Sunday, 24 March 2013
Tuesday, 29 January 2013
Success: An absolute phenomenon
How often do we see parents taunting their children because
their son or daughter could not achieve what their neighbour Mr. Sharma’s or
Mr. Goyal’s son has done! Sometimes we get to see this onscreen, sometimes at
our own places or at some friend’s place. Those who have witnessed it
personally can tell how bad is the feeling, while the lucky ones who never had
to face it can just guess. Such is the felling that the parents whom we have
respected and adored like God also appear in grey shade to us. No doubt all
these comparisons are intended at our growth in life but there are better ways
to encourage, aren’t there? Now let’s take another example. How often it
happens that we see a very close friend of ours performing exceedingly well in
his life, surpassing the entire criteria to be tagged as successful! No doubt
how good we are as a friend; there were times when we felt ‘down and out’
seeing our friends’ progress. No surprises here. Such is the human tendency! But
in both the cases mentioned above, we consider the success to be a relative
phenomenon. We measure the level of our success against that of our friends,
our neighbours and relatives. And this is where we underestimate our potential.
Each one of us is born with different level of capabilities, different talents
and different strengths. Competing with others certainly forces us to target
something whose level is set by someone else. For example, if some friend of
yours is all set to make it to the any of the top 5 B-schools of Asia, there is
a possibility that competing against him can eclipse your vision and thus you
might miss the chance of making it to top 5 B-Schools of World. Not only can
this, competing with others can force us to go after something which we are not
good at. If Harsha Bhogle had not identified his true potential as a cricket
presenter, he may not have achieved what he did and could have ended as a
manager after passing out from IIM-A. Today these managers call him for
motivational speeches for their employees. There are numerous such examples to
sight. Success is always meant to be an absolute phenomenon. If we have to
compete with someone, it has to be ‘us’ only. Because nobody, I repeat ‘nobody’
in this world can identify and measure our true potential more accurately than
ourselves. This way we will not only be doing justice to our capabilities but
also be free from feelings like jealousy and inferiority. Life will be a
celebration. We will be able to celebrate the success of our friends in a
better way and lead to a more meaningful life. Afterall life is not meant to be
a “भेड़ चाल“.
Is it?
Wednesday, 3 October 2012
That repetitive cycle of praise and criticism!
These days when I read newspapers or people sharing their
opinion on social networking sites, I see everyone is mad about Dhoni, questioning
his creditability as a captain and a batsman, following India’s early exit from
T20 world cup. These are the same newspapers or people who were all full of
praise for team India after having nailed Pakistan and England like never
before. Strange, isn’t it? Then all of the sudden why this criticism? There is
no denying that we all re hurt ‘coz the captain cool could not win his THIRD
world cup. But is this his failure alone? Is this the case that when resources
were overflowing, all batsmen and bowlers were in form and fielders were as
energetic and alert as they should be? I guess the answer is no! This is a
collective failure of the team and blaming captain alone might help our frustration
level to come down but it will not serve the purpose. Look at our openers, what
have they done? Not even a single half century from Sehwag and Gambhir in any
of the matches. Now compare it with Australia, Srilanka or Westindies. Verdict is
: openers failed, means early pressure on the team, means powerplay overs are
not utilized, means scores can rarely cross 150. That’s what actually happened.
Now let’s move ahead. Middle order was fine, thanks to Kohli. Dhoni and Raina
provided late bursts in lower middle order most of the times. Now coming to the
bowling, an unfit and out of rhythm Zaheer Khan far away from his best left a
weak bowling unit directionless. But still, they made most of whatever they had
got and begged all 10 wickets of the opposition on 4 out of 5 occasions.
Impressive, isn’t it? Well, now look at most criticized decisions made by
Dhoni: first of them was not playing Sehwag against Australia. Now those who
had seen South Africa vs Pakistan match, they will agree that it was a valid
decision playing 3 spinners. Pitch was turning square and fine performances by
Harbhajan and Piyush in the previous
match supported the decision. Now if they had to play 5 bowlers, who else could
be dropped to make way for Sehwag: Gautam- no, not after a fine 40 in last
match, Kohli- oh no!, yuvi- his bowling alongside glimpses of old Yuvraj were enough for him to be in the team, Rohit- no,
he made an unbeaten 50 in last match, Raina- no, he had done nothing wrong,
Dhoni- well… So that leaves us with no choice then to keep Viru out. Now next
most criticized decision was why bowling Rohit ahead of Ashwin in last super 8
match, well… here I will use critical reasoning. Why nobody objected when Yuvi
was given the bowl ahead of Ashwin, coz he begged ABD’s wicket, right! If he had failed, the same people would have
thrashed Dhoni giving an over to yuvi ahead of Ashwin. A game is played like this
only. Some of your decisions fail, some click. And those suggesting removal of
Dhoni as captain, please tell me who can replace him? Most of the players are
unfit, most of them are out of form.Virat is the only choice they
have got and I guess he still has sometime left to be ready for this bigger
responsibility. He needs to control his anger and his emotions to grab the most
coveted position in the team. It’s so easy for us to pick an individual and
kick his ass to express our passion, our support and our concern but logical reasoning
and thinking is required at the moment to help the team coming out of this
crisis. And I am sure people will again fall for Dhoni once the team beats
England and Pakistan in future series. This is a cycle which keeps repeating.
Aaah… I will like to end this article with the same quote:
“Any fool can criticize, condemn, and complain
but it takes character and self control to be understanding and forgiving.”
Dale Carnegie
MSD for life \m/
Friday, 6 July 2012
He came, He pLayED, He conquered..
I very well remember those days when a wicketkeeper was more
like a liability for Indian cricket team. While teams like Srilanka and
Australia could boast of Sangakara and Gilchrist as their wicketkeeper, India
could never find a keeper who could bat even with half reliability as these
giants. Then came MSD, with a reputation of hard hitting batsman from Jharkhand
and since then, India have never looked back. However his debut series against
Bangladesh could not turn out fruitful for him but he did not take long to
impress one and all, thanks to those magnificent match winning innings of 148(against
Pakistan) and 183 (against Srilanka). He did not have a very elegant bat swing
or effective technique but his power was more than sufficient to destroy some
of the finest bowling line ups. All this from a wicketkeeper- India could not
have expected more. But for everyone’s delight, best of MSD was yet to come. He
kept producing those match winning knocks. Who would forget his finishing
streaks with Yuvi during Pakistan series? Not just this, this hard hitting
Ranchi boy had a cool , intelligent and thinking head over those powerful shoulders,
often evident in his statements during post match presentations. India had
found its own combination of calmness of Sanga and destructive batting of
Gilchrist. He was being seen as future captain; however it seemed that he might
have to wait for it, with team doing well under Rahul and likes of Sehwag and Yuvi
ahead of him for captain’s position. But all the equations changed after India’s
early exit in 2007 world cup, followed by Rahul’s unexpected resignation as
captain after England tour. First ever T20 world cup was on corner, with the
famous trio opting out from it. Then came one of the most surprising decision
in world cricket, MSD was made captain of Indian cricket team. And boy o boy,
this turned out to be perhaps the decision of that decade. He led India to
victory in inaugural edition of T20 world championship and thus began the glory
days of MSD and team India. In his very first tournament as captain, Dhoni
showed that he was a special captain. Often his achievements have been termed as
gifts of his luck but was it just luck? Not really! I would like to recall the
league match against Pakistan in T20 world cup. Match was initially a tie and
was to be decided by bowl out. Well, India won the bowl out and it was not just
luck, it was well framed strategy of bowling slow bowlers (Robin Uthappa,
Bhajji and Viru) in bowl out as they had better control while Pakistan opted
for fast bowlers. And we all remember how many we hit and how many they missed.
Not just this, MSD made his bowlers practice for bowl out during net sessions.
Was it luck? No, it was his ability to visualize. Bowling Joginder Sharma in
final over during the final was not a bad choice. Bhajji was hit for 2-3 sixes
in his previous over and Joginder had bowled an economical one. Hence Joginder
was the obvious choice. And Dhoni’s field positions were immaculate, else who
would have placed Sreesanth to that unorthodox fine leg position during that
final over, thus made him claim that catch of Misbah. So every now and then Dhoni
has been deprived of the credit he deserves by giving it to his luck. But people
never saw that he had made his own luck. His dream beginning as captain was
followed by many other victories. He lead both his teams: Team India and CSK to
bag many marvelous. India became number one in tests, Dhoni became number one
as batsman. However with time, there were many changes to his initial power
hitting style of batsman and now he was cautious during initial phase of his
arrival on crease and exploded towards the end of innings.
People
often say Ganguly was the best captain of Indian team and Dhoni is the captain
of best Indian team. However I differ on this. No doubt Ganguly was a superb
captain and he was the one who initialized the resurgence of Indian cricket
team but if you really look at players who played under him, you would find he
led a better team. Under Saurav, Dravid was the best in the world, Sachin was in his prime form, Kumble and
Bhajji formed the most potent spin duo in the world, Zaheer was young and
energetic, Viru was more reliable. Undoubtedly, Dada led a more powerful
bowling line up. However Dhoni had to deal with problems of ageing fast
bowlers, unavailability of lethal spin bowlers, thanks to Bhajji’s drop in the
form and Anil’s retirement. Infact Dravid also was not at his best; however he
discovered back his magic towards the end of the career. So undoubtedly,
Ganguly was blessed with a better team.
But keeping the critics aside, Dhoni kept touching heights. Indian team now had a leader, who was innovative, who was unorthordox yet very effective. All these qualities made him earn respect from opponents, ofcourse earning him millions of bucks alongside. Two world cup titles, two IPL titles, one CLt20 titles, CB series victory and many more trophies tell the success story of Dhoni-the captain. However clean sweeps against England and Australia have raised a question mark on his creditability as captain but needless to say this was collective failure of the team and he alone cannot be blamed. However Dhoni has always loved challenges in his career and the day is not far away when he would wash away whatever doubts are put on him. Today, on his birthday, I pray to God to bless him with much more success, fitness and wisdom. MSD, it’s been a wonderful experience to witness you on cricket field! I am sure you have a lot more in store for us. Amen!
But keeping the critics aside, Dhoni kept touching heights. Indian team now had a leader, who was innovative, who was unorthordox yet very effective. All these qualities made him earn respect from opponents, ofcourse earning him millions of bucks alongside. Two world cup titles, two IPL titles, one CLt20 titles, CB series victory and many more trophies tell the success story of Dhoni-the captain. However clean sweeps against England and Australia have raised a question mark on his creditability as captain but needless to say this was collective failure of the team and he alone cannot be blamed. However Dhoni has always loved challenges in his career and the day is not far away when he would wash away whatever doubts are put on him. Today, on his birthday, I pray to God to bless him with much more success, fitness and wisdom. MSD, it’s been a wonderful experience to witness you on cricket field! I am sure you have a lot more in store for us. Amen!
Monday, 12 March 2012
"Rahul Dravid": Mr. Dependable
Those were the early days for me as a cricket lover, early
enough for not being able to be recalled exactly but I noticed something in a
cricketer which made me follow him every time he came to bat. When Sachin was
scripting some of finest wins for India, when nation was busy adoring the
magical wristy shots of Azhar, I was being fascinated by a not so liked
cricketer those days. I don’t know why, I don’t remember how but I had
developed a liking for this man. My friends would often abuse him for his slow batting;
making me angry but to be honest I really did not have anything to defend my
choice. Today, almost 12-13 years after, when I am writing this article, I must
say, I fell for one of the finest man to have played this game.
Things were not easy for Rahul in his initial days, no doubt
he had impressed one and all as a test batsman, but his success as one day
batsman came somewhat later. He was not blessed with power of Sehwag or ability
to dominate the bowling like Sachin did but he kept working hard, kept placing
brick after brick in the wall to make it
high enough not to be climbed, strong enough not to be demolished easily. Slowly
and steadily he had shown his importance as a one day batsman too. In between
he kept producing some marvelous knocks which were often overshadowed by his
fellow partners. We often mention Laxman’s magical 281 in Eden’s test but we
find it tough to praise Rahul’s gritty 180 in the same match, considering the
pressure he was under after being replaced by VVS at no. 3 due to failure in
first innings. What was the common thing in Sachin’s 186 against New Zeland or Saurav’s
183 against Srilanka; they were some uncharacteristic flamboyant centuries by
Rahul Dravid at the other end. Often denied the respect and credit he deserved,
this man kept sacrificing, adjusting and accepting whatever was thrown at him
in order to serve the cause as a team man. But it was his ardent character that
kept him going and going. When the bowling attacks were hostile, pitches were
unplayable, conditions were adverse, he was the perfect man to bat for India.
My love for him kept growing and growing. It was not just his batting that was
adored but his temperament, his never dying attitude, his calmness, his
humility, his character that had a magic far beyond one’s ability to escape. His
ever-growing fan list not just included cricket fans like me but likes of Glenn
Mcgrath, Brain Lara, Shane Warne and others who chose him as a batsman to bat
for saving their lives (if required). Time and again he has been described as a
perfect role model for youngsters and rightly so because he is one guy who is a
perfect example to tell you that what if you are not born genius, what if you
are not so gifted, you have a perfect weapon called hard work which can take
you on the top. And boy he made it to the top, didn’t he?! Statistically, he
was ICC’s cricketer of the year and test cricketer of the year when these awards
were inaugurated. He has achieved some feats which even Sachin (as batsman) and
Dhoni (as captain) failed to achieve.
Quoting Harsha Bhogle “There were two things Dravid didn't really love in cricket:
opening the batting and keeping wicket. He was asked to do both at various
times, and I asked him if he ever contemplated saying no. He didn't enjoy it,
he said, but took it as a challenge, to see how good he could be. This
acceptance of challenges is what has defined his cricket and made him one of
the finest team players there has been.”
Rahul
believed in the philosophy “for the strength of the wolf is the pack and the
strength of the pack is the wolf.” And he justified this throughout his
cricketing career. As mentioned by Harsha, he never enjoyed opening but who
could forget his heroics in last Oval test during England tour where he had but
ten minutes between deliveries as he batted through the innings for six and a
half hours, before returning to open the batting. These magic moments
always made us to amaze at the nerves of this cricketer.
Rahul, words
cannot describe what you have given to me as your fan. I might be one of those
millions of such fans, adoring you for years but for me, you would remain to be
one of the finest memories I would like to carry to my grave. Its true cricket
would continue at its pace after your retirement, but it would not be the same
for me.
Thank you
Rahul! Thanks for blessing me with sheer magic!
Aahh… I wish
I could rewind the time by a decade or so…. Rahul, you would be missed!
Saturday, 27 August 2011
The INFOSYS day :)
Morning of august 26th, woke up at 9 am, was excited coz it was the much awaited day. Infosys was visiting our campus. The anticipation was building up, as whole of the last week me, Deepak and shobhit kept speculating the number of people they are gonna pick. Would it be higher than last year or lesser, there was still sometime for these questions to be answered but we all expected it to be around 70-80. Well, I got ready and reached auditorium where the process of filling up of forms was going on. It was good to see around 250 plus batch-mates along with 50-60 seniors from M.Tech sitting there. There I met my two companions for the day: Jitesh and Shobhit who gave me company in this day full of roller-coaster rides. Then began the process for aptitude/English test. It was a relaxed moment for me having a job under my belt but the view reminded me of AIEEE exam. The nervousness was visible of few faces. Then came the most defining moment of the day: the call from the guest house that panelists for interview have arrived and waiting there for half an hour. Me, shobhit and jitesh rushed towards guest house. There me saw the senior most panelist standing on the door. We expected a handshake with a smile but all we got was scolding. Actually the number of recruiters was thrice than what we were intimated. We had booked 5 rooms for them 3 of which were already occupied by the people who came for conducting the test. And to add to our misery, all panelists were demanding a separate room. We decided to vacate 3 rooms for them by collecting the luggage of others in one room. Then came the most defining moment of the day, while moving the luggage to other room, we saw a wet underwear hanging in the bathroom that belonged to some test conductor from Infosys. It was fun to see shobhit carrying that chaddi in his hand and placing it in other room. It formed the reason for our laughter for rest of the day. Later shobhit identified whom the underwear belonged to :p. Well, to arrange more rooms for them , we had to beg in director’s office for opening the VIP room which required lots of effort. Anyways, the things settled down, test was conducted. Then began the speculation on how many would be shortlisted for interviews. We had to wait in audi’s lobby for hours and hours. Then joined Himanshu, who missed the chaddi incident but still had a lot of thrills in store for him too. With chips, kurkure and fruit cake being breakfast and lunch, we were starving for food. But excitement for test’s result kept us away from ICH. The wait continued and continued, then came the moment.. 150 candidates were shortlisted on basis of test. It required lots of effort for us to make a branchwise list and to inform all the interviewees. It always felt good to answer the calls of successful students but those who could not make it through, the heart pained for them. All the students were informed and then began the process for interviews. Vipul had also joined us by this time. Once again the panelists scolded shobhit and jitesh as they were not happy with interview rooms, which other companies found to be world-class. Anyways the process began at around 5pm. And we knew its gonna be a long night for each one of us. We had to rush to chief warden sir’s residence for girls’ timings extension which he gave easily, thank you rajesh sir for all the cooperation. We returned to audi, it was full with some well dressed gentlemen and girls with a hope and desire of not returning jobless tonight. The process continued endlessly. The clock kept ticking and our excitement kept increasing, so did the body-ache and tiredness. At around 2 am, the interviews ended and process for compilation of results began. As one of my friends in Kota was here representing Infy, he told the number should be around 125-130. Later on of the HR person told its gonna be atleast 90 percent, that meant around 135. What a feeling it was to hear this, but the brain still kept telling, wait for the final list. Then came the list and the moment we got to know that number is 141…Whole pain vanished. There were smiles all around. The result was also declared, all shortlisted girls made it through. All my EEE mates made it through. Some were ecstatic, some were happy while others were saying “just Infosys hai yaar” to whom I kept telling that a first job is always special. But happiest of them were me, Himanshu, jitesh and shobhit coz the hard work involved had paid. We returned to room with a feeling of achievement. Dunno when I asleep but I am sure I must be smiling while asleep. My 141 friends were now employed! J
Tuesday, 2 August 2011
TEAM INDIA:- Are we really the “number 1” side?
When we try to recall the origin of cricket, we are brought to England: the home of cricket. This began in 1877 with first test match being played between Australia and England. Since then, gentlemen’s game has seen rise and fall of many cricketing super powers. Bradman’s invincible team was a force to match with. But the true dominance in cricket began in late 70’s, with Clive Lloyd’s West Indian boys rocking the world cricket with their performance at the highest stage. Two back to back world cup triumphs and not losing a test series for over 15 years say their success story. But more than statistics which speaks for them is the manner in which they played. Who can forget the deadly Caribbean bowling lineup consisting of greats like Malcom Marshall, Michael holding, Joel Garner and Andy Roberts? Their mere mention fills the batsmen of that era with feelings of fear and pain. Ask Tony Greig, how badly he repents his comment “make them grovel” intended for Caribbean team during their England’s tour which not only received some bouncery and yorkery welcome from West Indies team, but lead to their whitewash. This was the era which unleashed fear in minds of everyone those who were playing against Calypso cricketers. We can’t forget Sunil Gavaskar leaving the batting pitch forced by bodyline bouncers by Windies bowlers. This is a tale of dominance, this is a tale teaching us that one should aim at being ruthless; one should aim at demolishing your opponents and bring them down with such intensity that it takes them ages to recover. Later years might have seen the downfall of Windies team, say thanks to their cricket board’s strategy but now it was the time for resurgence of mighty Australian team in late 90s. Aussie bowlers may not have such fearsome bowling attack as Windies or batsmen of likes of Richards but they still ruled the world cricket. The common thing they shared with West Indies team of 70/80s was the spirit which they played: go for the kill. Hence they adopted different strategy to conquer the world. Mind games along with some amazing talent (Warne, Mcgrath, Ponting, Waughs, Lee) on display worked for Aussies. Their gutsy declarations, their aggression, their strategy of cashing at opponents weaknesses fetched them this feat.
Their era too seems to have come to an end with India being regarded as the new “World Power” of cricket. It is nothing short of fairy tale that how Dhoni’s boys clinched world cup and made their way to spot in test ranking. The turnaround began during Saurav Ganguly’s time, which was continued by Rahul and Anil, later on with Dhoni bringing the team on the podium. I don’t think there was any team in past boasting of such mastery in batting line up. In bowling likes of Harbhajan, Zaheer, Ishant might not be as fearsome as Windies attack of 70s or as skillful as Aussie attack of late 90s but they work well for Team India. Every team Indian team appears on ground, a record or two is always destined to be broken. Then what is the reason that our number one spot remains in a state of doubt, what is the reason for us being regarded as the best team just on paper? What keeps us behind the past rulers of world cricket? Why can’t the world bow at us despite of winning so many matches and performing marvelously well for such a long time? Is it just the victories that matter or is it the manner in which they are achieved? Let us go back in recent past- was Dhoni’s idea of not going for chase in final test against Windies team was a clever move? It’s true that the pitch was difficult but don’t we play at slower and tougher pitches back at home? Atleast they could have stayed on pitch for one more hour and bat at a normal pace. Are we so scared of these Windies bowlers that we cannot take risk of going for run a ball chase with 7 wickets in hand? Leave this apart, how often we see Indian team with dropped shoulders struggling to knock out the opposition? How often we see gutsy declarations from team India keeping the opposition interested in the match? How often we see Indian players cheering for their fielders and bowlers? How often we play like world champions? We have the talent, perhaps best in the world but then why can’t we convert this talent into impressive victories? Mind you, I am not talking of results. What I wanna emphasize at is why we can’t win by margins such as 3-0 or 5-0? Why can’t we go out and show this world that this it is the team which is now gonna rule the world?! I guess it’s the lack of intent “to kill”. This talent garnished with aggression and a desire to be ruthless and dominant make a perfect recipe for forcing the world to shiver with the thought of playing against India. Wins matter but victories after demolishing the opponent wins you respect. Indian team’s journey to the top is made possible because of some real hard work by players and it would be little injustice to the talent the team possesses if we can’t force the opponents to regard us as the best in the business. We are lucky to have witnessed the charisma of Sachin and the solidity of Rahul. But what we desire to witness is their names going in record book as a part of the most powerful cricketing team in the world with none other than Englishmen-the inventors, Caribbeans-the aggressors and Aussies-the prudent acclaiming this fact.
I wish that day to come very soon. Amen!
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