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   <title>From the Editor</title>
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   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2012:/fromeditor//178</id>
   <updated>2011-11-13T11:41:37Z</updated>
   
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<entry>
   <title>Remembering Roebuck</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2011/11/remembering_roebuck.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2011:/fromeditor//178.26099</id>
   
   <published>2011-11-13T10:06:50Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T11:41:37Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ Roebuck held no allegiance when writing &copy; PA Photos I don’t precisely recall when and where I met Peter Roebuck first; it feels like I always knew him. It must have been in the English summer of 2001, or...]]></summary>
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<span class="pcaption">Roebuck held no allegiance when writing  </span>
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I don’t precisely recall when and where I met <a href=http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/player/19456.html>Peter Roebuck</a> first; it feels like I always knew him. It must have been in the English summer of 2001, or perhaps 2002. I am certain he was wearing a straw hat, and was struck by his physicality: large and strong hands, sharp nose, enquiring eyes, and hair protruding out of his ears. But the strongest, most lasting impression was left by his manner of delivering sweeping snap judgements. 
 
“I think the best cricket writing now comes out of India.” He said this out of the blue, without a preamble, and without bothering to qualify it. And this continued through my ten-year association with him, in emails, in conversation, and even in <a href=http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/current/url/540288.html>his columns</a>. 
 
Of course, he was not always right. The last time I met him in person was in Sri Lanka during the last World Cup. He spoke animatedly about a young Sri Lankan journalist he had just met, and tried to persuade me to hire him as a writer. The young man in question walked up to us a few minutes later. He turned out to be a photographer. “How many times have we been told not to rush in to a judgement,” Roebuck said upon instant reflection. But nothing dissuaded him from making them. And often he was spot-on. 
 
His judgements were based not merely on the keenest understanding of the game but on a wider understanding of society, history and human behaviour, and his ability to connect the dots. Like all good writers, he was observant, sensitive, and deeply affected by the world outside, even as he grappled with his own complexities. 
 
Few drew better portraits of cricketers as human beings because few had the combination of his talents: having been a player himself, he had the ability to view the inner lives of cricketers from the outside. He grasped their torment, and had the gift with words with which to articulate it. At the top of his game, his writing was both profound and poignant. His writing, in a sense, was like Brian Lara’s batsmanship: it had beauty and depth, it reflected his moods, and while it could be inconsistent, it attained incomparable heights. Even his poorer pieces contained priceless gems. 
 
Among the cricket people I have known, he cared more than most about the game, and he worried incessantly about its future. He saw his writing as not merely a vocation but as an obligation to the game. To this effect, he became a missionary and avenger. In his latter years his concerns grew wider. He was deeply affected by the political situation in Zimbabwe, where he had a home, and he sometimes began exceeding his brief in his cricket writings.  When Firdose Moonda, our South Africa correspondent, travelled to Zimbabwe to cover the country’s return to Test cricket, I sought Roebuck’s advice on stories she could pursue. For the next two weeks he wrote me almost daily, suggesting ideas, pointing me towards reports and other writings on Zimbabwe. Very few of these were cricket-related. 
 
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      He wrote for ESPNcricinfo because he wanted to be a global voice on a global platform. The idea mattered a great deal to him. That modern cricket writing for the most part was influenced by nationalism was a constant lament of his. He brought to his writing his own beliefs and biases, but it was refreshingly shorn of any other allegiance. He maintained a curiously complex relationship with England, his home country – it was tough to say at times whether he abandoned England or if England had abandoned him – and was open in embracing the Australian way of life, but his outlook, shaped by his experiences of living in different countries, his curiosity about different peoples and cultures, remained scrupulously global. 
 
In the last couple of years he had been enamoured of the idea of becoming a part-time resident of India, a country he regarded with affection. It was, I suspected, partly down to his restless nature, and partly his unflinching desire to reinforce, to himself, the idea of his rootlessness. 
 
Only a few days ago he was a guest on a yet-to-be-published episode of Time Out, our audio discussion show, hosted by Harsha Bhogle. The subject was spot-fixing, and he spoke lucidly and precisely. He laughed at the jokes and told Osman Samiuddin, our former Pakistan editor, and a guest on the show, that he looked forward to seeing him in South Africa. 
 
For a person who never held back from expressing his views on the affairs of the game or the world, he led a very private life. After he stopped playing, he withdrew completely from the world of players. He rarely met them or interviewed them. Not knowing them personally, he said, gave him the objectivity to write about their cricket. He was usually the first to leave the press box, normally within a couple of minutes after the last ball had been bowled, and if he ever met fellow journalists outside of work, it was one on one. And he did most of talking then. 
 
The circumstances that led him to take his life are unclear. Though I knew the writer quite well, I had little access to the person. Even great men are not free of flaws. I will remember Peter for his gifts. 

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<entry>
   <title>Record crowd for record Test</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2011/07/record_crowd_for_record_test.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2011:/fromeditor//178.24445</id>
   
   <published>2011-07-25T12:24:16Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:09:41Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ The serpentine queues outside Lord's &copy; Getty Images Lord’s, the grandest of cricket grounds as far as the richness of heritage and history go, had a new chapter added to its pages today. Never has a Monday morning at...]]></summary>
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<span class="pcaption">The serpentine queues outside Lord's</span>
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Lord’s, the grandest of cricket grounds as far as the richness of heritage and history go, had a new chapter added to its pages today. Never has a Monday morning at the ground been so busy, so urgent and so alive. Not even the prospect of a first Ashes victory in 75 years brought so many people to the ground in 2009. Today’s full house beat that record by over 4000, but there is no account of those who had to return disappointed.

I certainly haven’t seen a longer queue at a cricket ground, or anywhere for that matter, than today. It began right outside the St John’s Wood tube station, about half a kilometre from Lord’s, and snaked all around the stadium. And incredibly there were two of those.

I was in Granada in the south of Spain last month where they sell a limited number of tickets for the magnificent Alhambra Palace. Though the ticket counter opened at 8.30 am I had been advised to go early; I reached there at 6 am, bleary and cold, and was astounded to find 15 people ahead of me. By all accounts, there were over a thousand outside Lord’s at that hour. Sam Collins, one half of the Chucks who do a delightful <a href="/ci/content/current/video_audio/524602.html" target="_blank">video diary</a> for us, met the man who was first in one of the queues - he had reached there at 2 am.]]>
      As fans ran past me to join the end of the seemingly interminable queue, I felt grateful for the privileges of my job that granted me a seat right behind the bowler’s arm, with free food thrown in.

A variety of factors have combined to make this a special day. The weather is gorgeous. What was meant to be a largely wet Test has grown brighter by the day. The Test was open with, theoretically at least, all four results still possible. VVS Laxman and Rahul Dravid were at the crease with Sachin Tendulkar to follow, and this would certainly be the one last chance to watch them together at Lord’s. There remained the outside chance of Tendulkar’s 100th hundred. And of course, there are a lot of Indians in London.

There was another reason why the queues were so long. Usually, fans are allowed to buy four tickets on the final day. But to ensure touts didn’t take advantage – final day tickets were priced at 20 pounds against 65 for the first day – the MCC decided to issue one ticket per person, with complimentary tickets for children below 16. But still, if you joined the queue at 8.30 am, when the ticket counters opened, there was no hope.

At a streetside coffee shop I met a man who’d travelled that morning from Bristol. He has been doing so for many years. “Book a return ticket in advance, land up around 8.30, have a beer after the game and catch a late evening train home.”

“Looks like I’ll be drinking a lot of beers today,” he said, “I hope I can find some pubs where they are showing the match.”

The man next to him was luckier. He’d travelled from Hampshire, about 40 minutes by train, and arrived not much earlier. “I jumped the queue,” he said sheepishly. “They have broken up the queue at the traffic light, the cops weren’t watching, and the guy at the end was looking elsewhere, so I joined in.

“I’m not proud of it but this will be my first day at Lord’s, and I did what I had to.”

At the media centre I caught up with Sourav Ganguly, a centurion on debut at this ground in 1996 and now here as a television commentator, and he said he had never seen a Monday like this at Lord’s.

But of course it isn’t merely about this Monday. To have been at Lord’s through the five days has been to see the sun shining on Test cricket. It’s been glorious.
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Talking legspin with TJ </title>
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   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2011:/fromeditor//178.23712</id>
   
   <published>2011-05-31T15:45:16Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:09:54Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ To fully appreciate Jenner, you had to hear him talk legspin &copy; Zimbabwe Cricket If you like cricket, you had to like Terry Jenner. And if you love legspin you had to absolutely adore him. No one spoke more...]]></summary>
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<span class="pcaption">To fully appreciate Jenner, you had to hear him talk legspin</span>
<span class="pcopyright">&copy; Zimbabwe Cricket</span><br> 
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If you like cricket, you had to like Terry Jenner. And if you love legspin you had to absolutely adore him. No one spoke more eloquently, knowledgeably, and passionately about legspin than him. I met him properly only once, but even years later, I can picturise him vividly.

We met in the lobby behind the press box at the Adelaide Oval in 2003. That morning he had been in the nets with Shane Warne, preparing to make his comeback to international cricket after serving his one-year ban for taking diuretics. I had asked him for five minutes; he gave me close to an hour, during which I might have asked him no more than five questions.

I did ask him, though, about the difference between Stuart MacGill and Warne. MacGill had benefitted from Warne’s absence and used the period profitably, claiming 43 wickets in eight Tests at 25.11, with a strike rate of 45.9. But of course he had made no impression on the touring Indians, nor was he expected to.  During a meet-the-press event before the Test, MacGill, while giving fulsome praise to Warne, had questioned, only half in jest, his claims to mystery balls.

“Stuart is right,” Jenner said. “There is only so much spin you can generate, and there are only so many balls you can bowl.” Then he counted them: the legbreak, the topspinner, the backspinner, the flipper and the googly. The difference between Warne and Macgill, he said, wasn’t the number of different balls they possessed or how much they spun the ball.  It was in how the ball arrived at the batsman.

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      Then he proceeded, oblivious to scores of other journalists and a few commentators around, to give a full demonstration. Because he was so round-arm, MacGill’s ball arrived at the right eye of the batsman and went on straight, giving the batsman 20:20 vision. “When Warnie bowls to right-handers,” Jenner said, mimicking Warne’s action, “the ball arrives at eye-level and then disappears behind the left ear, forcing the batsman to search for it.”  That Warne had the ability to drift the ball wasn’t unknown, but Jenner’s way of explaining it gave it different meaning.

There was another nets before the Test and it was organised at the behest of another legspinner. Anil Kumble had invited Warne and Jenner to watch him practice and talk about legspin. Spinners are a club by themselves, and Jenner watched while Kumble and Warne bowled, and then they stood in a corner and chatted for an eternity.

Kumble wasn’t Jenner’s kind of legspinner in that he hardly turned the ball. But Jenner saw his art. “You couldn’t teach someone to bowl like Kumble,” he said, “and that makes him unique and special. Sitting far away in the stands it’s not easy to see his subtleties and nuances. Only the batsman knows.”

I was wary of asking him about his experience in jail. But there was no awkwardness about him. He wasn’t proud of what landed him there, but he was proud of how he came out of it. “It made me a better man,” he said, without a trace of rancour and bitterness.

It also made him value his friends. Ian Chappell, his captain at South Australia and in the Australian team, was one the few of his teammates to have visited in prison. “He told me to look him in the eye,” Jenner said. “And then he said something I would never forget. ‘Once captain, always captain.’ I knew he would always be there for me.”

Terry played only nine Tests. Being Warne’s coach brought him more fame than his international career. But to fully appreciate Jenner, you had to hear him talk legspin. I count myself as fortunate. 
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>A forgotten anniversary</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2011/03/a_forgotten_anniversary.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2011:/fromeditor//178.22598</id>
   
   <published>2011-03-15T14:41:48Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:10:07Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ Ten years ago, VVS Laxman and Rahul Dravid constructed a partnership that would change Indian cricket &copy; AFP While the senses are riveted on the World Cup, a landmark day in Indian cricket has gone unheralded, unacknowledged even. Ten...]]></summary>
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<span class="pcaption">Ten years ago, VVS Laxman and Rahul Dravid constructed a partnership that would change Indian cricket </span>
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While the senses are riveted on the World Cup, a landmark day in Indian cricket has gone unheralded, unacknowledged even. Ten years ago, on March 14, the foundation for the golden age of Indian Test cricket was laid by two remarkable men. VVS Laxman and Rahul Dravid looked defeat in the eye and refused to blink. 
 
Faced with a follow-on and an opposition which had won 16 Tests in a row, they batted on and on and on till hope and spirit drained off the Australians. For the record, they batted out the day, put on 376 runs for the 5th wicket, and the next day, which is ten years to the day today, Harbhajan Singh and Sachin Tendulkar spun out Australia for 212 to secure the <a href="/ci/engine/match/63920.html" target="_blank">improbablest of wins</a>. 
 
This would remain the defining moment of Laxman’s career, but the feat would have been less significant had it just remained a freak event. But not only was this match and series turning, it also changed the course of Indian cricket. The momentum carried India to a win at Chennai, the confidence derived from beating the one of greatest-ever Test teams carried them on a journey that ended with them becoming the No. 1 Test team in the world. 
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      <![CDATA[I should confess that I didn’t remember the day myself. But then I am hopeless with dates. It was Jaideep Varma, the rationalist half of our <b>Running Between the Cricket</b> team, who messaged me breathlessly from Eden Gardens. He was chuffed already to step in to one of cricket’s iconic venues for the first time in his life, but when he realised what day it was, he couldn’t believe his luck. “What an honour to be here today,” he wrote, “on the 10th anniversary of the greatest day in Indian cricket.” 
 
I had a busy afternoon and it was quite late when I got around to reading his message. I then messaged Dravid, asking him teasingly if he knew the significance of the day. He replied a couple of hours later. No, he hadn’t known till late evening when a journalist from Kolkata called him. 
 
But would you have guessed who his dinner guests were for the evening? VVS Laxman and family. It was a coincidence. Laxman’s wife had spent the day at Dravid’s house, and Laxman, who is in Bangalore to train at the National Cricket Academy, joined them for dinner. There are things you can plan, but some things are just meant to be. 
 
Earlier this evening, I spoke about the day to John Wright, who is in Mumbai on duty as the New Zealand coach. The day before Dravid and Laxman’s partnership, with India 254 for 4 after following on, Wright had been counting his days as India’s first foreign coach.  “That day, that Test, changed my life, and Harbhajan’s.” 
 
We spoke for a while. I asked for one memory, and he gave me half a dozen. "It's all so vivid still."  The fire in the stands after the win (“and then I looked back, and it was gone”); the noise when the wickets were falling (“I was asking myself how intimidating it must be for the opposition batsmen”), Laxman driving the first balls after the lunch and tea breaks for four (“just how can anyone manage to do that coming out of a break?”); and driving back with Sourav Ganguly after the press conference (“we were quiet, but a great weight had lifted off our shoulders”). 
 
India is a different country now. And Indian cricket is unrecognisable from then. Victories are now expected, taken for granted even. But Indian fans must find a quiet moment, rewind to that day, and feel grateful for it. 
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   </content>
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<entry>
   <title>The joys of watching cricket on HD</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2011/03/the_joys_of_watching_cricket_o.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2011:/fromeditor//178.22418</id>
   
   <published>2011-03-03T10:45:35Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:10:24Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ The ad-free HD broadcast made the World Cup's most joyous day even more enjoyable &copy; Getty Images Ireland and Kevin O’Brien provided the World Cup its most joyous day yet, and while I would have loved to be at...]]></summary>
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<span class="pcaption">The ad-free HD broadcast made the World Cup's  most joyous day even more enjoyable</span>
<span class="pcopyright">&copy; Getty Images</span><br> 
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Ireland and Kevin O’Brien provided the World Cup its most <a href="/icc_cricket_worldcup2011/engine/match/433572.html" target="_blank">joyous day</a> yet, and while I would have loved to be at the ground, I had the next best viewing option available. My HD (high-definition) set-top box had arrived the day before, and what a joy it was to watch the crystal-clear pictures on wide screen – and, would you believe it, without a single ad.

As the match went on – and even though there were periods during England’s innings when it was a one-way street, the clean feed kept me engaged – it became apparent how much of the game the India television viewer misses out on. You watched batsmen walk off the pitch after being dismissed. Alex Cusack went stoically, betraying no emotion. O’Brien went to a hero’s ovation, but you could see the mixed emotions as he acknowledged the cheers; he had played the innings of his life but the job wasn’t over yet, and indeed it could go all wrong from there.

You also saw captains setting the field; batting partners having a chat; there were a few more graphics; and you heard commentators discuss a wicket after it has just fallen and, on other occasions, you heard them making small talk. And often, between the overs, the camera just lingered on the stands, going into the viewing balconies, and sometimes hanging idly over the field. Cricket is a contemplative game with lots of pauses, and it was nice for a change to feel those pauses as a television viewer.

A few weeks ago, we devoted an <a href="/ci/content/video_audio/498419.html?genre=33;" target="_blank">entire Timeout show</a> to the awfulness of the television experience for the Indian fan. The coverage of the World Cup so far has been far better – less ads, better commentary - but given the cost of rights, and that the cable industry isn’t the most transparent, it is unrealistic to expect the kind of broadcast available in England or Australia. The takeaway from the discussion was that, at the very least, the consumer needed to be given another option, and that option given, he should be prepared to pay.

That option is available during the World Cup. The HD feed is more expensive to produce and uplink, but DTH operators can make this worthwhile by paying for this feed, and then it’s down to the subscriber to embrace the concept. If you are a cricket fan, it is worth every rupee.
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<entry>
   <title>Introducing ESPNcricinfo&apos;s iPhone app</title>
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   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2011:/fromeditor//178.22109</id>
   
   <published>2011-02-14T04:13:50Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:10:39Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ &copy; ESPNcricinfo Forgive me if this sounds a bit gushing, but as a long-time sucker for Apple’s temptations, I have been waiting for this one with childlike anticipation. And now that it is on my phone, I can say,...]]></summary>
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Forgive me if this sounds a bit gushing, but as a long-time sucker for Apple’s temptations, I have been waiting for this one with childlike anticipation. And now that it is on my phone, I can say, hand on heart, that ESPNcricinfo’s iPhone app is a thing of beauty. And before anyone accuses me of being an Apple evangelist, let me add that this app is also available on the Android platform.
 
Shrinking a huge site like ours to fit a mobile device was a challenge. “It’s a bit like building a scale model of a luxury car,” says Anil Nair, our director of Wireless Services. “The only difference is, you need to be able to drive it.”
 
Anil and his team have done quite a job of it. We have had a fairly handy mobile-optimised site for a couple of years now, but I have always preferred to use the full site, even on my phone, which can be a struggle at lower bandwidths. I can happily switch over to the iPhone app now: it gives richness and depth at a good speed.

Like all good iPhone apps, ours is simple and intuitive. The home screen offers quick access to news, scores and results, and to our lead writers. And the full menu offers a lot more, including video and audio, the full magazine section, and records. I was curious about how they’d fit cricket records tables, which often run into several columns, on a phone screen. They have found a simple solution: the columns are stacked up vertically, as against the traditional across-the-page display.]]>
      <![CDATA[Perhaps the niftiest thing about the app is the lean-back mode, which gives you the option of turning your home screen into a digital clock-like display, with scores ticking away instead of time. There are push notification options for instant alerts for wickets, batsman milestones and score updates during live matches. You also have the ability to customise and filter news, results and fixtures by the team of your choice.  

Almost without our noticing it, nearly 25% of the traffic on ESPNcricinfo is now through mobile devices and the smartphone market is growing rapidly. This app is affirmation of our commitment to bring cricket to you in the best-possible manner on each of your preferred platforms. 

Like many of the really good things in life, the app is free.

<i>You can download the app <a href="http://itunes.apple.com/in/app/espncricinfo/id417408017?mt=8" target="_blank">here</a>.</i>

PS: A lot of you have enquired about the Android app. It has been launched and can be found <a href="https://market.android.com/details?id=com.july.cricinfo" target="_blank">here</a>.]]>
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Evolving Tendulkar remains India&apos;s best</title>
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   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2010:/fromeditor//178.21249</id>
   
   <published>2010-12-19T20:30:38Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:10:51Z</updated>
   
   <summary>When you next hear Tendulkar talk about wanting to get better, he is not merely dishing out a quote. Unbelievably, he is still working on his game, and the runs are hardly a coincidence</summary>
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<span class="pcaption">Sachin Tendulkar continues to improve his game 21 years after he made his debut </span>
<span class="pcopyright">&copy; Getty Images</span><br> 
</div>

The way things have panned out in <a href="/south-africa-v-india-2010/engine/current/match/463146.html" target="_blank">this Test</a> it would seem nothing has changed. Another stirring hundred from Sachin Tendulkar is likely to be, barring a washout tomorrow, in a hopelessly losing cause. And once again, the personal landmark of India’s favourite son will ease the pain of the failure of the team. Tendulkar’s 50th hundred will make it to the front pages tomorrow while the story of impending defeat will remain in the back pages.

Of course many things have changed. India are no longer a one-man team. Whatever they have achieved in this decade, including reaching the No. 1 status in the ICC rankings, a feat unimaginable when Tendulkar started playing, is because they have had an outstanding bunch of players. But that he should, after 21 years, still be India’s finest batsman in conditions that challenged all India batsmen, is almost as incredible as him getting to 50 Test hundreds.

In my memory it was John Wright who first spoke about 100 hundreds for Tendulkar. And he did it casually during a post-interview chat in February 2002. “It’s down to him how he wants to bat, how much he wants to push the envelope,” Wright, then India’s coach, said. “I have told him he should go for 100 hundreds.” It seemed almost fanciful then. Tendulkar’s tally was 59 at that point, 28 in Tests and 31 in ODIs, and he was nearly 30. But nothing about Wright was ever fanciful; he must have known.]]>
      But could he have imagined that Tendulkar would have his most prolific year in international cricket eight years from then? There was time a couple of years ago when it seemed inevitable that Ricky Ponting will overtake Tendulkar both in career runs and Test hundreds. Ponting, a couple  of years younger, now finds himself in an extended, and perhaps, unarrestable, decline, while Tendulkar has reeled off seven Test centuries and over 1500 runs since the beginning of the year with a Test to go.

Over the last few weeks, I have had the opportunity to discuss Tendulkar’s batting with two players who have played alongside him and count among the sharpest observers in the game. Sanjay Manjrekar pointed out how Tendulkar had managed to so tighten his game that he now had the best defensive technique among the batsmen he had watched. Rahul Dravid, who shares with Tendulkar the record for most century partnerships, spoke about his backlift. “It’s amazing how he has minimised it and yet is able to generate so much of power.”

So when you next hear Tendulkar talk about wanting to get better, he is not merely dishing out a quote. Unbelievably, he is still working on his game, and the runs are hardly a coincidence.
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>The bigger picture</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2010/11/the_bigger_picture.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2010:/fromeditor//178.20844</id>
   
   <published>2010-11-27T12:58:19Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:11:08Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ Our Video and Audio homepage &copy; ESPNcricinfo Ltd I am sure you haven’t failed to notice the steady increase in video content on the site. While it hasn’t changed our faith in the invincibility and timelessness of the written...]]></summary>
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      <name></name>
      
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         <category term="Cricinfo" scheme="http://www.sixapart.com/ns/types#category" />
   
   
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      <![CDATA[<div id="inlinePic310"> 
<img src="/inline/content/image/489341.jpg" width="310"> 
<span class="pcaption">Our Video and Audio homepage </span>
<span class="pcopyright">&copy; ESPNcricinfo Ltd</span><br> 
</div>

I am sure you haven’t failed to notice the steady increase in <a href="http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/video_audio/index.html" target="_blank">video content</a> on the site. While it hasn’t changed our faith in the invincibility and timelessness of the written word, we are also committed to exploiting the inclusiveness of our medium and present to our readers any additional options for consuming our content. Ian Chappell is still doing the same match analysis for us from the Ashes, but it’s now <a href="http://www.espncricinfo.com/the-ashes-2010-11/content/video_audio/489194.html?genre=1" target="_blank">on video</a>; which makes it a richer experience. 

But of course, video brings huge challenges. To start with it costs much more and is far more time-consuming. And then, on a professional level, it brings challenges in terms of skill. In addition to writing his daily pieces, Andrew Miller, our UK editor, has taken it upon himself to record Chappell, who has been wonderfully patient and accommodating as always, and upload the raw file, which can consume an hour, or even more. 

And recently we sent off senior editor Sharda Urga, who joined us earlier this year after more than 20 years in print, to <a href="http://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/video_audio/488936.html?genre=9;" target="_blank">interview Kapil Dev on video</a>, and she came back wiser. I’ll let her relate her experiences: 
 
<blockquote>“For print, you do some homework, scribble down a series of questions, check if you have new batteries and tapes [it's what the pre-digital generation does] at your command, test them for 30 seconds and then go and wait where you are supposed to. Hopefully the star turns up, is in a good mood, talks for ages and tells you his deepest secrets. 
 
“After transcription, you arrange the questions in whichever order makes them [and you] look intelligent. Often you can even reinvent the question so that it suits the answer. [Sometimes the fast bowler really doesn't want to offer an existential answer about his soul, and talks about his soles instead.]
 
“Television is a different biscuit altogether. No, actually, it's a different grain. What it involves is inches and angles that exist outside the print journalist’s concerns and questions. It involves audio-visual machines. More gadgetry! Each of which had better be right or the alternative reality includes cantankerous cameramen and peeved producers. Is the lighting right or are lights needed? [They are two different things]. How about the sound? Would someone leaping into a swimming pool 20 feet away ruin the track? 
 
“All you must do is keep quiet (until someone says, “rolling”) and focus. Make sure the questions are in correct sequence, no leaping back and forth with various topics. Club them together logically (print people don't do logic or sequence, but the video business doesn't care). This is so that they can be edited quickly, cut correctly, uploaded/ broadcast seamlessly. 
 
“Speak in prose. No um-ming, er-ing, ah-ing. No matter how smart your rejoinder or supplementary question may be, no interrupting the subject. Never. He/she must first finish the answer and full-stop it before you are permitted to open your mouth. Abandon your ego and get used to doing "noddies". Which is to sit in front of the camera after the interviewee has left and nod your head. It's to fill in the visual gaps. To help the guy who will be cutting the interview. Oh, and please don't ask dumb questions.”  </blockquote>
 
 
And you thought journos thought they knew everything.  
]]>
      
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Beyond boundaries</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2010/11/beyond_boundaries.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2010:/fromeditor//178.20794</id>
   
   <published>2010-11-24T14:06:29Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:11:21Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ The Bangalore travel homepage &copy; ESPNcricinfo Ltd At ESPNcricinfo we are always trying to expand our range. We are fortunate that the canvas and the tapestry of cricket often allow us to venture out of our crease without feeling...]]></summary>
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      <![CDATA[<div id="inlinePic310"> 
<img src="/inline/content/image/488866.jpg" width="310"> 
<span class="pcaption">The Bangalore travel homepage </span>
<span class="pcopyright">&copy; ESPNcricinfo Ltd</span><br> 
</div>

At ESPNcricinfo we are always trying to expand our range. We are fortunate that the canvas and the tapestry of cricket often allow us to venture out of our crease without feeling silly. That said, though, a travel section on a cricket site isn’t as radical as it might seem: in fact, having got the section up and running, we’re wondering what took us so long. 

All sports are shaped by their environment. There is a reason why cricket has struggled to find a base outside the Commonwealth nations. Within cricket, different countries, regions and states provide the game with its varied hues and textures. Not only do the Indians play their cricket in a distinctly different style and manner from the West Indians, Mumbai cricketers play the game differently from those in Delhi, just as cricketers in Yorkshire are different from those in Lancashire. 

To fully understand and appreciate cricket, you need to understand the places it’s played in. And as cricket’s biggest tournament travels to the World Cup, we have built a section that will allow you to explore the host countries before the World Cup begins. 

This isn’t merely a travel site about where to stay and what to eat and see. Those essentials are all there, but we’ve also made an attempt to find the cricket pulse of each city, explore its cricket heritage, and share cricket experiences. 

]]>
      <![CDATA[<div id="inlinePic310"> 
<img src="/inline/content/image/488867.jpg" width="310"> 
<span class="pcaption">Mahela's Must-Dos in Colombo</span>
<span class="pcopyright">&copy; ESPNcricinfo Ltd</span><br> 
</div>
If you’ve ever wondered why Bangalore has always produced cricketers who are gentlemanly and self-effacing, though still confident, Suresh Menon has <a href= "http://www.espncricinfo.com/travel/content/story/482549.html?city=bangalore" target="_new">an explanation</a>. Soumya Bhattacharya explores matters of the heart when <a href="http://www.espncricinfo.com/travel/content/story/478485.html?city=kolkata" target="_new">he writes on</a> what Eden Gardens and Sourav Ganguly mean to the residents of Kolkata. Elsewhere, Sharda Ugra <a href="http://www.espncricinfo.com/travel/content/story/487786.html?city=colombo" target="_new"> writes about </A> watching cricket in Colombo when it felt like West Bank on an island, and Jayaditya Gupta describes the <a href= "http://www.espncricinfo.com/travel/content/story/488785.html?city=ahmedabad" target=”new”>not immediately apparent charms</a> of Ahmedabad. 

Even the recommendations come cricket-flavoured. We tell you about the best places to stay, eat, party or shop in near the cricket grounds, and there’s expert advice from resident cricketers themselves. Yuvraj Singh has a list of five <a href=http://www.espncricinfo.com/travel/content/story/481040.html?city=chandigarh" target="_new">must-dos</a> for his hometown Chandigarh, one of which suggests a trip to "the most trustworthy and efficient petrol station in all of Punjab". Kumar Sangakkara gives you the lowdown on what to do when <a href="http://www.espncricinfo.com/travel/content/story/482229.html?city=kandy" target=”new”>in Kandy</a>. There’s also Parthiv Patel on Ahmedabad, Mahela Jayawardene on Colombo, Shakib Al Hasan on Dhaka, and lots more.

Each of the 13 host towns for the World Cup has its own homepage. <a href="http://www.espncricinfo.com/travel/content/site/travel/index.html?city=delhi" target=”new”>Here’s</a> the one for Delhi, to get you started. 



Fresh articles will be added these pages in the coming days. And you too can contribute. What <a href="http://www.espncricinfo.com/travel/content/site/travel/tips.html?city=dhaka" target="_new">advice</A> would you give to tourists coming to your cities? And what shouldn’t they miss doing before leaving? Tell us also about your memories of watching, playing or anything else cricket-related. To write in, click here <a href="http://www.espncricinfo.com/travel/content/submit/other/travel_submission.html" target="_new">here</a>.

]]>
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>The best of the best </title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2010/10/the_best_of_the_best.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2010:/fromeditor//178.20248</id>
   
   <published>2010-10-26T10:07:09Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:11:34Z</updated>
   
   <summary>While it can be argued that picking fantasy XIs are ultimately exercises in futility, they also serve the worthiest of causes. They give us a reason and opportunity to peek into the past, and regard the present in its context</summary>
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      <![CDATA[<div id="inlinePic310"> 
<img src="/inline/content/image/333863.jpg" width="310"> 
<span class="pcaption"> Now the quibbling can begin: Glichrist over Knott? </span>
<span class="pcopyright">&copy; Associated Press</span><br> 
</div>

I am yet to meet a cricket fan who doesn’t fancy himself as a selector. This of course makes the job of professional selectors among the most hazardous in the business. Everyone thinks they could have done a better job than you and, no matter what team you pick, there would be a billion people disagreeing. 
 
But picking all-time XIs is always fun because it allows you to enter the realms of fantasy with nothing material at stake. So we stand accused of having indulged ourselves for over 15 months in picking all-time XIs of each major Test-playing country and then capping it off with a World XI. Judging from your whole-hearted participation, though, it’s clear that we haven’t been the only ones enjoying ourselves. 
]]>
      However, fun was only part of the deal. While it can be argued that picking fantasy XIs are ultimately exercises in futility, they also serve the worthiest of causes. They give us a reason and opportunity to peek into the past, and regard the present in its context. Cricket is so incessant, so over exposed and, if you live in the subcontinent, so pervasive that it allows little room for contemplation. And the modern game can get so raucous, so frenzied and so over-hyped that it can feel too rarefied for its own good. 
 
The word “great” is bandied around so casually and so carelessly - and never so insincerely as on TV commentary - that it has been stripped of all value. An exercise like picking an all-time team is to force yourself to examine greatness in proper context and restore it to its rightful place. 
 
Picking an all-time XI is never about whom to include but whom to leave out. Selectors regard the problem of plenty as a happy one, but this is a problem of obscene abundance. Picking one player means leaving out at least five others who could have done the job as well. But, as Ian Chappell has said, the best way to examine great players is to judge them by their opposition. We can go on quibbling about the players we would have had in our team, but is there anyone in that XI who didn’t earn his place? 
 
Happily, my role was restricted to picking the jury and I can explain that part of the selection. We chose eight Test captains, most of whom started their first-class career in the 1960s; assuming they all started watching cricket at least ten years prior to that, that would have given them a span of almost 60 years. As captains, they were all keen students of game and were closely involved in selecting teams. Additionally, we chose three cricket historians for obvious reasons and one of world’s most-travelled cricket writers who has been a captain himself. 
 
 
Now we can go on quibbling about the players we would or should have had in our team – Where’s Imran? Why not Hadlee? No Gavaskar? Gilchrist over Knott? Why not both Murali and Warne? – but to a great degree that’s what it is all about: getting involved, digging into memories, caring and feeling for your heroes and celebrating them. 
 
And in keeping with the spirit of things, I have allowed myself the indulgence of picking my own team. I would make two changes. Alan Knott wins my vote for being the better wicketkeeper and because this team might not be so reliant on Gilchrist’s batting. 

And because I saw him tackle the most fearsome bowling attack of our times with the assuredness none of his contemporaries could manage, and because so much my childhood and youth was spent worshipping his batting, I would have Sunil Gavaskar open the innings. But who would I drop - Hobbs or Hutton? - is a question to contemplate over the next few days.


   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>New Facebook functionality for ESPNcricinfo</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2010/10/new_facebook_functionality_for.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2010:/fromeditor//178.20038</id>
   
   <published>2010-10-13T15:37:38Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:11:46Z</updated>
   
   <summary>ESPNcricinfo rolls out new Facebook functionality</summary>
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      <![CDATA[Some news on a new addition to the site from Will Luke, who defected from the editorial team to become our social media manager, and is rather enjoying himself:

<blockquote>We implemented the now-ubiquitous "thumbs up" like button from Facebook at their F8 launch earlier this year and it's been tremendously successful, with thousands of you liking and recommending stories, players, countries, teams and series each day. This was good, but we felt there was a lot of scope for improvement and an opportunity to offer personalisation.

If you actively decide that you like a particular player, or your favourite team, then we feel that's a strong enough indication to us that you're interested in hearing more about that person or country. So now, if you've already liked a certain individual on ESPNcricinfo.com, you'll receive any related stories which are published on the site - straight to your Facebook wall. It includes a summary of the story and a link, so you can go straight to it or share it with your friends.

<img border=0 src="http://www.cricinfo.com/db/PICTURES/CMS/122800/122880.jpg" align="center">

For example, you could like <a href="http://www.cricinfo.com/england/content/current/team/1.html"><b>England</a></b>, <a href="http://www.cricinfo.com/india/content/player/28081.html"><b>MS Dhoni</b></a> and <b><a href="http://www.cricinfo.com/england/content/player/19296.html">Kevin Pietersen</a></b> and perhaps <a href="http://www.cricinfo.com/the-ashes-2010-11/content/current/series/428730.html"><b>The Ashes</a></b>. When an England story is published, you'll be pinged on Facebook. If Pietersen cracks a ton, you'll be first to hear. And when Ricky Ponting decides to bat on an unseasonal greentop at the 'Gabba next month, the Ashes will be fed straight to you without you lifting a finger.

We hope you enjoy it.</blockquote>]]>
      
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Spirit now and spirit then </title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2010/08/spirit_now_and_spirit_then.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2010:/fromeditor//178.19221</id>
   
   <published>2010-08-21T09:02:14Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:12:06Z</updated>
   
   <summary>For those still mulling over the spirit of the cricket and the severity of Suraj Randiv’s crime in denying Virender Sehwag a hundred, here’s a little story narrated with glee by Bishen Singh Bedi during his memorial lecture for the...</summary>
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      <![CDATA[For those still mulling over the spirit of the cricket and the severity of <a href="http://www.cricinfo.com/sl-tri2010/content/story/473077.html" target="_blank">Suraj Randiv’s crime</a> in denying Virender Sehwag a hundred, here’s a little story narrated with glee by Bishen Singh Bedi during his memorial lecture for the late Dilip Sardesai in Mumbai. 
 
Neither Bedi nor Sardesai quite distinguished themselves as athletes and the only person more terrified than Sardesai when a catch went up in air anywhere near him was the bowler. Sardesai usually lounged about in the mid-on area, and on Australian grounds this could often be a real ordeal because the ball took that longer to reach the boundary and the chase had to be maintained. The straight boundaries at Adelaide were the worst. They are still the longest, but these days the rope is a few metres in. Those days, you had to chase the ball right down the picket fences. 
 
Once after an Australian batsman had driven the ball past mid-on, Sardesai pursued the ball for such an eternity that the batsmen had time to turn for the fifth run. And then, with a flourish and agility his team-mates had never suspected of him, he dived forward to push the ball to the fence to restrict the batsmen to four. 
 
The story raised the biggest laugh that evening. 
]]>
      
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Out of proportion</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2010/08/out_of_proportion.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2010:/fromeditor//178.19179</id>
   
   <published>2010-08-18T13:25:50Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:12:18Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ Once Virender Sehwag accepted Suraj Randiv's apology, that should have been the end of that &copy; Getty Images I wonder if I am desperately out of sync with this but I am quite bemused by the colour Suraj Randiv’s...]]></summary>
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      <![CDATA[<div id="inlinePic310"> 
<img src="/inline/content/image/472716.jpg?alt=2" width="310" title="" alt=""> 
<span class="pcaption">Once Virender Sehwag accepted Suraj Randiv's apology, that should have been the end of that</span> 
<span class="pcopyright">&copy; Getty Images</span><br> 
</div> 

I wonder if I am desperately out of sync with this but I am quite bemused by the colour Suraj Randiv’s century-denying no-ball to Virender Sehwag has acquired. Having been persuaded out for dinner with the family, I missed the last half hour of the match and caught Sehwag’s six on a shop window around which a crowd had gathered. The crowd rejoiced as Sehwag raised his bat and I walked on.
 
It was only after logging on at home that I realised Sehwag had been stranded on 99. When I watched the replay it felt schoolboyishly petty. The overstepping looked deliberate and, coming after the four byes conceded three balls previously, it seemed the Sri Lankans had a design to deny Sehwag a well-earned hundred. Overall, it felt mean-spirited. It was immediately apparent that there would be a few headlines about it next day. 
 
But even making allowances for the media’s ability to exaggerate, there’s a touch of ridiculousness about the way the matter has played out. The forthright manner in which Sehwag expressed his disappointment was characteristic of him; you expected him to move on quickly. And when it turned out that Randiv had come over to say sorry, the matter should have ended there. 
 
Instead, it took a turn for the ridiculous. Whispers emerged about the complicity of Kumar Sangakkara in the crime – after all, the four byes had slipped through his gloves – and the Sri Lanka captain was forced to protest his innocence. Some newspapers devoted a whole page to the incident, summoning the ICC and MCC for explanations. There was even a reference to Monkeygate somewhere in there. 

The most bizarre play, though, came from the Sri Lankan cricket board. It apologised for the breach of spirit and, more, it announced an enquiry into the incident. Little fazes Sehwag but it’s not unreasonable to assume that even he might find this a bit embarrassing. Centuries matter, but cricketers move on swiftly after the missed ones.]]>
      By issuing a public apology, the Sri Lankan board merely belittled the concept. At worst, Randiv’s no-ball was petty; at best, it was naughty. But he broke no law; he didn’t even contravene the ICC code of conduct as it is laid out. He can be accused of breaching the spirit of the game, but the spirit of cricket is a fuzzy concept. Batsmen rarely walk when they know they are out, fielders do their worst to cheat a favorable decision out of the umpires; and wives and girlfriends are sometimes brought into the equation to rile an opponent. If Sehwag was owed an apology it was from the bowler. 

The bowler apologised, the batsman accepted; where do the rest of us come in? 
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>A new look for Cricinfo blogs</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2010/06/a_new_look_for_cricinfo_blogs.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2010:/fromeditor//178.18099</id>
   
   <published>2010-06-21T14:04:54Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:12:30Z</updated>
   
   <summary><![CDATA[ The all new Cricinfo blogs home-page &copy; Cricinfo You are reading this on a page different from the one you’re used to seeing for a Cricinfo blog. I must admit it took us longer to get here - the...]]></summary>
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      <![CDATA[<div id="inlinePic470"> 
<img src="/inline/content/image/464160.jpg" width="470" title="" alt=""> 
<span class="pcaption">The all new Cricinfo blogs home-page</span> 
<span class="pcopyright">&copy; Cricinfo</span><br> 
</div>
<br>

You are reading this on a page different from the one you’re used to seeing for a Cricinfo blog. 
 
I must admit it took us longer to get here - the blogs section was feeling, in a visual sense, more and more disconnected with the other parts of the site - than we bargained for, but it’s been a busy few months for the design and production teams. Since the redesign of Cricinfo, they have relaunched a Formula One site and delivered a World Cup one for Soccernet, while continuing to polish Cricinfo.
 
The real purpose of a redesign, of course, goes beyond the cosmetic. Not only does the <a href=http://blogs.cricinfo.com>blogs section</a> now look better integrated with the rest of the site, we also believe it is more reader-friendly. The page headers are cleaner and sharper, the text-display panel wider, and the type better spaced. The navigation has been shortened to make it look less cluttered, and all blogs are available via a couple of dropdown menus and on the page footer. 
 ]]>
      <![CDATA[More importantly, your voice finds a more prominent space. We have introduced a comments feed on the right-hand column of the <a href=http://blogs.cricinfo.com>blogs homepage</a>, which is an invitation to you engage in a meaningful discussion not only with the writers but among yourselves. Also, there are now feeds for comments – for all blogs and individual ones.
 
This is the second significant section redesign for us this fortnight. Most of you will have seen our new <a href= http://www.cricinfo.com/ci/content/video_audio/index.html>Video and Audio page</a>, which as the name suggests, combines our multimedia offerings. Among the improvements: a larger video player that enhances the experience of watching a clip manifold, and a more visually appealing listings display, with pictures for each item.
 
As always, some of you might miss the familiar, but clearly, it was time to move on.]]>
   </content>
</entry>
<entry>
   <title>Football, the occasional mistress</title>
   <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://blogs.espncricinfo.com/fromeditor/archives/2010/06/football_the_occasional_mistre_1.php" />
   <id>tag:blogs.espncricinfo.com,2010:/fromeditor//178.17794</id>
   
   <published>2010-06-12T05:25:12Z</published>
   <updated>2011-11-13T10:12:45Z</updated>
   
   <summary>For  individual skills, speed, thrills and adrenaline rush, the Twenty20 game  is no match.  But I doubt any field sport can match the intellectual  dimensions and the epic grandeur of Test cricket</summary>
   <author>
      <name></name>
      
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Torn between Lionel Messi and a thrilling fifth day of  Test?
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Cricket is an enduring romance for me, but once every four years, when the World Cup comes around, I submit to the illicit pleasures of football.

Club football has rarely held any appeal for me; I might occasionally  catch a game with the kids and be touched by a burst of individual  brilliance, but I can't get myself to feel anything for a club, just as  I can't, despite trying, feel any kinship towards the IPL teams. Mumbai is my home, but I couldn't bring myself to feel a trace of pain when  Mumbai Indians were losing to Chennai Super Kings in the IPL final.  I root for them in the Ranji Trophy, but must I care for a team brought  together by Mukesh Ambani's money?

Of course, being a sports fan is about appreciating the skills of the  players and the thrill of a contest. But even more than that, it's about  being able or unable to relate to something. I relate to Roger Federer,  as I did to John McEnroe. I relate to Lionel Messi, too, but through him  I find it impossible to relate to Barcelona the way I would with Argentina.

Sitting thousands of miles away, feeling a bit errant about ditching  Test cricket, which was on television as the same time, I felt far more  deeply for the South African football team, a side I had never watched  before, than I have ever done for an IPL team.

I switched to the game while another South African team were battling  away in my chosen sport. Jacques Kallis had been dismissed in  Port of Spain, the ball was gripping and turning, and Ashwell Prince had  just danced down the pitch to play an airy drive. And though I kept  coming back to the Test, I couldn't keep my eyes off the South African  men in the yellow jerseys for too long. Even at the risk of disloyalty,  it was the better story. Rank underdogs -- they are only at the World  Cup because they are the hosts -- but lifted by the will of the nation,  they filled the opening match with spirit and emotion. Katlego Mphela,  after pulling away from the defender and dodging the goalkeeper in a  sensational burst, hit the woodwork in the 90th minute. I have my  favourite teams at the World Cup; now I just have to support one more.]]>
      <![CDATA[I have digressed massively. This piece was prompted by an instant  riposte on email from Jayaditya Gupta, Cricinfo's own <b><a href="http://search.espn.go.com/results?searchString=%22jayaditya+gupta%22&page=null&wc=true&fromForm=true submit.x=0&submit.y=0&submit=SEARCH&cc=4716&ver=global" target="_blank">man at the football World Cup</a></b> to a blog post titled <b><a href="http://www.cricketwithballs.com/2010/06/11/10-reasons-why-cricket-is-better-than-football" target="new">"10 reasons why cricket is better than football"</a></b>. 

Now, Joy, as he is better known, enjoys running Cricinfo these days -- if it  is otherwise, he has done a good job of hiding it -- but in his heart he  must feel like an infidel often because football has always been his  game. We had the good sense to lend him to our sister site <b><a href="http://soccernet.espn.go.com/world-cup/?cc=4716&ver=global">Soccernet</a></b> for a  month, and I can feel his sense of liberation in South Africa (you can  read his latest piece <b><a href="http://soccernet.espn.go.com/world-cup/feature?id=794550&cc=4716&ver=global" target="new">here</a></b>). Our spirit of generosity extends to even  allowing him to diss cricket while he is away. He knows which South  African wines to bring back from Cape Town.

But even I will grant him this: a good 90 minutes of football would  beat the three-hour game of cricket hands down. No argument there. For  individual skills, speed, thrills and adrenaline rush, the Twenty20 game  is no match.  But I doubt any field sport can match the intellectual  dimensions and the epic grandeur of Test cricket. It's an unfair and  futile comparison, too, because no sport has been, or can be, granted  the scale and canvas of Test cricket. Consequently no game can grow and  linger in the senses like a winding, turning, well-contested Test match does. In these times Test cricket remains a luxury we are fortunate and  privileged to be able to afford. And it is played at such a gentle pace  that if you are smart you can catch a lot of football while watching it.  I counted: between two deliveries from Ravi Rampaul in Port of Spain,  the ball had been passed around 16 times in Soccer City.

My loyalty will really be tested if Messi - I love him the most, because  apart from his obvious gifts with the ball, his smile on the field  conveys an enjoyment of his sport that is unsullied by the trappings of  stardom - is on field while a Test match enters a gripping phase on the  fifth day.

I hope I will be true to my heart. ]]>
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