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LosingNow

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DP again.."It is all about heart" - HEAR HEAR!!!
« on: January 07, 2007, 12:34:41 AM »
Heart and the hard yards

The red highlights (quotes from the great Lombardi from your "home state" of Wisconsin) are for my friend Jiet...to add to my comments here.. http://www.cricketvoice.com/cricketforum2/index.php?topic=6278.msg98554#msg98554

I am a big believer in "heart and will to succeed"..I saw MJ do it again and again for the Bulls. In team sports, sometimes skills (specially of the superstars..and of course, you have to have some base skills) can have a palliative effect on the team and unwittingly block them from reaching the pinnacle.

---
The Verdict by Dileep Premachandran in Cape Town

January 6, 2007

Vince Lombardi, one of the greatest of all sports coaches, once said: "Teams do not go physically flat, they go mentally stale." This afternoon, at a suitably grey Newlands, India were not only mentally stale, but as physically flat as beer left under a harsh sun. With the exception of a couple of new faces fuelled by the exuberance of youth, and another driven by the urge to reestablish himself, the rest were unathletic old men bereft of energy and desire. At day's end, the young lions were perfectly entitled to look accusingly at the toothless, clawless old ones and wonder when the urge to fight had dissipated.

It would have been a travesty if rain had denied South Africa. Ever since the loss at the Wanderers, they had been patently the hungrier side, winning the decisive sessions and making the running against an Indian team that didn't even recognise the key moments, leave alone seize them.

The architect of the revival was undoubtedly Graeme Smith, whose pugnacity under pressure fetched him three straight half-centuries after a truly abysmal start to the series. When he walked back out this morning, the game was still in the balance, with Hashim Amla falling to the last ball of the fourth day. As ally, he had a man with oceans of experience, and a batting technique capable of coping with the best that Anil Kumble and friends could muster.

Promoting Shaun Pollock to No.4 was a masterstroke. It gave Smith someone at the other end that was unafraid to play his strokes, and more importantly, someone who wouldn't shy away from taking on Kumble. With Pollock knocking the ball around sweetly, Smith had the freedom to express himself, and by the time the rain arrived, 56 had been whittled away from the target in just 10.5 overs.

Both India's bowling and fielding were listless and insipid in that passage of play. Unlike Shane Warne, Kumble has never really been comfortable bowling round the wicket into the rough, and his attempts to settle into a length were easily frustrated. The pace bowlers were all over the place, and instead of a steady build-up of pressure, the runs came with the ease that they would on a first-day pitch.

When the players came back nearly four hours later, things were markedly better. Zaheer Khan produced a magnificent spell to nab both Smith and Pollock, leaving some to wonder what might have been had such urgency and aggression been on display in the morning. Suddenly, Kumble too appeared to find some extra zip and for a while, there must have been more than the odd chewed finger-nail in the South African dressing room.

Such games turn on little things, and India's moment perhaps came and went with a Kumble googly. Kallis was always going to be the key man, utterly impervious to the prattling from behind the stumps and possessed of a temperament perfectly suited to the strains of a run chase. Yet, he had no idea about a wrong 'un that Kumble threw up, and the shouts of anguish as the ball narrowly cleared the stumped summed up India's day.

Once Ashwell Prince overcame a nervous start, the path to victory became far less rocky. India's new-found intensity vanished just before tea, and 16 runs in the first two overs after tea pretty much settled it. Dinesh Karthik, whose superb catch to dismiss Smith offered a frisson of hope, never lost his voice behind the stumps, while Sreesanth and Zaheer were never found wanting in the commitment stakes.

A clearly unfit Munaf Patel bowled just one over, the 48th of the innings, but the real disappointment was Kumble. The man the South Africans feared most on a wearing pitch couldn't summon up anything like his best when it mattered most, and once again, Indian dreams of a series victory abroad vanished like the rain clouds that had initially enveloped Table Mountain. It was no surprise when a misfield sealed South Africa's triumph, encapsulating India's inability to cling on to a series that was theirs for the taking after the opening day.

Looking back, it would be easy to say that India lost it with their deplorable batting on the fourth afternoon, but in fairness South Africa won it by being prepared to go the extra yard when needed. Unlike India's old-timers, who flunked their test miserably, the duo of Pollock and Kallis were impeccable with the ball, even as one for the future - Dale Steyn - devastated any slim Indian hopes of a revival.

Most of all, this was Smith's victory. His innate self-belief and swagger would perhaps have been embraced in Australia, though they appear to make people uncomfortable here. And when his team needed to be shown the way, he was the first one out of the trenches. No praise can be too high for that. Like Lombardi, he had understood one of life's fundamental truths: "It is essential to understand that battles are primarily won in the hearts of men."

Dileep Premachandran is features editor of Cricinfo
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Play with heart. Win with class. Lose with dignity

undercover

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Re: DP again.."It is all about heart" - HEAR HEAR!!!
« Reply #1 on: January 07, 2007, 02:37:36 AM »

As usual nothing-new .I think DP has a template. Just copy –paste every time India loses.
No mention about RD’s captaincy or about not playing HS in this pitch where SRT was turning square.

I like this guy Veerakumar from Karnataka for his guts & honesty...


Is Dravid a good skipper?
Friday , January 05, 2007


Is Rahul Dravid a good skipper? His recent handling of the team during the South Africa tour leaves a big question mark on his ability as the captain of the Indian cricket team.

There is no doubt that the Karnataka star is one of the best middle order batsmen in the world today, despite his poor form during the on-going series. But his captaincy on this tour is much to be desired.

There is a saying that the captain can only be as good as the team but then Dravid is leading a side which boasts of the best batting line-up (at least on paper) and quite a reliable bowling attack but is still not able to sustain pressure with the opposition down on its knees and struggling to get up.

Picking an unfit Munaf Patel in the playing eleven at Cape Town was a big blunder and the Indians could pay a heavy price for that. It is quite clear that Munaf is struggling to even field the ball on the boundary line and is not 100 per cent fit.

How can the team perform to its potential if one of their strike-bowler is struggling to bowl even medium pace stuff?

It is strange how the Indian team’s physio, John Gloster, certified Munaf fit to play when it was quite evident of the player’s discomfort while fielding and bowling to millions of TV viewers.

Does it not sound strange that the Indian management sent home Irfan Patan due to poor bowling form but decided to play an unfit Munaf Patel in the crucial third and final Test while other teams world over would have sent back a unfit player and retained a out-of-form cricketer, hoping that he strikes form during the crucial match.

Secondly, when South African skipper Graeme Smith (94) and middle order batsman Hashim Amla (63) were going great guns adding 159 runs for the second wicket, the Indian skipper should have brought in Sachin Tendulkar, who is known for his ability to break partnerships, to bowl his leg spinners.

Surprisingly, Dravid preferred to persist with Munaf Patel, who bowled well in patches, instead of trying out new things even though Sachin got the most important break through with the wicket of Jacques Kallis. If India had broken the Smith-Amla association much earlier, perhaps India would have been in a much stronger position than they find themselves in at the start of the penultimate day’s play.

Just before the start of the fourth day’s play, Dravid admitted on TV that he had not checked with the physio about the fitness status of S Sreesanth (ankle injury) and Munaf, which sounded a bit foolish. With the match very delicately poised and with lots at stake, how can the skipper be ignorant of his players’ fitness?

After being named the captain of the Rest of the World (Test) team by the International Cricket Council (ICC), which will take on the world champions Australia later this year, Dravid should now look to iron out these mistakes, which could turn out to be the decisive factor between winning and losing.

Despite all these mistakes, if India still manages to win the Cape Town Test, then it is the biggest New Year gift that we can ever get from our beloved skipper.

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kban1

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Re: DP again.."It is all about heart" - HEAR HEAR!!!
« Reply #2 on: January 07, 2007, 04:33:18 AM »
undercover:

very good forthright comments in this article, much of which we have discussed on this DG but its good to see a reporter take the bull by the horns when all the other journos cant put brain to pen.

As far as DP, you are expecting too much -- he is sold on the current management firm to ever make an objective analysis of any issue --his repeated defense of RD whenever he can slip in a word edgewise and even when he cant (but still does, nonetheless) points to a reporter who has sold his objectivity down the process street.
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achutank

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Re: DP again.."It is all about heart" - HEAR HEAR!!!
« Reply #3 on: January 07, 2007, 07:24:37 AM »
http://content-ind.cricinfo.com/db/PICTURES/CMS/70500/70536.jpg

ok dravid all set to dig his nose now that he is finished digging his hole
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there is more than meets the i

undercover

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Re: DP again.."It is all about heart" - HEAR HEAR!!!
« Reply #4 on: January 07, 2007, 07:50:06 PM »
undercover:

very good forthright comments in this article, much of which we have discussed on this DG but its good to see a reporter take the bull by the horns when all the other journos cant put brain to pen.

As far as DP, you are expecting too much -- he is sold on the current management firm to ever make an objective analysis of any issue --his repeated defense of RD whenever he can slip in a word edgewise and even when he cant (but still does, nonetheless) points to a reporter who has sold his objectivity down the process street.

KBAN ,Interesting that you mentioned that. When someone like DP writes for CRICINFO I think it’s important for him to know what kind of audience he is writing to  … does he care for the feedback ? … is he chained? …He writes what his boss wants him to ? ...Or he knows more than we know because he is close to the team ...Or it’s all his personal likes & dislikes?

For that matter, we have been reading & analyzing some these journalists …Do not you think there is a fixed pattern followed by one set journalists …that the actual content is same  … no matter what they support xx yy

It’s interesting to know how they function in a group and who decides the content for them ? 
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pieterSAN

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Re: DP again.."It is all about heart" - HEAR HEAR!!!
« Reply #5 on: March 15, 2007, 09:03:48 PM »
LN: Not sure how I missed this post....good one. It's heartening to see the appreciation for Lombardi all over the world.
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CLR James

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Re: DP again.."It is all about heart" - HEAR HEAR!!!
« Reply #6 on: March 15, 2007, 10:57:54 PM »

This summary by DP is significant:

Quote
Looking back, it would be easy to say that India lost it with their deplorable batting on the fourth afternoon, but in fairness South Africa won it by being prepared to go the extra yard when needed. Unlike India's old-timers, who flunked their test miserably, the duo of Pollock and Kallis were impeccable with the ball, even as one for the future - Dale Steyn - devastated any slim Indian hopes of a revival.

Most of all, this was Smith's victory. His innate self-belief and swagger would perhaps have been embraced in Australia, though they appear to make people uncomfortable here. And when his team needed to be shown the way, he was the first one out of the trenches. No praise can be too high for that. Like Lombardi, he had understood one of life's fundamental truths: "It is essential to understand that battles are primarily won in the hearts of men."

It seems that we have quite a few pseudo thinkers of the game nowadays who come up with a mix of orientalist pop philosophy of the Zen kind to explain away tactical malfunctions of the worst kind. This group includes coaches and journalists. Between them, they throw up the worst armada of cliches the world of cricket has been assaulted with recently. But the deployment of this world view of course, is selective. One tends to forget these when the going is good (as it was for a while a few months back); that time, one waxes eloquent about batting order changes, fielding placements, new batting talents, and cold professional amputations of cancerous growths.

One begins speaking to 'hearts' and 'existentialist minds' as soon as the process hits a low ebb. Which begs the question what exactly is the process in the first place. Is it a technical regime to improve cricketing skills and planning, or is it a new age 'Dharma' to redeem lost souls? Are we dealing with professional cricketers here, or existentialist Arjunas? Why is it that when the team cannot match up in a game of cricket, it is only because of some cardio-vascular-spiritio-poetic moonshine and not because so and so's feet are not moving properly? the praises for Greame Smith are deserved by a cricketing general. What is Dravid supposed to be in the process? Chief Meditator?
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RicePlateReddy

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Re: DP again.."It is all about heart" - HEAR HEAR!!!
« Reply #7 on: March 16, 2007, 12:15:11 AM »
http://content-ind.cricinfo.com/db/PICTURES/CMS/70500/70536.jpg

ok dravid all set to dig his nose now that he is finished digging his hole



Astute observation. I didn't readily notice that he his clutching his underwear in his hand.
« Last Edit: March 16, 2007, 12:17:59 AM by kingofprussia »
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