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Thursday, January 2, 2014

pressure of success and ... wearing a mask in life... Martin Crowe

He was once dismissed for 299 in a Test - I had watched and admired his ease of picking up runs of the hip ~ he was in Chennai but could not bat a single delivery……….. more of that in the penultimate  para… the man is Martin David Crowe, a player, commentator and author…………. A grand right hander who could bowl too, brother of Jeff Crowe who captained New Zealand………… Crowe has gone through rough patches in life and his writings have always borne class…  His cousin, Russel Crowe,  won Academy award for his portrayal  as Maximus Decimus Meridius in Gladiator: a  Roman legatus forced into becoming a slave who seeks revenge against Commodus.  Crowe played 77 test matches, averaging 45.65 with the bat, including 17 centuries and 18 half-centuries. He also played 143 One Day International, averaging 38.55, and hit four centuries and 34 half-centuries. Though not material to this post, in 2009 Crowe married former Miss Universe Lorraine Downes.

A  classical batsman with a wide range of shots and seemingly all the time in the world to play them, Martin Crowe came from a cricketing family - his father had played in the first-class game and brother Jeff represented New Zealand - and made his Test debut aged 19, quickly being tagged with the label of best young batsman in the world. He broke a series of record, despite being blighted by injuries which included a broken shin, back trouble, torn hamstrings and in latter years, serious knee injuries. After retiring, he took up as a commentator with Sky in New Zealand as well as heading their cricket coverage behind the scenes. He was also the man who came up with Cricket Max, for a time a success in New Zealand but a format which never caught on elsewhere.

He wrote a book ‘Raw’ but at a later stage he was diagnosed with cancer -  suffering from follicular lymphoma and having undergone chemo, Crowe became bald.  More than facing the boucers, the condition sure would have depressed him and put lot of self-doubt in him.  His was to be a story of a man who took criticism too personally and who let his stress get the better of him. A man who looked so in control at the crease yet, by his own admission, had large periods of his life where he was out of control. At one point he had three major antagonists: Sky Television, cancer and New Zealand Cricket. And they are all - he reckons - linked.

Crowe was to be admired  for unleashing a brutal self-assessment. Examples include his views on the Test championship, an assessment of Brendon McCullum's batting and of Muttiah Muralitharan's legacy, a breakdown of Stephen Fleming's career at home and abroad, and thoughts on how cricket should best use technology. Crowe was a deserved choice to deliver the annual Cowdrey lecture at Lord's in 2006. With this long intro, read his views on Greame Swann’s retirement (excerpted from Cricinfo)

Unless the fear of success, or perhaps more appropriately the pressure of success, has spoken. Many fear failure, of humiliation, rejection and of unworthiness. However, once you steam past that and move into the stratosphere of triumph and glory, individual and team success, you enter another world; the expectant world. Basic failing is actually a very acceptable human trait. What isn't is the lack of courage to get up and try again. Then after a few attempts, a certain amount of learning should kick in and the performance - whatever it is that you are doing - should improve, and the journey goes on. The butt kicker sometimes is that in life's decision-making eyes, whatever you are doing might not be good enough at a given point, and therefore we are stood down for someone else.

And that, ladies and gentlemen, is the $64,000 question. The very question that faced Swann when the Ashes were mercifully and brutally extracted from England's once-firm grip. In the aftermath of the urn being handed over in Perth, and the mauling that Shane Watson dished out to Swann, and George Bailey to James Anderson, came the searching, gnarly, nagging question into the mind of Swann himself: "Oh my god, what's next?"

We have heard the rationale from him about nothing left to give, allowing another to feel the privilege. We respect it, it's his decision and his fine career prompts us all to listen and respect. But do we believe? I believe that the fear of success took its toll. It's the eroded belief, the exhausted energy, that called Swann out and said: "I am sick of having to succeed. Let someone else do it! Let someone else chase the figures that I was expected to produce as the lone spinner. I am done." This I believe.

It takes an extraordinary athlete with an exceptional mind to keep producing great feats. Geniuses like Tendulkar, Warne, McGrath, Dravid, Ponting and Kallis, to name a bunch, all showed an amazing appetite and a groundedness to resist the pressures of success and go into the twilight, and even long into the night. It's a hard one. And some folk, like those six mentioned, have the innate immunity to rise above any fear and to feel the love instead. That's why they are the chosen ones. For the rest, like Swann, who fork out an honest and, at times, exquisite period of very-goodness, we simply reach a point of breaking strain, a need to go home and rest a weary and sore head. And that is okay too. We are all made differently. The mind-and-body connection gets you in the end. In the cases of those like Swann, who have decided to go unexpectedly in the middle of an intensely fervid battle, well, it does make you ask why.

So – in game and in life – ‘quitting’ is never an option !!

Martin Crowe played his last Test at Cuttack in Nov 1995 and his last ODI at Nagpur in the same month….. sadly during the lunch interval, a part of the stadium collapsed, killing 9 people and injuring 70 people. The match continued in the afternoon, as the organizers feared a riot from the crowd if the match was called off. !!! how sad and how inhumane…..

15 years later,  Martin Crowe  announced his desire to return to club cricket at ripe age of 48 but was forced to retire hurt 3 balls into his first innings.   Crowe pulled a muscle while batting for Cornwall against Parnell on November 19, 2011.   A jerk of the hip, a single to midwicket adding to his countless runs was the style of this high scoring right hander in his hay days.. he was known to rotate the strike, run so well and keep the score card ticking all the time but while getting off the mark in that match, he pulled a thigh muscle running a single into covers.   He was quoted as writing - "I pulled a hip flexor in July, a hamstring in August, a groin in October and now a thigh, all upper left leg, all compensating for a dodgy arthritic right knee. No tears, but frustrated after a lot of hard work getting ready." He had said he saw his comeback as a means of self-motivation and a tool to get fit - and also an opportunity to score the 392 runs he needs to tally 20,000 first-class runs. That was not to be !!

In Oct 1995, he was at Chennai playing the test under Lee Germon……….. it was October and the Test came two days after a total eclipse of the sun, which had brought the country to a halt.  It was no match at all ………. As it rained and rained through out.  At only 71.1 overs, it was the shortest Test in terms of actual playing time ever staged in India;  everyone cursed the Board’s  wisdom of playing a match in Chennai during the monsoon.   On day 1 play began at 2.30 p.m., there was no further play until the fourth day, although the sun shone brightly on the second. The teams suggested calling off the Test and playing a limited-overs match on the final day, but the host association scotched these thoughts, citing its legal obligations to those who bought season tickets for a five-day game. Ironically,  fifth day was abandoned too. India ended at 144/2 – Sachin who remained unbeaten on 52 was the man of the (no) match…

In Oct  2012, it was revealed that Crowe had been diagnosed with Lymphoma. He blamed the illness on a failing immune system, weakened by various illnesses picked up while touring the world in the 1980s and 1990s.  In June  2013, Crowe announced that he is free of cancer on Campbell Live, but he will cut his ties with cricket, as he was a self-proclaimed "recovering addict to cricket, much like an alcoholic". Crowe says he wore a 'mask' from the age of 22, due to high expectations, but at the age of 51 was happy to 'look at the real me'.

Most ordinary people do wear a mask and are unable to look at the real self, fearing the outside World………….. Crowe’s life and revelations offer great opportunity of learning.

With regards – S. Sampathkumar

28th Dec 2013. 

millions of CFL bulbs.............. no light at the tunnel ... !!

In the recent Assembly elections in Rajasthan, Congress was drubbed – BJP won absolute majority securing 162 seats as against 21 of Congress  ~ in the  outgoing  Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot's home district Jodhpur, BJP has won nine out of ten assembly constituencies, with Gehlot the only winning candidate of the Congress party.

Sure we know - Thomas Alva Edison (1847 – 1931)  a great inventor who changed the lives of people with his electric bulb and more including the phonograph, the motion picture camera. Edison is the fourth most prolific inventor in history, holding 1,093 US patents in his name, as well as many patents in the United Kingdom, France, and Germany. More significant than the number of Edison's patents, are the impacts of his inventions, because Edison not only invented things, his inventions established major new industries world-wide, notably, electric light and power utilities,sound recording and motion pictures.

After passage of decades now it is stated that the incandescent light bulb is not very innovative. It hasn't changed much since Thomas Edison introduced it in 1879. Even today, it still generates light by heating a tungsten filament until it reaches 4,172 degrees Fahrenheit (2,300 degrees Celsius) and glows white-hot. Unfortunately, all of that white light is not very green. A good deal of electricity -- electricity from coal-fired powered plants responsible for spewing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere -- is required to make an incandescent bulb burn brightly ~ and now its existence is being threatened by compact fluorescent light bulb, or CFL,  as  its illumination comes by way of a much different mechanism. Instead of a glowing filament, CFLs contain argon and mercury vapor housed within a spiral-shaped tube.

A compact fluorescent lamp (CFL),  is a fluorescent lamp  that uses  one-fifth to one-third the electric power, and last eight to fifteen times longer. A CFL has a higher purchase price than an incandescent lamp, but can save over five times its purchase price in electricity costs over the lamp's lifetime.L ike all fluorescent lamps, CFLs contain mercury, a neurotoxin especially dangerous to children and pregnant women,[3] which complicates their disposal. In many countries, governments have established recycling schemes for CFLs and glass generally.

 Here in Tamil Nadu, CM Jayalalithaa  launched the first phase of providing free compact fluorescent light bulbs to over 14 lakh hut-dwellers in the state, an energy-saving measure aimed at saving 40 mw of power.  Chief Minister Jayalalithaa also launched over Rs. 500 crore worth of projects under the Energy Department through video conferencing from her camp office at Kodanadu in the Nilgiris district. The scheme of providing free CFL bulbs was launched with an objective of promoting power-saving, a state government release here said. In the first phase of the Rs. 8.77 crore project launched on Monday, Ms. Jayalalithaa gave away one nine-watt CFL bulb to seven persons each marking its roll out, the release said, adding the initiative will help the government save about 40 mw. A total of 14.62 lakh domestic consumers coming under the hut-dwellers category will benefit with seven lakh of them being covered under the first phase, it said.

But elsewhere……… Rajasthan's new chief minister Ms Raje finds the state in a mess with six million abandoned bulbs ordered by last government to help woo voters ~ all have the face of Gehlot on the box… !!  Daily Mail reports that though his performance has been wiped out in the Assembly polls, perhaps the light has not gone out yet.   The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) government has been left wondering what to do with around six million compact fluorescent lamp (CFL) bulbs worth Rs 66 crore, which were purchased by the former Congress government, led by Ashok Gehlot, for free distribution among the below poverty line (BPL) families and those living in hamlets and shanty dwellings.  Giving the bulbs is ticklish as all of the covers carry the face of former CM and former power minister - Jitendra Singh.

In his budget speech, Gehlot had announced the distribution of two CFL bulbs each to BPL families and those living in hamlets at a budgeted cost of about Rs 100 crore. Consequently, 12.5 million CFLs at the rate of Rs 107 per bulb were purchased for Rs 133.75 crore. The distribution work was supposed to be over before the Assembly elections. It has now emerged that around six million CFL bulbs - about half of the total purchased - couldn't be distributed, despite the fact that anybody who produced an electricity bill was given the CFLs, even in urban areas including the state capital Jaipur.  As the scheme was meant to win over the electorate in favour of the ruling Congress party, the suppliers were asked to print photographs of Gehlot and his power minister on the packages.

Besides the CFL, more than 55000 laptops were given to students; these, tabs, bicycles and more did not turn the tide in his favour though ~ now so many bulbs are not providing any light !!!!
with regards – S. Sampathkumar

30th Dec 2013

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Hyosung Aquila pro 650cc spotted at Express Avenue Mall

On a web search read this news : ‘Deputy Commissioner under section 144 Cr.PC has imposed ban on plying of unregistered without number plates motorcycles as well as on driving without wearing helmets by the motorcyclists.’ Anyone found violating this order shall be proceeded against under section 188 ……  As you go to any city and travel on the main roads, you see so many automobiles and certain to see lot of two-wheelers…. Some are macho machines but most offer easier commutation between workplace and home and bought because they are economical.  The middle class Indians want more value for their money – cannot afford to buy, maintain and travel by car and hence most travel by two wheelers …… the world of mopeds, scooters and motor-cycles – things have changed a lot, I must say !!


In mid 1980s we could see on road - Kawasaki Bajaj, Ind-Suzuki, Raj-Yamaha, Hero-Honda …… and before that there were only Enfield (Bullet,200…) Jawa (later Yezdi), Rajdoot ; Lambretta, Vijay, Vespa and (hamara) Bajaj (scooters) and Luna and Suvega mopeds (before TVS ventured and took the market by storm)

A motorcycle  by definition could include two or even 3 wheeled vehicles used for varied purposes and could include scooters, mopeds, motorized bicycles and the like.  By some yardstick, on a bike you sit as one would straddle a horse ~ on a scooter, you sit with legs firmly planted on the floor bird. Scooters have smaller wheels and smaller engines….. in motor cycles the power is conveyed from engine to drive by way of chain – where as scooters are shaft driven……….  Now you have so many varieties of motorcycles (scooters and moped) on road – and with recent emission norms, no two-stroke engines are on road. Vespa, Bajaj, Lamby are out of the market with Honda Activa, TVS Pep, Mahindra, Pleasure and the like ruling the roost.  Maruti 800 was to afford the middle class the reach and Tata Nano was to be 1 lakh car………..but there are two-wheelers which cost more than some most bought cars on road.  

In mid 1980s Japanese collaboration stormed the market and we saw Suzuki, Kawasaki, Honda,  Yamaha (British) and the like entering the segment with Indian collaboration.  In between there have been sport bikes and some beasts like - Confederate X 132 Hellcat – on which I had posted earlier..

Do you know that Koreans also have entered 2 wheeler market (in car segment already Hyundai is doing well) - Korean motorcycle manufacturer Hyosung now owned by S&T Motors has ventured into the middleweight motorcycle space in India with its Indian partner Garware Motors to cater to the enthusiast buyers. Hyosung has 5 Bikes models available in India. The available models are Hyosung, Hyosung GD, Hyosung GV250, Hyosung Gt, Hyosung ST7, Hyosung GV650, . The minimum priced model of Hyosung is Hyosung GD priced at Rs 110000.   The other day happened to see one new vehicle at EA mall in Chennai ….named ‘Aquila’… Aquila is a constellation in the northern sky. Its name is Latin for 'eagle' and it represents the bird who carried Zeus/Jupiter's thunderbolts in Greco-Roman mythology. Aquila is a bird in the  genus of true eagles.

Understand that Hyosung  bikes were launched in India by Garware about a couple of years ago ….the initial launches were GT650R, a focused sports bike, and ST 7, a bike specifically targeted as a cruiser. The one seen at Express Avenue Mall is ‘4 stroke; 8 valve, 647 cc water cooled engine; with a mass of 240 kg – priced at around Rs.6.50 lakhs….. whether one would buy a 2 wheeler at the price more than that of standard cars on road is no Q – as there is easy market for such bikes.  

The news of ban in plying unregistered vehicles without number plates and compulsory wearing of helmets pertains to Peshavar and it read that violators would be proceeded against under Sec 188 PPC.  

Interesting !!

With regards – S. Sampathkumar

28th Dec 2013.

Indian Team for New Zealand tour announced - Ishwar Pandey, Stuart Binny, Varun Aaron come in

After the present tour of SA, India is to tour Kiwiland – playing 5 One dayers and 2 tests.  The One dayers are on Jan 19th; 22nd; 25th; 28th and 31st …. The 1st Test is at Eden Park, Auckland starting on Feb 6th; while the 2nd sarts on Feb 14th at Basin Reserve, Wellington.  Newzealand is known for its chill weather and swing that pacers will be able to achieve. 

Heard of Rewa - a  city in the north-eastern part Madhya Pradesh.  It is the former capital of the princely state of Rewa and the former state of Vindhya Pradesh. The city lies about 420 kilometres (261 mi) northeast of the state capital Bhopal and 130 kilometres (81 mi) south of the city of Allahabad. Rewa derives its name from another name for the Narmada River.

Way back in June 1986 in Test no. 1047 – India was on a high – in that test at Leeds India won by 279 runs as Indian bowlers skittled out England twice for 102 & 128.  Chetan Sharma was injured and S Madanlal who was playing minor league was drafted in to the eleven…………….. it was the unlikely hero Roger Binny who had figures of 13-1-40-5 and 8-1-18-2 – the wrecker-in-chief. Madanlal took 3 for 18 in the 1st while Maninder 4 for 26 in the 2nd… those days Binny was hailed as India’s overseas player as he could bowl well in overcast conditions but was ordinary on subcontinent wickets though he took a 6 for against Pakis at Calcutta.

The team for NZ tour has been announced……………. Pragyan Ojha who did not get a solitary game to play is dropped out of Test team and in his place comes Ishwar Pandey – who ? The Test squad is : MS Dhoni (capt), Shikhar Dhawan, M Vijay, Cheteshwar Pujara, Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, Ajinkya Rahane, Ravindra Jadeja, Zaheer Khan, Mohammed Shami, Ishant Sharma, Ambati Rayudu, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, R Ashwin, Umesh Yadav, Wriddhiman Saha, Ishwar Pandey

For the ODIs – Yuvraj Singh, Mohit Sharma and Umesh Yadav are dropped and in comes – Ishwar Pandey, Stuart Binny and Varun Aaron.  The team for One dayers is : MS Dhoni (capt), Shikhar Dhawan, Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, Ajinkya Rahane, Ambati Rayudu, Suresh Raina, R Ashwin, Ravindra Jadeja, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Mohammed Shami, Ishant Sharma, Amit Mishra, Ishwar Pandey, Stuart Binny, Varun Aaron

After leading the wicket-takers' list in the 2012-13 Ranji Trophy, Pandey has played 12 first-class matches this season - two each against South Africa A and West Indies A, and eight in the Ranji Trophy. He has taken 45 wickets in those, with two five-fors, including 11 wickets on the tour to South Africa.  Until the 12th standard, Ishwar Pandey - son of a retired Subedar Major in the army - had no business with serious cricket, let alone fast bowling. But a chance visit to a selection trial changed his life forever, and with India call-up, the 6-feet-2-inch man from Madhya Pradesh has taken a giant leap. A product of MRF Chennai, Pandey, 24, has received maiden call to the Indian Test and ODI squads for the tour of New Zealand.  He played for Pune Warriors in the last IPL.

The hero of that Leeds match was Roger Michael Humphrey Binny – once a commentator said – with this name he deserves to be playing for England !!!! – now his son, Stuart Binny, a medium-pacer and middle-order batsman capable of getting quick runs when needed, gets a chance as an allrounder – it is a coincidence that Roger Binny is in the selection committee.

Varun Aaron played the last of his four ODIs in December 2011, in the home series against West Indies. He impressed then with his speed and in fact has bowled the fastest delivery in National cricket but has been hampered by injuries.  Remember he played in that test against West Indies at Mumbai which ended with scores equal (a draw still).  Aaron and Ashwin played the last over….  Yuvraj had a woeful home ODI series against Australia in October, scoring 19 runs in four innings, and now has been dropped.   Ojha should feel unlucky – dropped to beef up the pace attack …. Zaheer, Ishant did not excel but are still there.  The batting line-up is the same…………. Hoping that in New Zealand India does well this time

With regards – S. Sampathkumar

31st Dec 2013.