Saturday, 28 February 2015

Doing and undoing!

"Don't think of what you have to do, don't consider how to carry it out!" the master exclaimed. 
"The shot will only go smoothly when it takes the archer himself by surprise. 
It must be as if the bowstring suddenly cut through the thumb that held it. 
You mustn't open the right hand on purpose." 
                                                                      - Eugen Herrigel in "Zen in the Art of Archery"




"Cricket is a game of glorious uncertainties".... I find the term 'Cricket' in this cliche, a very narrow one and would love to replace it with 'life'!

But, since the business here is Cricket, I let me have it for a start....appropriately so, with what happened in that game between the Oz and Kiwis in Auckland!

After that fairy tale finish in that game, which belonged to the showcase in a museum, I tweeted "Incredible is word which will fall short of description.... and I don't subscribe to 'incredulous' - the skeptics choice".

The Aussies were off to their customary flying start and suddenly lost a bit of sense which got them reduced to 106 for 9!

It is always intrigues me as to what happens in the minds of the bowlers, and why - especially in a crunch contest - after running through the entire top-line of accomplished batsmanship powerfully; and...., and then allow that last one or two men to score a bit and spoil all the great fun that they had!

Eugen Harrigel, while learning the art of archery, in his quest to embrace Zen, found the going tough and said to his master that he was failing despite his conscientious effort to relax. And the Master replied, "That's just the trouble"!

The first 8 batsmen tried to score and tried to retain their wickets and therefore failed, the last batsman lived the moment and thus survived every ball, letting the opposition bowlers "try" to take his wicket - the roles got reversed: and hence the one who failed succeeded and one who succeeded failed!

Zen is a way of life, so is Cricket... so is any other profession! 

The conscientious effort, freezes the mind, tightens the muscles, numbs the reflexes and therefore, renders the one who is putting in the effort, ordinary.

The 'effort' of the Kiwi bowlers in the end allowed Aussies to escape the ignominy of finding their name amongst the other low scorers in the history of the game and the relief that it was all over!

The confidence that the Kiwis got off to, with the explosive start by McCullum, may have urged them to rush and finish-off the game,  and 'enabled' them to lose a few wickets in a rush.

11 runs to go, 4 wickets in hand..... Aussies were merely getting through their motions.... and Daniel Vettori gifted his wicket....!

5 runs remaining, 27.3 overs to go, 3 wicket in hand!  

Nothing to lose in any case, and so Starc runs in and just bowls...effortlessly, which incidentally lands as a couple of perfect yorkers and two more wickets in succession! 

Still 5 runs remain, 27.1 overs to go, 1 wicket in hand!!  Everything swayed, and lost a bit of sanity, nails of countless fingers got chopped off without a cutter... the crowd and the commentators screamed in delirium!

The last man facing the last ball of Starc who was on a hat-trick.  Suddenly, the Aussies starts 'planning' to take that wicket and grab the victory from nowhere! 

Aussies forgot that they reached this stage, in this match, not because of their effort; but inspite of it..., inspite of them... because they had letgo! When they had nothing to lose, they got everything. 

The proximity of victory, made historic by its bizarreness, made them to 'try conscientiously'.... they wanted to take charge and that effort made Starc bowl that last ball way outside the line allowing the 'prey' escape.

Still Aussies can win, New Zealand can win or even a tie - as they say, all three results was also possible. 

Williamson, who witnessed the heap of wickets fall, standing on the other end, probably thought enough is enough and swung his bat..., not sure on purpose or despair...., at the first given opportunity and the ball soared high into the stands!

The Kiwis scrambled through....just. 

It certainly could not have been planned, but in the end, everyone would say (except the Aussies) that it was a poetic justice!

We are in for more exciting matches in the days to come!  As I write this, England just compiled 309 runs against the Srilankan's and we are in for an exciting game!

To continue...

Tuesday, 24 February 2015

Line and length

"The right art," cried the Master, "is purposeless, aimless!" - Zen Mystic


After painful years of waiting and hoping, it is heartening to see Indian Bowlers bowl fiery pace on decent line and length with reasonable consistency! And we could see what it has transpired into, in the first two games of this World Cup that India played. 



Let us not go too far with this two performances and just say "good" - all is well that has 'begun well'!
The problem with Indians; be it media or the fans, is that they reach the extremes fast, no middle-way....and this does not help our players.

The pitches down-under are conducive for fast bowling and our bowlers discovered this open secret! The bygone triangular series loss has not gone waste!

"The ball is allowed to swing isn't it!?"  Harsha Bhogle quoted Alan Border commenting on Tim Southee's bowling against England. Great men talk less, and when they do it will sound as the most powerful!  In fact, what Alan Border said encompasses the art of bowling (not only swing bowling) in a nutshell.

What is line & length?  What is good bowling? 

LINE, as we know, is the most important component, not only in Cricket but in most spheres of human life.  It is used to refer anything that is perpetual, continuous, sequential etc....line of thought, line of control, lifeline, drawing a line (euphemism) so on and so forth.  Why even a circle is a line in some sense - a circle of infinite radius is a line!  

So things do not come around....in circles....rather in lines!

It is no different in Cricket, where the line implies the imaginary trajectory in relation to a batsman's stance in congruence to the stumps: off-stump line; middle-stump line & leg-stump line.

Till the last two games, the Indian bowlers have been consistently bowling to the pads and the leg stump line, which is considered a cardinal sin!  


LENGTH corresponds to the pitching of the ball or the point where the ball lands after leaving the bowlers hand: 'short-pitch', 'good-length', 'fuller' or the 'yorker-length' etc and bowlers use these lengths with the corresponding right line, in consonance with the field setting provided, and in line with their plan of attack.

There are other aspects such as coming over the wickets, around the wickers, closer to the stumps, away from the stumps, using the popping crease fully, keeping the seam straight, bowling with cross seam, bowling through the fingers, bowling from back of the palm.... 

Also, a bowler needs to pitch the ball 'just outside the off-stick', not too far away, not too close either and occasionally vary the lengths according to the plan....either to bowl a bouncer, teaser etc

Apart from these, there is an optimum run-up length, stride and rhythm, high arm action, rolling over the ball, using the shoulders, wrist....

Now, how do you do all these, along with the thoughts about the particular phase in their career, doubts lingering on the selection process....oof!


Don't tell me you are going to teach me doing all those....would you!?


You cannot play any sport with all these going in your minds!

What is required is an unflinching consistency in keeping things simple and not think about any-other-thing! And to do this, one needs to do rigorous practice in a focused way - and above all, train their mind to remain unwavering, uncomplicated, stress free and steady at all times!

Just run in powerfully, and approach the stumps gracefully, unhurriedly, leap as you near the stumps, swing the arm full and high with the leap, shift the weight to the non bowling arm for the thrust, all the while just look at the batsman on his eyes and deliver the ball on the final stride with the heel of the front foot landing just inside the popping crease.....and...

....let the ball find the line, length, swing and do all the talking, let it kiss the grass and the wind and find its way to the stumps, or the outer edge of the bat!

When it comes to fast bowling amongst my many favourites, Michael Holding and Wasim Akram gets the top billing - for the sheer ease with which they showcase their art and the apprehension (at times bordering on fear) that they instill in the minds of the batsman!

(Michael Holding)

Dicky Bird had once said the following about Michael Holding; "....his bowling action was like a Rolls Royce, His run-up was so smooth the umpires couldn't hear him. And he used to run from miles away...!"

He was aptly referred to as "the whispering death"!

Michael Holding got most of his wickets by 'hitting the wickets' - clean bowled!  That shows for his consistency and accuracy. 

And this story, narrated by him, explains how he did that: "When I was a kid, we used to play this informal game in Jamaica called Catchy Shubby. You turned up in a park, all kids, you had no umpires, you had no gloves, no pads. Just a matter of who was batting. The only chance you get to bat was by getting that person out. And not by getting him caught, because the person who took the catch would get to bat! You had to hit the stumps. Because there were no umpires they could place their legs in front of the stumps. So we decided if we could hit them on their legs - and that hurts - they wouldn't put their legs in front. That's how I began to bowl fast!"  (Courtesy Crickinfo.com)

And then he reveals..."I was an off-spinner initially!!"

Many batsman in the world would have loved to have had him as an off-spinner - not that it is easy to play, but to have escaped what they had to endure!


Too much cricket, too much attention to minor details, too much coaching, too much focus on everything else other than keeping things simple and focus on the act persay, has rendered most of the modern day cricketers confused and stale - even the good ones get burnt down fast.

Rarely you find someone emerge unscathed from these and go on to become truly great.

All that the bowler needs to do is to 'think' - think not on what to do, but what they did!  When I know, sitting in my study, on what needs to be done to turn into a great bowler, surely the one who has spent major portion of his young years slogging on the field, instead of fiddling with the computers and video games, would know better on what to do.  Yet....

....it is the most difficult art....and hence I started with the Zen quote "The right artis purposeless, aimless"! It essentially emphasises on the act of "let-go" - the oft repeated and most misunderstood phrase. 

By trying consciously, a bowler will fail surely! But by letting go his 'self' and allowing him to go with the flow, he would allow his instincts to take over and command every muscle in his body and orchestrate them to perfection and allow the ball to go and land on the desired place, pace and let the nature and physics do everything else!

A bowler need not be 'trying' anything consciously in those few moments that he gets, from the top of the bowling mark to the actual release of the ball.  He cannot hope to do anything consciously, and if he tries, he will only fail miserably.  Rather, a bowler needs to free his mind of all the shit and just bowl.  He can try things in the nets, not while the match is on!
  
You learn all the right technique, what to do and what not to do and how to do etc when you are young and learning the art of bowling.  And to do the same after reaching the international arena,...gosh, there is something seriously wrong.  

Yes you may have an expert coach for guidance, just to point out what one is doing and let the bowler to discover what he needs to do or what adjustments that he needs to do, both mentally and physically, off the field and in the nets.

In the same interview in Crickinfo, Mike and Wasim were asked this question on coaching and this is what they had to say:

Holding: "In our day we didn't have too many coaches, we had senior players and we learned from these guys. Just like today you have these computers telling you where this guy scores his runs, in our days we learned that from experience. We would remember that. It's all memory."

Akram: "Everything is handed on a plat now. There is so much technology. They say, this batsman plays 20% of his shots there, and 20% there... It gets too complicated for the bowler."


Good that our bowlers have realised what they did and have done well to correct their undoings, so far. It is not about winning, it is also not about taking wickets....it just about doing enough to lure the batsman 'do' or come at you.  

Wasim said that he hated short delivery that the batsmen could leave alone! He said, "....I am not going to do that. It has to make him uncomfortable. Let them wait. It's coming. It's coming. It's coming."  Not only the bouncer, Wasim kept the batsmen guessing on when he will bowl the yorker too!

Emmanuel Lasker the great Chess World Champion who lived in earlier part of 20th century said that the threat is better than its execution!  How true!

Herein lies the art....the results are what 'others' see.... an offshoot of the art...for those who are materialistic!  What is most satisfying to a true artist and art lover is The Art....in its pure manifestation....graceful....silent.....whispering....!

As I write this post, the West Indian 'Gale' decimated the Zimbabwe bowlers with the first ever World Cup double century! 

Hey Gayle Strom, stay away.....stay away....when you meet us on March 6th; our guys have just started believing in their abilities.....don't dampen their new found spirit! 


To continue



Sunday, 22 February 2015

"....so be it" - A letter to George Bernard Shaw

"played by 22 flanneled fools being watched by 22000...."

WHAT?  

22000??

You got your numbers terribly wrong, Sir!  Definitely your genius mind failed to understand the mesmerising potential and power of the game you reproached...wish you had lived today....!


Yet, you may not be far off....in terms of the 'act of watching' or more precisely whiling away time. But, we love this game and indulge in an act of wishful self-fooling!!  

Do you know, people live and die for this game...some make living and many die literally!!  You would have, if you had watched the reactions to the loss of Pakistani team in their first two World Cup 2015 matches.

Fortunately, I am not a Pakistani.... and not fool enough.....I value my TV set, and certainly my life, more!

Who knows, the guy on the picture below, may have been taking his TV to a repair shop...!




However, it does bring happiness, it does....for me and for billions.

Was it not your Bard who said "One man's tragedy is another man's comedy"? Somebody in some country find a loss tragic and break their whatever, in despise and somebody else find it comical enough to film and telecast it and make billions laugh at the tragedy and the loss of...!

I hear you murmur...in the grave..."What sort of a world is this...."  You may have understood many things, which made you worthy of nobel prize, but....

When music sung or played by someone else, when movies and drama written and enacted by someone else can bring happiness, why not this game by 11 flannelled....22 flannelled....or 24 flannelled (why miss out those two guys who converse and entertain only by raising their arms upwards and sidewards!!). 

Money, yes, it does rain money for few, no matter how and how much....!  

Mr Shaw, certainly I need not remind you about the phrase, "Whan the sunne shinth make hay": some John Heywood may have said this in 16th century, but it is only now our people have managed to put this phrase to great use!  

You need to watch our 24/7 TV channels to understand what I say: 
- if a team wins it is marketed!
- if they lose, it is still marketed!!

It is all about "mauka" - no, I may not be able to explain this one to you, nor you will be able to understand its true meaning - it is beyond your language and grammar!

Everything is bought or sold!

NO No no, certainly not....I don't mean that way; Kipling has taught me how to trust and allow doubters...
"If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
But make allowance for their doubting too...."

Will you be able to understand if I tell you that they sell and buy space, minutes and seconds in media!?

In your days there were more intellectuals and less opportunities; now we have more opportunities... To make a living, in your days, you need to KNOW EVERYTHING ABOUT SOMETHING at least!

Now Tom, Dick and Harry can write, talk, do whatever and thrive WITHOUT KNOWING NOTHING ABOUT ANYTHING!!

Sir! (even though you may have shunned it, it is customary to address anybody this way in our times!),

Yours truly also has a secret desire to 'sell some words' and make hay.....  The sun is shining bright 'down under' and will remain that way for another couple of months!


In that fervent hope, and also knowing that you would certainly not resurrect to admonish me for this indulgence! 


To Continue.....