost the main batsmen very quickly in the game, as a result we had no specialist batsmen left in the last 10 overs," Yuvraj said. "This is our worst game in the tournament. It hit us hard as in Twenty20 you don't get time to recover."