Sunday, April 29, 2007

And So It Ends

Catch a snail and watch it every inch of the way until it completes the New Jersey Marathon. Or drop a little lactic acid bacteria into a bowl of milk and watch it turn into curd. Or watch the 2007 Cricket World Cup. As for interest levels and thrill factors go, they are more or less the same - no disrespect to the snails and the yeast microbes.

With respect to sheer excruciating length of the show, the 2007 CWC has only one competition. Sindbad from 'Dina Thanthi' (The Daily Telegraph), a daily in South India where the hero tries to slay a monster in a three-pane comic strip (Pane 1 Sindbad stares at monster, Pane 2 monster returns stare, Pane 3 Sindbad wondering aloud whether to use a curse or his sword to overcome the monster which would have died by that time due to old age). However, by the time the first round of matches were over, Sindbad had waded through a slew of such monsters and was wanting more which doesn't say much about the format of the WC. Eventually, Malcolm Speed 'felt' that the tournament might have been 'slightly long'. Ladies and Gentlemen, please put your hands together for The Understatement of The New Millenium.



As for predictability, there are a few close competitors viz. "Kolangal", "Arasi" and "Lakshmi" - three flagship television mega serials where, in a move of pure genius at writing screenplay, the writers have ensured that no matter how many episodes you miss, you would still be able to pick up the story right from the point where you left. Oh, and if you want to point out some unexpected twists in the WC where Bangladesh and Ireland qualified for the Pauper League, they are exactly as soppy as their mega serial counter parts at best. Don't believe me ?? By a show of hands, tell us if you really thought Bangladesh or Ireland had any chance in the Pauper League ?? Anybody ?? Helloooo ??

So, after few months of lugging it around, we get to see a final. No, we finally get to see players grope around in the dark while the match referees and umpires are unsure of how to complete the match when it is written in big, bold letters in the rule book. And yes in a dramatic event of gigantic proportions, Australia won the WC. By a hair's width of 50+ runs (where the hair in question is Keratin from a Rhino's horn). After decimating the opponent earlier in the day. For the third time in a row. And they are unbeaten in the WC for God-knows-how-long. Wasabi icing on Ladies-finger cake.

Some food for thought : How about a WC format where Australia have to play beat _every_ single team to win the WC ?? How about giving Kichaans (the thamizh equivalent of Handicaps) to the other teams and their players ?? Maybe just arrive at different winning criteria for australians (score twice the runs in half as many overs by losing a quarter of the wickets the opponents lost, and if case all criteria are met, the whim of the opposing captain) ?? Play clandestine World Cups when the Australians aren't looking ?? Just plain abolish the sport of cricket and wait for the Australians to forget the game and then start all over again ??

It is evident Cricket needs an overhaul. No, not politician-turned-administrators and no-good-businessmen with a foot-in-the-mouth disease. Not ridiculously whimsical fans whose idea of fandom is (a) having the same hairstyle as their hero or (b) destroying their half built house. Not terminally-greedy managers who hiked the ticket rates beyond a limit that the empty seats easily outnumbered the occupied ones for the semi-final between the world's top ODI team and the current world champion. And definitely not intellectuals who banned people from carrying musical instruments inside cricket stadiums inside the West Indies because of the noise. What next ?? Stripping astronauts out of their space suits because they are heavy ??

Cricket administrators need to buy a new dictionary and look up the word "Relegation". They also need to understand the meaning of the phrase "Tiered Leagues". Have Eight teams in Tier 1 and call it International Cricket. Have Eight more teams in Tier 2 and call it League Cricket. Just to make sure home-bred FTBs (Flat Track Bullies) don't bloat their records, divide cricket records into International and League so that the "Highest Scorer in International Cricket" is not someone with a 600 not out against Scotland and a 12.52 average against Australia. Let teams play test matches and one-dayers against opponents only within their tier. After every year or two, re-visit the rankings and relegate the bottom two teams from Tier 1 to Tier 2. Promote the top two from Tier 2 up to Tier 1. Rinse. Repeat.

Then sit back and see how Pepsi/Coke/Sudarmani Underwear sponsor a team that plays 3-test series and triangular championships against Netherlands and Bermuda.

7 comments:

Vetty Max said...

Won't happen. Just like reservations also won't go.

But 20-20 might be able to provide a more level playing field.

And Sindbad on Sun TV is supposedly finally over.

Just Me said...

If you ever need a job dude I would suggest you apply for Supreme Head of World Cricket ;)

Very very nicely done!

sudhar said...

romba nalla post..aana onnume nadakkadu! makes for a good cricket based work of fiction- you should give it a shot!
>"no matter how many episodes you miss, you would still be able to pick up the story"

and no matter what language it is!

Heidi Kris said...

nice one, but i dont understand the fact why shudnt Bangladesh or Ireland qualify for the Super 8.

Hope you have not forgotten the fact that your Indians lost against Bangladesh. If your guys are not fit enough to play worldclass international cricket, why blame the aussies?

Tyler Durden said...

@Thala
Test cricket is the key thala. Ask everyone to play each ball on it's merit and not on their strike rate.

Just when I thought "Vikramaditya" - absolutely artificial talking rats - was the worst fantasy show, in comes "Sindbad" where a whole planet is infested with 20-feet jasmines. WTH ??

@Just Me
A job profile that includes babysitting the Asian Cricket Block ?? Thanks, but no thanks :-)

@Sudhar
Romba nandri ba. Romba naala aalaye kaanom ?? Cochin madapura maatinudutha ??

@Heidi
Echoos me, but who is unhappy India didn't make it to the super league ?? My problem is
a) having a league format where having 1-2 bad days can get you out of the tournament
b) ridiculously long super league which had 8 teams. Instead, they could have done that with the regular league itself.
And am not most definitely blaming the Aussies. If there is one thing predictable after death and taxes (thanks G), its the Aussie cricket team.

Ram said...

you wouldn't have had the chance to complain had India and Pakistan made it to the super eights instead of Bangladesh and Ireland! I'd like to know if anybody felt that the format was too long before India and Pakistan bowed out! Blame India and Pakistan for playing bad cricket, knowing fully well that complacency was the only thing that had to be avoided while playing the minnows.
I want the same format in the next WC with 4 games each day during the first round(finishing in 8 days(sunday to sunday) with 2 rest days in between) and twenty four days for the super eights with no rest days, starting a couple of days after the first round gets over and then a week for the last three games. All done in 40 days or so. But, given the utter flop this time, this will probably not happen.
kudos to Bangladesh and Ireland for their fighting spirit! no matter what, Cricket rules!

~SuCh~ said...

"Wasabi icing on Ladies-finger cake."
Good one..:-)

"Malcolm Speed 'felt' that the tournament might have been 'slightly long'."

Not surprising.. given that his surname is 'Speed' :-)

"... tiered leagues..."
Good suggestion...
But when 5 days gave way to 50 overs which have given way to 20, how much of viewership can we expect for the lower tiers ?? Even now, the minnows get 'watched' only when they play the 'biggies' in the tournaments... Cricket has long ceased to be the gentleman's game.. And people no longer watch/play it for the sake of the game...

-(erstwhile Soliloquist and once-upon-a-time Cricket enthusiast)