India at the Winter Olympics

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India and winter are not two words that really go together. Add Olympics to that, it becomes even more bizarre. While going through The Hindu today, I read that India is participating in this years winter Olympics! Big surprise! What’s more, India had been represented in the last two Olympics too. Guess by how many athletes? Yeah, just one! And his name is Shiva Kesavan. Never thought that winter sports existed in India, simply due to the fact that winter doesnt exist in most of India ;). I had my eyes pop out when I learned that his dad was from my very own Kerala – that’s as tropical as you can get in India! A winter athlete from Kerala? Not even in my dreams!!

He was also some sort of hero during the 2002 Salt Lake games. The American media, made this guy really famous, calling him one in a billion. How true! And amazingly I don’t remember a single mention of him here in the Indian media before.

He has turned out to be a hero to me instantly. How proud must he have been representing 1,000,000,000 people at not one but two (and soon three) Olympics. The guy obviously never got much support from our government and had to participate in his event with borrowed equipment… oh… and his event is called Luge. It is a high-speed race on a sled down a fixed track. I remember watching it once or twice on TV, seemed fun :D

In 2006 though, Shiva is not alone for India. The official site lists 3 more athletes. Good lord. Are winter sports catching up in India? :o

Anyway do support Shiva in his quest. The Turin games are live, here in India on DD Sports from February 10. Whether he wins or finishes last, he will be a big hero to me!

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A nice day for Cricket!

Two very exciting matches today, the Ashes test between Australia v England and the ODI India v West Indies. Both thrilling… and both a relief to every loyal cricket fan… Cricket’s magic is still working.

What a wonderful test match it was! I would have never thought Australia would have reached so close, needing more than a 100 runs to win with just two wickets remaining. For the first time, in a long time, I could see Australia having to fight for a win… and boy wasn’t it good! The match was outstanding even before the last day, but the final act made it truly unforgettable. Kudos to Warne, Lee and Kasperowicz. I knew Lee and Warne could bat a bit, but Kasperowicz… that was a surprise. It was fun seeing both sides fighting till the end… congrats to England, for not letting their heads down even when it was all slipping away. But amidst all this let’s not forget Andrew Flintoff, who made it all possible. If it had not been for his explosive batting and accurate bowling, the Aussies would have simply walked away with all honours. Too good a match to miss folks!!

Whoever that told me test cricket is boring, must have been joking!

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The New Laws of Cricket

ICC decided to bring in two new laws to limited-overs cricket that will supposedly make it more interesting. Now that the first experiment was tried out during the recent England vs. Australia Nat-West series, we have some idea over whether the whole thing is going to work.

I like the first rule. Three blocks of fielding-restrictions (now called as Powerplay). That I think should really add some twists to the same-old-story during the sleepy overs from the 15th to the 40th. During the Nat-West series however this wasn’t really tested, since all the matches were low scoring and almost always the team had a very slow start allowing the teams to finish off the powerplay blocks by over 20. It still looked like a normal ODI. But in high-scoring games say when a team has to chase a 300 plus total, this is definitely going to be more exciting.

Rule #2 was substitution. Previously the substitutes could only field and hence were almost of negligible importance (They didn’t even appear in the statistics of the game!). But now this option is now made more powerful, trying to make it at par with substitutions in football. Substitutions can now be made at any time and they can bat, bowl or field just like the other 10 on field. So is it working? Frankly, no! I do support the idea of substitution, but in the current form of implementation, I seriously doubt whether it adds anything more to the “excitement” of the game. It makes the toss even more powerful I guess. Suppose Australia wants to bat first and goes in with one extra batsman, thinking that they can substitute him for a bowler in the second innings. This will work if they win the toss and elect to bat. However if England wins the toss and they decide to bat, the whole plan is spoiled. Australia will have to substitute their player right at the beginning of the innings, absolutely wasting their extra batsman. The reason for this problem is that the playing 11 has to be submitted before the toss. One solution I can see for this problem is that instead of the playing 11, the entire 12 member team is given before the toss and the captain after the toss can decide who the substitute is.

In my humble opinion, substitution must either be improved or scrapped completely and the powerplay rules must be retained. Lets see where all this would bring cricket to. Anyway nice to see that ICC is innovating and are genuinely interested in promoting the game :)

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The Great Indianapolis Farce

I have been saying all along that this was the best F1 season I have ever seen in my life. That makes yesterday’s 6 car farce more painful. But no one can now argue with the fact that this has turned out to be the most surprise filled season of all time. Each race seems to spring up something interesting.

First of all Michelin should have done better. They screwed up big time, no question about that. But they had the guts to own up their mistakes. Commendable, that when so many millions are at stake, they were able to see the human side of it.

Ferrari must have thought, we haven’t got plenty of points to play with, our tyres are all ok, better take this golden opportunity for that. I can see that from their point of view. They are a racing team and had no reason not to race. But what about the FIA? Why didn’t they think of the big picture? There were 100,000 people who paid to watch a real race plus the millions watching at home. Don’t they have any commitment towards them? I was really disappointed with them especially when 9 out of teams, including Jordan & Minardi, were willing to make a concession. I just don’t believe that the FIA would not permit the changes, despite the teams willing to forfeit championship points for the race to go on for the sake of the fans. In their statement FIA says that the teams could have asked the drivers to go slow at turn 13. Are they out of their mind? They are racing drivers for heavens sake!! In a full-fledged race, how would you expect anyone to pull back on their pace, when they think the can get more out of the car!!

I don’t think the Michelin teams really had any other option, when FIA refused to introduce the chicane. I believe the teams did the right thing. They put safety first. Good thing that the team bosses had the common sense. This one was a real low point in F1 history, but had they raced and someone’s tyre had blown out, you never know what kind of tragedy would have played out.

Seeing the unity of the other teams, I now have big doubts about F1′s future. The alternate GP proposed by most major teams except Ferrari seems like getting more and more support with incidents like this. Too bad! I read that F1 has already lost out in US big time because of this. Nice way to woo the American crowds, Mr. Moseley.

One small “silver lining” to come out of all this – an Indian got F1 championship points for the first time in history. Congrats to Narain. Also felt nice that Minardi did score some points too. That should help them tremendously.

Hope F1 does recover from this deep ditch.

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Bangladesh beats Australia!

Wow!! This was probably the biggest upset in the history of one-day cricket. The team that is ranked last in the international ratings (by a long way) beat the team that has been on the top ever since the ratings were introduced.

Just think about it… It is somewhat like a Division 2 side in the English league defeating Brazil in football! Consider Bangladesh’s record before this match. Played – 109, Won – 9, Lost – 96. The odds of Australia loosing was tipped at 500 to 1 by Ladbrokes! Now that puts it into perspective doesn’t it?

I have always been a strong critic of Bangladesh. I never understood why the team was allowed to play at the highest level of cricket. It never seemed like they were even trying to win a match. But however yesterday’s performance was just so good. It wasn’t as if the Australians didn’t score any runs. Bangladesh had to chase a fairly good total of 250. Honestly before their innings started I wasn’t expecting them to cross even 200. But what a performance by the young team. They just withstood all the pressure against probably the best bowling attack in the world. Amazing!

I just hope this isn’t just a one-off. They are a very young side. People have already started drawing analogies with Sri Lanka, who were once a struggling side like Bangladesh and in the end managed to win the world cup in 1996. I think it’s a bit too pre-mature for that. But still this victory will immensely improve their confidence and more importantly will earn them some respect.

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