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Libran

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The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« on: November 05, 2008, 12:44:55 PM »
Beginning tomorrow is the last five days of a great career of one of India's great cricketers .
Let's look forward to some exciting performances from both the teams with an Indian victory to boot.

unlike AK's retirement which came as a bolt from the blue, here we have advance info...so all the more to cherish and enjoy every bit of it

His 113th Test kind of coincides with his 311 ODIs ...

Is this what they call back to back performances  :icon_smile:
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achutank

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #1 on: November 05, 2008, 12:47:35 PM »
dada is KING  :notworthy: :notworthy: :notworthy: :notworthy: :notworthy:
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Blwe_torch

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #2 on: November 05, 2008, 02:41:04 PM »
Nice observation Ravi!...........yes, we are in a celebratory mood! ::cheers::
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flute

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #3 on: November 05, 2008, 03:38:19 PM »
here's wishing for SG's one last great innings..we really need him to fire in the absence of GG, our batting suddenly looks vulnerable. ::cheers:: ::cheers::

I just hope we don't give back the initiative to Aussies.
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Cover Point

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #4 on: November 05, 2008, 04:34:45 PM »
well atleast the incentive is there for him to atleast play in Nagpur. Green or nanga wicket who cares :)

Hope he does great.
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dextrous

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #5 on: November 05, 2008, 05:14:18 PM »
well atleast the incentive is there for him to atleast play in Nagpur. Green or nanga wicket who cares :)

Hope he does great.

but if he doesnt...you have 2 more chances to start 2 new threads!
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justforkix

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #6 on: November 05, 2008, 05:26:07 PM »
I hope the next 5 days will be cherished for claiming back the Border Gavaskar Trophy after 4 years.....
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WicketView

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #7 on: November 05, 2008, 06:18:26 PM »
Beginning tomorrow is the last five days of a great career of one of India's great cricketers .
Let's look forward to some exciting performances from both the teams with an Indian victory to boot.

unlike AK's retirement which came as a bolt from the blue, here we have advance info...so all the more to cherish and enjoy every bit of it

{b]His 113th Test kind of coincides with his 311 ODIs ...

Is this what they call back to back performances[/b]  :icon_smile:
;D
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gouravk

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #8 on: November 05, 2008, 07:34:42 PM »
One Last Time, Dada ...  ;D ;D ;D
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pipsqueak

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #9 on: November 06, 2008, 12:41:28 AM »
grrrrr - i can only manage 2 fulls days, it seems

1st day - got a lunch appointment i can't wiggle out of
4th day - some stupid outing that i can't get out of
5th day - have to go to the airport

maybe i can fall sick on the 1st and 4th day - different groups and how wd they know! isn't dada worth a bit of malingering!

let me practise some coughing...

here's wishing SG a memorable last test - watching indian cricket will never be the same again for me.
« Last Edit: November 06, 2008, 12:44:06 AM by pipsqueak »
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kban1

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #10 on: November 06, 2008, 06:21:34 AM »
The many sides of Sourav

Sometimes a rebel, often a creative force, always in the thick of it, Ganguly has been a many-layered character, and his career an astonishing one


November 6, 2008

Gangles was fun. Every now and then a fellow feels like tearing off his shirt and waving it around like Mick Jagger with a microphone. Of all places, Sourav Ganguly responded to the urge at Lord's, holiest of cricketing holies. So much for decorum. He might as well have burped in St Paul's. Every now and then a fellow feels an insult coming on. Ganguly was rude to Steve Waugh, captain of all Australia, the mightiest foe of them all. So much for deference. Typically it started as a misjudgment and became an amusement that turned into a strategy.

Ganguly did not mind directing the fire at himself. What could they do? Bowl bumpers? Already every fast bowler worth his salt had tried to knock off his head. He had no lordly lineage but he walked and talked as he pleased, not exactly trying to provoke opponents but unwilling to deny himself. He did not give much ground to the modern game, with its fitness and diving and running between wickets and morning training and all that rot. It was brave of him to remain apart, for it left him exposed to ridicule, forced him to justify himself. But Ganguly was not scared of the pressure. Perhaps he needed the extra pressure the way a veteran car needs a crank. And, just in case, he had the populist touch. If Anil Kumble was the colossus, Sachin Tendulkar the champion, Rahul Dravid the craftsman, VVS Laxman the sorcerer, then Ganguly was the inspiration.

It has been an astonishing career. Some men prefer to follow a predictable path and their stories tell of a slow rise to the top and an equally measured decline. To that end instinct is subdued, contention avoided and risk reduced. That has been altogether too dull for Ganguly. Throughout he has toyed with his fate, tempting it to turn its back on him so that once again he could surprise the world with a stunning restoration. Something in him rebelled against the mundane and the sensible. He needed his life to be full of disasters and rescues, and comebacks and mistakes and memorable moments. To hell with the prosaic. At heart he is a cavalier, albeit of mischievous persuasion.

Taken as a whole, his contribution has been a triumph. It is no small thing for a boy from Kolkata to make it in Indian cricket. Till then local players were regarded as soft touches, and Ganguly himself was so categorised in his early days. Whereas the Mumbai-ites had risen through a rigorous system and the outstation boys had fought every inch of the way, the Bengalis seemed to lack the toughness required to make the grade. Ganguly changed all that. Indeed it was one of the many tasks he set himself. Always he has pitted himself against presumption and always he has prevailed.

Heavens, he even managed to time his departure as sweetly as ever he did any cover-drive. Before the series began he disarmingly announced that these four Tests against Australia were going to be his last. At a stroke his announcement put an end to speculation that he might lose his place. Ganguly is shrewder than he pretends. Just for a day or so it seemed that he might not get his way as reports spread of indiscreet remarks supposedly made about Robin Uthappa's hair, but Ganguly disowned the comments, even the splendid one about "every Tom, Dick and Harry" playing in the team. And so, once again, he lived to fight another day. Mind you, he let them hang in the air for 72 hours! That was typical Ganguly: at once the hero and the villain.

To some extent his manner has distracted attention from his cricket. Above all he has been a fine player whose career tells of determination and perseverance. As a batsman he played numerous influential innings. Often he was at his best on the game's greatest stages (including Lord's, where he first made his mark) or when the chips were down. Then he could concentrate. In less stressful times his batting could be flashy, with shots vaguely executed and the outcome left to the gods. Ganguly was not a collector of runs but a match player. Such men cannot be judged only in terms of tallies.

As captain he was an uplifting figure prepared to stand up for his players. It is easily forgotten that his captaincy started with Indian cricket at its lowest ebb. Hereabouts India was extremely lucky to have at its disposal a superb group of senior players untouched by those dire events, and a new captain free from the insecurity and greed that had undone his predecessor. Accepting money from grubby sources was, one sensed, beneath Ganguly. He just did not move in those circles or think along those lines.

Not that Ganguly alone deserves all the credit for India's swift recovery. Around him could be found a resolute and principled bunch of cricketers. They needed someone to blow the bugle and Ganguly obliged. That is leadership. Alone among the cricketing nations, his Indian side repeatedly troubled the Australians. Under his leadership the team prevailed in England, daring to bat first on a Headingley greentop. Indeed the very image of Indian cricket changed - a process started by Sunil Gavaskar and completed by Ganguly and companions. No longer does anyone talk about timidity against fast bowling or languishing overseas. Driven in varying degrees by pride and professionalism, the now-departing generation acknowledged these weaknesses, confronted them and corrected them.

Always Ganguly was in the thick of it. No matter how often he was discarded he bounced back. No matter how frequently his cricketing obituary was written he found a way back into the team. At times he seemed to relish the headlines forecasting his imminent and final downfall. He is not by nature defiant. It is too petty an emotion. Just that he liked to prove doubters wrong. Criticism spurred him on. Otherwise he was inclined to become lethargic. He revelled in his reputation as an independent man who lived and played by his own lights.

He is not a man easily pinned down. Although it is never wise to suppose a man can be caught in a single adjective, it is much easier with his contemporaries. To watch Rahul Dravid or Virender Sehwag or Anil Kumble play is to know a large part of them. Ganguly liked to keep people guessing. Perhaps it is his background. Is it possible that the son of a wealthy businessman might have had some reservations, even embarrassment, about becoming a professional cricketer? Deep down Ganguly belonged to the old days, not so much of aristocracy as of ease. He cast himself as a sportsman, a player of games, and on the surface did not take it too seriously. And yet the fires of competition burned hot.

In some respects he has been a rebel, against the expectations of his origins, against dutiful modern ways, against the patronising of his country. But he is too large a figure to be motivated by anything as shrivelling as anger. Rather he has been a creative force in the game. As a batsman he was full of neatly executed strokes. It was not in his nature to brutalise the ball. Nor was he a poet caressing it with a delicate touch. Neither extreme attracted him in the slightest. Instead he stroked the ball, guiding it between fieldsmen or lifting it over their heads. It looked effortless but some men like to hide the strain.

He has an unusual and unconventional mind. Often he will make the remark that raises eyebrows, causes people to stop and think. After all the hullabaloo of the travesty in Sydney, his stepped back and said that it had shown "how desperately the Australians want to win". All India was in a rage and yet a part of him respected that unbridled determination to prevail. He saw the meaning of the whole thing. Indeed he must have taken satisfaction from it. Australia has worked themselves into a lather over beating India. The rivalry had been largely his creation. And India had stood its ground. He had played his part in that as well.

Ganguly was at his most effective against the Australians. Somehow he sensed that the two nations had a lot in common, though they knew it not. But he felt that his players were unduly intimidated by the reputations and muscularity of these opponents. Accordingly he set out to convince them that the Aussies were human and could be beaten. In India he turned up late for the toss, a cheekiness that began as an accident and became an amusing tactic. It worked. The Australians became riled and started to play the man and not the ball. They had fallen into Ganguly's trap. His players could see that he was neither scared nor scarred, and enjoyed plucking the giant's beard. As captain Ganguly understood the value of gestures, the importance of appearances.

By no means, though, was it all gestures. Ganguly was the real thing, or else he could not have carried his players along with him. In Australia in 2003-04 he knew that his struggling team needed him to lead the way in the critical hour with a captain's innings and in Brisbane he promptly produced a rousing, valorous hundred on a lively pitch against a rampant attack. It was this performance that confirmed, once and for all, that Ganguly was not as fragile as he seemed. A twig can be snapped but not even a tempest can uproot a tree. It also secured the respect of his initially reluctant opponents, who know a fighter when they see one. As far as the Aussies were concerned, Lord Snooty had earned his stripes. It is one thing to talk, quite another to follow up with deeds.

And now he leaves the scene. Although he has batted with silky serenity in this series, it is the right time to go. A man has only so many struggles in him. A player's supporters have only so many battles in them. Perhaps in the last few days of his career he will play his part in India's greatest cricketing feat, the downing of Australia not by miraculous deed but sustained ruthlessness. If so it will be no more than he deserves. Ganguly has been neither a genius or a saint or a great batsmen, but he has served with distinction and leaves Indian cricket in a much better state than he found it.

Peter Roebuck is a former captain of Somerset and the author, most recently, of In It to Win It

 
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keep-it-cool

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #11 on: November 06, 2008, 06:30:47 AM »
I hope the next 5 days will be cherished for claiming back the Border Gavaskar Trophy after 4 years.....

Exactly
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Blwe_torch

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #12 on: November 06, 2008, 06:51:27 AM »
I hope the next 5 days will be cherished for claiming back the Border Gavaskar Trophy after 4 years.....

Exactly

Many Border-Gavaskar trophies will come and go. I would rather cherish this match as Ganguly's farewell match, personally.
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pipsqueak

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #13 on: November 06, 2008, 07:23:07 AM »
I hope the next 5 days will be cherished for claiming back the Border Gavaskar Trophy after 4 years.....

Exactly

why shd they be mutually exclusive? we can cherish these days for BOTH, can't we?
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keep-it-cool

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #14 on: November 06, 2008, 07:27:59 AM »
I hope the next 5 days will be cherished for claiming back the Border Gavaskar Trophy after 4 years.....

Exactly

why shd they be mutually exclusive? we can cherish these days for BOTH, can't we?


Of course.

But one is assured. The other is not.

Hence the hope that we'll cherish it for that as well. Else, it wont be a match to cherish, I'm sure, even for SG himself.
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pipsqueak

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #15 on: November 06, 2008, 07:34:18 AM »
I hope the next 5 days will be cherished for claiming back the Border Gavaskar Trophy after 4 years.....

Exactly

why shd they be mutually exclusive? we can cherish these days for BOTH, can't we?


Of course.

But one is assured. The other is not.

Hence the hope that we'll cherish it for that as well. Else, it wont be a match to cherish, I'm sure, even for SG himself.

well, i will still cherish the last few days SG can be seen in action - just like how some innings even if playing for a losing cause will be cherished - gavaskar's 96 for instance.
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keep-it-cool

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #16 on: November 06, 2008, 07:36:32 AM »
I hope the next 5 days will be cherished for claiming back the Border Gavaskar Trophy after 4 years.....

Exactly

why shd they be mutually exclusive? we can cherish these days for BOTH, can't we?


Of course.

But one is assured. The other is not.

Hence the hope that we'll cherish it for that as well. Else, it wont be a match to cherish, I'm sure, even for SG himself.

well, i will still cherish the last few days SG can be seen in action - just like how some innings even if playing for a losing cause will be cherished - gavaskar's 96 for instance.


Agree. But even those innings are cherished more in retrospect than during the match ... when the frustration of losing - especially if you have a head start (as we had then bowling Pak out for under hundred and here by winning the toss) overcomes most other things.
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Sachin Tendulkar gave the muhurat clap for 'Awwal Number' - that apart, he hasn't done much wrong in the last 20 yrs!

pipsqueak

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #17 on: November 06, 2008, 07:41:05 AM »
I hope the next 5 days will be cherished for claiming back the Border Gavaskar Trophy after 4 years.....

Exactly

why shd they be mutually exclusive? we can cherish these days for BOTH, can't we?


Of course.

But one is assured. The other is not.

Hence the hope that we'll cherish it for that as well. Else, it wont be a match to cherish, I'm sure, even for SG himself.

well, i will still cherish the last few days SG can be seen in action - just like how some innings even if playing for a losing cause will be cherished - gavaskar's 96 for instance.


Agree. But even those innings are cherished more in retrospect than during the match ... when the frustration of losing - especially if you have a head start (as we had then bowling Pak out for under hundred and here by winning the toss) overcomes most other things.

no matter what - i will cherish the last time i see SG in action - hopefully, he will bow out on a high, from both personal and team perspective.

winning B&G will be the icing on the cake but does not alter the fact that this will be the last 5 days of a champion.
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keep-it-cool

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #18 on: November 06, 2008, 07:42:57 AM »
I hope the next 5 days will be cherished for claiming back the Border Gavaskar Trophy after 4 years.....

Exactly

why shd they be mutually exclusive? we can cherish these days for BOTH, can't we?


Of course.

But one is assured. The other is not.

Hence the hope that we'll cherish it for that as well. Else, it wont be a match to cherish, I'm sure, even for SG himself.

well, i will still cherish the last few days SG can be seen in action - just like how some innings even if playing for a losing cause will be cherished - gavaskar's 96 for instance.


Agree. But even those innings are cherished more in retrospect than during the match ... when the frustration of losing - especially if you have a head start (as we had then bowling Pak out for under hundred and here by winning the toss) overcomes most other things.

no matter what - i will cherish the last time i see SG in action - hopefully, he will bow out on a high, from both personal and team perspective.

winning B&G will be the icing on the cake but does not alter the fact that this will be the last 5 days of a champion.


Isn't that what JFK & I said? SG's retirement is a given. Hopefully we'll cherish this match for regaining the Border Gavaskar trophy as well.
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pipsqueak

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #19 on: November 06, 2008, 07:52:29 AM »
Isn't that what JFK & I said? SG's retirement is a given. Hopefully we'll cherish this match for regaining the Border Gavaskar trophy as well.

JFK's initial post seemed to indicate that we shd cherish it for winning the trophy and not for SG.

i will cherish this match regardless of the result.

if that's what you both also mean, we can agree to agree.
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Blwe_torch

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #20 on: November 06, 2008, 07:58:09 AM »
Beware of the never ending loop! :evil4:
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keep-it-cool

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #21 on: November 06, 2008, 08:10:56 AM »
Isn't that what JFK & I said? SG's retirement is a given. Hopefully we'll cherish this match for regaining the Border Gavaskar trophy as well.

JFK's initial post seemed to indicate that we shd cherish it for winning the trophy and not for SG.

i will cherish this match regardless of the result.

if that's what you both also mean, we can agree to agree.


Ok. As for me, I'll cherish this match if we win / draw and thus retain the BG trophy.

If we do not, I'd rather not remember this match when I remember SG ...there are many better matches / ways.
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justforkix

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #22 on: November 06, 2008, 08:12:54 AM »
Isn't that what JFK & I said? SG's retirement is a given. Hopefully we'll cherish this match for regaining the Border Gavaskar trophy as well.

JFK's initial post seemed to indicate that we shd cherish it for winning the trophy and not for SG.

i will cherish this match regardless of the result.

if that's what you both also mean, we can agree to agree.

Yes, if we lose this game, I will remember it for all wrong reasons, i.e., doing a Bangalore/Mumbai all over again. This being SG's last test will come to me as an afterthought. So, for me to remember this game as SG's last test match, we have to win/draw the game. Even then, I will celebrate 1st for regaining the trophy, 2nd for SG's last test, 3rd for VVS's 100th test
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pipsqueak

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #23 on: November 06, 2008, 08:15:39 AM »
i will ALWAYS remember this as SG's last test - it is about cherishing SG and i will ALWAYS remember the last time i get to see him in action, good or bad.

100th test is irrelevant to me, SG's or VVS's or any one else's.

ps: it may so happen that we may have to remember this for RD's last test as well? let me get into the cherish mode, just in case.
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justforkix

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #24 on: November 06, 2008, 08:19:09 AM »
i will ALWAYS remember this as SG's last test - it is about cherishing SG and i will ALWAYS remember the last time i get to see him in action, good or bad.

100th test is irrelevant to me, SG's or VVS's or any one else's.

ps: it may so happen that we may have to remember this for RD's last test as well? let me get into the cherish mode, just in case.

So, like KKK, you are also an indian cricketer fan  :P
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keep-it-cool

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #25 on: November 06, 2008, 08:20:48 AM »
ps: it may so happen that we may have to remember this for RD's last test as well? let me get into the cherish mode, just in case.

See. That is the problem. If we lose this test and RD has already scored one zero .. imagine he scores another one ... will I cherish this as his last test? No way.

It is difficult to cherish / remember a test for an individual if you have lost ... different if it was a dead rubber or a meaningless one against some average team .. but losing an opportunity of winning a series against the top team (that too after losing to them the last two times) is tough to digest and difficult to forget.
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Sachin Tendulkar gave the muhurat clap for 'Awwal Number' - that apart, he hasn't done much wrong in the last 20 yrs!

pipsqueak

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #26 on: November 06, 2008, 08:24:06 AM »
ps: it may so happen that we may have to remember this for RD's last test as well? let me get into the cherish mode, just in case.

See. That is the problem. If we lose this test and RD has already scored one zero .. imagine he scores another one ... will I cherish this as his last test? No way.

It is difficult to cherish / remember a test for an individual if you have lost ... different if it was a dead rubber or a meaningless one against some average team .. but losing an opportunity of winning a series against the top team (that too after losing to them the last two times) is tough to digest and difficult to forget.

you can't change the fact that this will be SG's last test - some of us want to cherish every minute we get to see of SG, as a last opportunity.

if he doesn't do well, oh well, so be it. if the team fails, oh well, so be it.

it does not change the fact that this is the LAST/FINAL opportunity we get to see him wearing the india cap.

is that so hard to comprehend?  if you don't want to cherish all that, so be it!
« Last Edit: November 06, 2008, 08:32:56 AM by pipsqueak »
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keep-it-cool

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #27 on: November 06, 2008, 08:26:01 AM »
ps: it may so happen that we may have to remember this for RD's last test as well? let me get into the cherish mode, just in case.

See. That is the problem. If we lose this test and RD has already scored one zero .. imagine he scores another one ... will I cherish this as his last test? No way.

It is difficult to cherish / remember a test for an individual if you have lost ... different if it was a dead rubber or a meaningless one against some average team .. but losing an opportunity of winning a series against the top team (that too after losing to them the last two times) is tough to digest and difficult to forget.

you can't change the fact that this will be SG's last test - some of us want to cherish every minute we get to see of SG, as a last opportunity.

if he doesn't do well, oh well, so be it. if the team fails, oh well, so be it.

it does not change the fact that this was the LAST/FINAL opportunity we get to see him wearing the india cap.

is that so hard to comprehend?  if you don't want to cherish all that, so be it!

Ok Ok. Chill. We'll all cherish that.
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pipsqueak

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #28 on: November 06, 2008, 08:28:46 AM »
ps: it may so happen that we may have to remember this for RD's last test as well? let me get into the cherish mode, just in case.

See. That is the problem. If we lose this test and RD has already scored one zero .. imagine he scores another one ... will I cherish this as his last test? No way.

It is difficult to cherish / remember a test for an individual if you have lost ... different if it was a dead rubber or a meaningless one against some average team .. but losing an opportunity of winning a series against the top team (that too after losing to them the last two times) is tough to digest and difficult to forget.

you can't change the fact that this will be SG's last test - some of us want to cherish every minute we get to see of SG, as a last opportunity.

if he doesn't do well, oh well, so be it. if the team fails, oh well, so be it.

it does not change the fact that this was the LAST/FINAL opportunity we get to see him wearing the india cap.

is that so hard to comprehend?  if you don't want to cherish all that, so be it!

Ok Ok. Chill. We'll all cherish that.

*phew*  thanks.

i think we shd all be cherishing instead of arguing - i missed RD's innings and have to do some extra cherishing when he fields. (ok, for another 3 mins)

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keep-it-cool

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #29 on: November 06, 2008, 08:29:18 AM »
ps: it may so happen that we may have to remember this for RD's last test as well? let me get into the cherish mode, just in case.

See. That is the problem. If we lose this test and RD has already scored one zero .. imagine he scores another one ... will I cherish this as his last test? No way.

It is difficult to cherish / remember a test for an individual if you have lost ... different if it was a dead rubber or a meaningless one against some average team .. but losing an opportunity of winning a series against the top team (that too after losing to them the last two times) is tough to digest and difficult to forget.

you can't change the fact that this will be SG's last test - some of us want to cherish every minute we get to see of SG, as a last opportunity.

if he doesn't do well, oh well, so be it. if the team fails, oh well, so be it.

it does not change the fact that this was the LAST/FINAL opportunity we get to see him wearing the india cap.

is that so hard to comprehend?  if you don't want to cherish all that, so be it!

Ok Ok. Chill. We'll all cherish that.

*phew*  thanks.

i think we shd all be cherishing instead of arguing - i missed RD's innings and have to do some extra cherishing when he fields. (ok, for another 3 mins)



yeah ..you must have blinked i guess
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Libran

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #30 on: November 06, 2008, 09:29:43 AM »
Isn't that what JFK & I said? SG's retirement is a given. Hopefully we'll cherish this match for regaining the Border Gavaskar trophy as well.

JFK's initial post seemed to indicate that we shd cherish it for winning the trophy and not for SG.

i will cherish this match regardless of the result.

if that's what you both also mean, we can agree to agree.

Yes, if we lose this game, I will remember it for all wrong reasons, i.e., doing a Bangalore/Mumbai all over again. This being SG's last test will come to me as an afterthought. So, for me to remember this game as SG's last test match, we have to win/draw the game. Even then, I will celebrate 1st for regaining the trophy, 2nd for SG's last test, 3rd for VVS's 100th test

Why is VVS's 100th test being touted like the next biggest thing after Obama victory..sometime back SG played his 100th at Melbourne...there was nothing...no celebratory threads, no felicitations, no grand write-ups by peers , superiors, sub ordinates...

Am I missing something here ?
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justforkix

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #31 on: November 06, 2008, 10:12:30 AM »
Why is VVS's 100th test being touted like the next biggest thing after Obama victory..sometime back SG played his 100th at Melbourne...there was nothing...no celebratory threads, no felicitations, no grand write-ups by peers , superiors, sub ordinates...

Am I missing something here ?

I remember a bunch of articles just before SG's 100th test, similar to VVS. In any case, I don't think people will remember these events after a while, at least not me. For e.g., I don't remember the 100th test of RD or SRT or AK now. Perhaps, I knew it when it happened, not anymore. I probably will nto remember which was the 100th test for SG/VVS after 3-4 years....
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keep-it-cool

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #32 on: November 06, 2008, 10:14:14 AM »
I dont even remember Kapil's last match
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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #33 on: November 06, 2008, 06:50:48 PM »
Stage set for a Ganguly special

6 Nov 2008, 2340 hrs IST, Bobilli Vijay Kumar, TNN 
 
NAGPUR: At exactly 3.45 pm, with 22 overs still to go, the languid partnership between Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman came to an abrupt end. By now, the VCA stadium, looking like a colossal but haunted spacecraft, had already yielded half of its light to shadows.

As the drinks trolley ambled towards the pitch, the yawns stopped midway and gave in to excited murmurs; but the stands, awash in their brand new blues, reds, greens and oranges, were depressingly empty. Maybe, cities don’t travel to their outskirts for Test cricket anymore.

Eventually, Sourav Ganguly stepped out of the players' enclosure: he was fashionably late again. Luckily, it was the mandatory break and the clock was not ticking away; anyway, neither Steve Waugh was waiting nor Ricky Ponting frothing yet to spark up the moment.

Ganguly took a couple of slow and calculated steps and, like always, looked up towards the skies; he hunted out the sun, made eye contact. And blinked. Who knows this could be his last innings as India's batsman; after all, there is no guarantee that there would be a second chance on this comatose pitch.

Suddenly, his walk picked up pace. Even from behind, he looked perkier than he has ever done; the muscles rippled in his half-sleeved shirt; the red bandana, symbolizing his fighting spirit, peeped out of his helmet. Clearly, he hasn't stopped waking up early or working on his fitness yet. The empty stands miraculously found a voice and rah-rahed him.

Ganguly walked up to Tendulkar and exchanged a partners-in-crime smile. The little master-blaster, already into his nineties, was trying his best to gift another debutant his wicket. Luckily, he failed in both his attempts, and after a painfully long battle with himself, made it to his 40th Test century.

In the meantime, like always, Sourav tested the patience of the Aussies: he took his own time to study the pitch and to take guard. A slip, a silly-point and a forward shortleg surfaced in response. Luckily, it was the debutant spinner (Jason Krejza) on attack. Full ball, near his feet. No worries.

Next over, Mitchell Johnson attacked his leg side. But the track had already shown that it had neither pace nor bounce to lose any appetite for runs. Ganguly flicked it gingerly towards mid-wicket. Single. It wasn't going to be the second-most famous last match duck (assuming there is no second chance).

Three overs later, he flicks a full toss wide of mid-on. He makes a mad dash for a single, even though an easy one was there for the taking; well, he has never been a great judge between the wickets. Eventually, he punched one through covers, thumped the new ball to the square-leg boundary and lofted the spinners high into the air.

There was, however, no sign really of the divine drive, or magical timing. But as the shadows lengthened, serenity descended over him; he looked at peace with his batting and the footwork seemed sublime too. He stayed unbeaten on 27 at stumps, with India well poised at 311 for five.

Tomorrow is, of course, another day. We will surely see all the strokes, through the off and on, that made him so special over the years. He has this uncanny ability to convert a wonderful platform into a grand occasion too; so don't be surprised if he does exactly that and makes his farewell Test truly memorable.
http://cricket.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/3682857.cms

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flute

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #34 on: November 06, 2008, 07:02:18 PM »
Stage set for a Ganguly special

6 Nov 2008, 2340 hrs IST, Bobilli Vijay Kumar, TNN 
 
NAGPUR: At exactly 3.45 pm, with 22 overs still to go, the languid partnership between Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman came to an abrupt end. By now, the VCA stadium, looking like a colossal but haunted spacecraft, had already yielded half of its light to shadows.

As the drinks trolley ambled towards the pitch, the yawns stopped midway and gave in to excited murmurs; but the stands, awash in their brand new blues, reds, greens and oranges, were depressingly empty. Maybe, cities don’t travel to their outskirts for Test cricket anymore.

Eventually, Sourav Ganguly stepped out of the players' enclosure: he was fashionably late again. Luckily, it was the mandatory break and the clock was not ticking away; anyway, neither Steve Waugh was waiting nor Ricky Ponting frothing yet to spark up the moment.

Ganguly took a couple of slow and calculated steps and, like always, looked up towards the skies; he hunted out the sun, made eye contact. And blinked. Who knows this could be his last innings as India's batsman; after all, there is no guarantee that there would be a second chance on this comatose pitch.

Suddenly, his walk picked up pace. Even from behind, he looked perkier than he has ever done; the muscles rippled in his half-sleeved shirt; the red bandana, symbolizing his fighting spirit, peeped out of his helmet. Clearly, he hasn't stopped waking up early or working on his fitness yet. The empty stands miraculously found a voice and rah-rahed him.

Ganguly walked up to Tendulkar and exchanged a partners-in-crime smile. The little master-blaster, already into his nineties, was trying his best to gift another debutant his wicket. Luckily, he failed in both his attempts, and after a painfully long battle with himself, made it to his 40th Test century.

In the meantime, like always, Sourav tested the patience of the Aussies: he took his own time to study the pitch and to take guard. A slip, a silly-point and a forward shortleg surfaced in response. Luckily, it was the debutant spinner (Jason Krejza) on attack. Full ball, near his feet. No worries.

Next over, Mitchell Johnson attacked his leg side. But the track had already shown that it had neither pace nor bounce to lose any appetite for runs. Ganguly flicked it gingerly towards mid-wicket. Single. It wasn't going to be the second-most famous last match duck (assuming there is no second chance).

Three overs later, he flicks a full toss wide of mid-on. He makes a mad dash for a single, even though an easy one was there for the taking; well, he has never been a great judge between the wickets. Eventually, he punched one through covers, thumped the new ball to the square-leg boundary and lofted the spinners high into the air.

There was, however, no sign really of the divine drive, or magical timing. But as the shadows lengthened, serenity descended over him; he looked at peace with his batting and the footwork seemed sublime too. He stayed unbeaten on 27 at stumps, with India well poised at 311 for five.

Tomorrow is, of course, another day. We will surely see all the strokes, through the off and on, that made him so special over the years. He has this uncanny ability to convert a wonderful platform into a grand occasion too; so don't be surprised if he does exactly that and makes his farewell Test truly memorable.
http://cricket.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/3682857.cms

amen to that..we really need something good from SG for us to get into a strong position in this test..just 150 more and we are in for a very good chance of winning on this pitch.
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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #35 on: November 06, 2008, 07:08:07 PM »
I dont even remember Kapil's last match

Should we celebrate and burst crackers to that?! >:D
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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #36 on: November 06, 2008, 07:14:44 PM »
I was not planning to stay up tonight but after reading through this cherish-fest I may cherish the sleep I had last night.
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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #37 on: November 06, 2008, 08:38:12 PM »
Why is VVS's 100th test being touted like the next biggest thing after Obama victory..sometime back SG played his 100th at Melbourne...there was nothing...no celebratory threads, no felicitations, no grand write-ups by peers , superiors, sub ordinates...

Am I missing something here ?


I remember a bunch of articles just before SG's 100th test, similar to VVS. In any case, I don't think people will remember these events after a while, at least not me. For e.g., I don't remember the 100th test of RD or SRT or AK now. Perhaps, I knew it when it happened, not anymore. I probably will nto remember which was the 100th test for SG/VVS after 3-4 years....
You are right.  This should perhaps help for those who think that VVS's 100 Tests somehow got more articles or coverage.  If anything Ganguly had more features attributed to him.  Here on this DG as well.

http://www.cricketvoice.com/cricketforum2/index.php/topic,14140.0.html

http://www.cricketvoice.com/cricketforum2/index.php/topic,14157.0.html

http://www.cricketvoice.com/cricketforum2/index.php/topic,14116.0.html

And this should cover all basis on what others like VVS, RD, SRT, MSD said of SG's 100th Test. 

http://specials.rediff.com/cricket/ganguly07-videos.html


I do not see what the big deal is.  Atleast there are some left on this DG to have threads for other great players like VVS especially when a feat like 100 Tests is accomplished.  Or is it that we all have to be hung up on Ganguly and his retirement and have all threads dedicated to him.

Again it goes to show how under appreciated VVS is despite having better knocks in Tests than the more celebrated stars.
« Last Edit: November 06, 2008, 08:44:58 PM by ramshorns »
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keep-it-cool

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #38 on: November 07, 2008, 04:33:05 AM »
I dont even remember Kapil's last match

Should we celebrate and burst crackers to that?! >:D

why? do you remember?
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RicePlateReddy

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Re: The last 5 days - Let's cherish the moments
« Reply #39 on: November 07, 2008, 04:51:05 AM »
Ganguly can pay Guru Dakshina by emulating Shri Shri Guruji. Century in both their first and last test.
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