Friday 26 May 2023

A Phenomenal ‘Pasmamising' of Sorts! 😊

A Quintessential Knock of Sorts!

From Sourav and Dravid ❤️

And quite a delightful treat for the ardent cricket buff!

26th May 1999

#memoriesfromdiaires

ICC World Cup 1999

This particular day went down in cricketing history, as one of the most memorable days in the annals of the game!

From my personal diary entry, 26th May 1999

When Sri Lanka came a cropper at the Cooper County ground! 😊

Or rather, the timid Sri Lankan side was taunted at Taunton by the Bengal Tiger! 😊

Lol! Inspirational flow you see! 😊

This India vs Sri Lanka ICC World Cup fixture had all those ecstatic moments that we most eagerly watch out for, in a ODI!

This was Sourav’s first World Cup! Same with Dravid as well!

And the Indian side was up against the formidable defending champs Sri Lanka!

But the duo’s quintessential knock of 300 plus runs, shattered the hope and the confidence of the opposition to smithereens, pulverizing them or rather ‘pasmam’ising* them by a phenomenal 157 runs, posting a whopping 373/6 in 50 overs. 😊

26th May 1999 also goes into the record books for having made One-day International Cricket’s first ever 300-run partnership.

The lovely duo on 26th May 1999 [Pic Courtesy: India Today]

Individually also, for Sourav this was his highest ODI score of 183!

Words wouldn’t come to the rescue of anyone who saw the match on this day – nayver! 

Not even to the likes of a Harsha Bhogle or a David Gower - when it comes to describe the delightful duo - on this particular day!

There were hysteric moments each and every time Ganguly belted the ball across the boundary, [17 times], and over the boundary [7 times]!

A blazing tit for a rhetorical tat from the Indian side, who had done miserably against Sri Lanka (the defending champs) just in the previous edition of the World Cup in Eden Gardens, Calcutta.

*‘pasmam’ising - yet another inspirational flow or an impulsive coinage today, that takes its cue and clue from the Tamil word, ‘ashes!’ 😊

Paspam:   பஸ்மம், பற்பம், [ashes], சாம்பல்;

Yet another definition refers to ‘paspam’ as medicinal ash of herbs/metals in siddha/ayurvedic medical system! 

Another connotation refers to paspam as, metal reduced to medicinal powder!

Whatever the deno or the conno, the Indian side literally paspamised the opponents!

And that, dear reader, matters much-o-much and more-oh-more – yeh dil maange more - for the avid cricket buff, ain’t it? 😉

Tuesday 23 May 2023

"I had to wear dark glasses during the practice sessions, because at times I could not hold back my tears"

On Sachin ❤️ | & His Record Partnership

ICC World Cup

23 May 1999 ❤️

[India vs Kenya]

#memoriesfromdiaries

After a brief hiatus, our Videocon television set was finally on its way back home after its IC - Integrated Circuit - was successfully replaced by the service people at Videocon.

My brother, wanting to make sure that nothing comes between us and the World Cup match in the offing😊 was quite busy fixing up on a broken wire in the antenna when - to our shock - he cut his palm slightly in the process.

Remember those sky-high antennas that adorned the rooftops of all our houses in the 80s and 90s, - antennas that were albeit decorated with bird droppings on all sides 😊– those good ol’ outdoor TV antennas that helped us receive the DD broadcasts with such good reception! Again, TV lore has it that, the higher the antenna, the better the reception!  😊

Personal diary entry, dt 23 May 1999

So yes, we had to make a quick SoS to our veteran electrician to help us fix the wire to the antenna and hey presto, the TV set was back in action in no time, - and right in time for the ICC World Cup fixture between India and Kenya.

Well, today’s match was memorable in many ways, and thats hence this blessed post! 😊

Firstly, this was Tendulkar’s first match that he played in International Cricket after his father’s demise!

Back from Mumbai, the legend scored an unbeaten 140 runs off just 101 balls, with Dravid at 104 off 109 balls, to take India’s total to 329/2 in 50 overs.  

23 May 1999 - India vs Kenya @ the ICC World Cup Match

Only two wickets had fallen for the Indian side [Ramesh and Ganguly].

Secondly, this partnership of 337 runs between Dravid and Sachin was considered a record partnership back then!

In response, Kenya could only manage a meagre 235/7.

On the Indian bowling front, Debashish Mohanty was on fire, scalping four wickets in quick succession to help India beat Kenya by 94 runs.

Finally, Tendulkar’s recollection about this incident in his autobiography.

Yes, Tendulkar recollects on this particular incident, with such poignancy in his autobiography titled, Playing it My Way.

Says he –

I couldn’t sleep for many nights having lost my biggest inspiration.

And it was a deeply emotional moment for all of us when the watchmen, postmen and all the other people he had helped during his life came over for his funeral.

I put a gold coin with my face on it in his pocket before the cremation, so that I could always be there with him. Without my father, my life would never be the same again.

‘A very difficult tournament’

After spending four days in India, I returned to England to rejoin the team on the eve of the match against Kenya.

That, it seemed to me, was what my father would have wanted me to do, and that’s what prompted the decision to return to London to play the remaining World Cup matches.

Mentally, however, I was not at my best throughout the tournament. I had to wear dark glasses during the practice sessions, because at times I could not hold back my tears.

Though I managed to score a hundred in the match against Kenya – which remains one of my most cherished centuries, one I dedicated to my father – my mind was not always on the game.

writes Sachin, in his Autobiography.

You may want to read a review on Sachin’s Autobiography on our past blog post HERE.

You may also be interested in watching/listening to the Book Review on his Autobiography, on our YouTube channel, HERE.

Interestingly, Tendulkar is one of the very few players to have represented India in a record six World Cups, in a career spanning 24 years.

Such is his devotion, dedication, and commitment to the game!

PS: To access a few of my past diary entries, on some such cherishable / memorable past events, that had happened decades ago, try keying in the hashtag #memoriesfromdiaries on Google. 

And yes! Until we meet up on yet another interesting diary entry from times past, here's me signing off for now. Stay tuned. Stay blessed. ❤️

Love,

Rufus

Pic Courtesy: espncrickinfo.com

Sunday 21 May 2023

"We have to look at the literature of the world from the Indian perspective!"

Remembering Dr. CDN | & His Dhvanyaloka

On his birthday today ❤️

What happens when a passionate Professor of English - along with a few like-minded vibrant literary souls - team up for the pure love of literature?

Simple!

Dhvanyaloka happens! 😊

The son of a shopkeeper, C. D. Narasimhaiah came from a very humble background. But his parents, sensing the literary prodigy in him, invested all their meagre earnings on their son, thus encouraging him on his talents all the way!

This, coupled with his own self-powered passion for literature, spurred him on and on to greater heights in the literary arena!

After having graduated from the University of Mysore, he went abroad, to the University of Cambridge and Princeton University, for his Higher Studies. There he was privileged to be a student of the great F. R. Leavis.

He then came back to India, and joined Maharaja’s College, Mysuru as Professor of English, and later went on to become the Principal of the institution in 1957, a position in which he served his institution until his retirement.

One is spontaneously reminded of Booker T. Washington here. For more on B.T.W, you may want to read our past post HERE. 

Even post-retirement, Professor CDN continued to shine his luminous literary light, with the founding of Dhvanyaloka!

This post is a nostalgic reminiscence on an amazing rendezvous we had with the legendary Dr. CDN at Dhvanyaloka, more than two decades ago!

Well, in the final year of our PG Programme, we were given the sweet luxury of going on a study tour – a study tour exclusively for the II MA Class.

Wanting to make our trip a bit more rewarding for all of us,  Prof. Daniel David suggested that, we visit Dhvanyaloka in Mysore!

And that’s how our trip to Dhvanyaloka happened in the year 2001, in the final year of our MA Programme in English! 

Added delight, since, we pulled off a surprise birthday party for Prof. Daniel David right inside the omni bus that was taking us to Dhvanyaloka. 😊

Now for a few interesting tidbits on Dhvanyaloka

Well, Dhvanyaloka is the name of the Literary Centre for English Studies in India, founded by Dr. C. D. Narasimhaiah in the year 1979.

[Much akin to SCILET - the high-renowned Study Centre for Indian Literature in English and Translation, founded almost around the same point of time, in the early 1980s, by Dr. Paul Love, and housed at the American College, Madurai].

The Centre is named after the 9th century writer, Anandavardhana, who is credited with creating the dhvani theory in his magnum opus titled, Dhvanyaloka, or A Light on Suggestion.

Housed in a lush, green locale, amidst hundreds of trees, quite close to Manasagangotri, shines this beautiful literary abode – the brain child of the legendary (late) Dr. C. D. Narasimhaiah!

Hundreds of budding academics, young researchers and faculty members from all over India and abroad flock to this sylvan locale, to delight themselves in the resources available aplenty in the premises.

Apart from Shri Rajiv Gandhi, who visited the Centre in 1989, as Prime Minister, a bevy of literary souls have also visited the premises, including the likes of R. K. Narayan, Chinua Achebe, A. K. Ramanujan, Ayyappa Paniker, Kamala Das, Jayanta Mahapatra, Les Murray, and the Nobel Laureate William Golding, to name a few.

We, in the II MA Class, were so blessed to be introduced to the legendary C. D. Narasimhaiah, 80 years young, who, though a bit weak in body, was so vivacious and exhuberant in his spirit. He was literally in his elements when we engaged him on his magnum opus in particular, which is titled, The Swan and the Eagle.

Three decades ago, the common saying was that, 

Any study in Indian Writing in English would remain incomplete without invoking those impactful insights from The Swan and the Eagle. Such was the prestige, the pre-eminence and the aura of CDN’s The Swan and the Eagle amongst academics.

Interestingly, The Swan and the Eagle has quite conveniently been forgotten in literary circles today, and even in mainstream academia.

It wouldn’t be an exaggeration to say that, The Swan and the Eagle laid down the paradigm and the solid foundations for the critical study of Indian Writing in English.

The book waxes eloquent on the famed Indian writers – right from the ‘poetic genius’ of Toru Dutt, to the ‘imaginative prose’ of Anand, Narayan and Rao, to the ‘tongue of flame’ speeches of Swami Vivekananda, to the ‘scientific humanism’ of Nehru, to ‘the Metaphysical’ in Raja Rao, to the writers of ‘spurious reputation’ – as CDN himself called them – in Rushdie, Seth, Shashi Tharoor and Arundhati Roy, all of whom have made such a huge difference to the quality of our thoughts, our ideas and our living.

We as a class, spent the entire day in the sylvan precints of Dhvanyaloka, browsing our way gracefully through the treasure troves of yore!

There’s also a beautiful pond in the premises, to cherish the memory of Henry David Thoreau’s Walden Pond!

Today, Dhvanyaloka is run by his son Dr. Srinath, who is also an eminent writer and critic. Also delighted to know that, he is sustaining the library, and its abundant literary resources - founded by his father - all this long, up until the present, with literally almost no help from the government! [to my knowledge].

The prestigious quarterly journal that was founded by Dr. CDN in 1952, titled, The Literary Criterion also continues to thrive till date, for more than seven decades now. ❤️

On the occasion of Dr. CDN’s birthday today, here’s wishing Dhvanyaloka many more years of fruitful service to the academic community.

And to those of you who plan on making a trip to Mysuru, please don’t forget to make a pitstop at Dhvanyaloka! 

To sign off in the words of Dr. CDN,

We have to return to our roots. We have to look at the literature of the world from the Indian perspective. Through Dhvanyaloka I have tried to connect my past with the present.

Well, therein lies the strength and the uniqueness of Dhvanyaloka in all her grandeur!

Friday 19 May 2023

When India needed seven runs from 11 balls - with just three wickets in hand!

India vs Zimb | Flower Power

#memoriesfromdiaries

19th May 1999

ICC World Cup 1999 Memories

Very rarely does one get to see a whopping record number of extras by the Indian side, and that too in a Cricket World Cup fixture – 51 extras in just 50 overs.

Yet another match in which India were comfortably placed, but totally squandered it all away, by some indiscipline in the bowling arena!

From my personal diary entry, 19 May 1999

Still couldn’t fathom the way in which they failed this dismally and disastrously at the hustings in this crucial game in the ICC Cricket World Cup 1999.

Many things worked against our boys today on the field. Four of them merit some attention though!

Firstly - a record 14 leg byes, 16 no balls, and 21 wides all in just 50 overs.

Secondly, it was highly unfortunate that Tendulkar couldn’t play the game on this particular day, as, sadly, he had to fly back to Mumbai, all of a sudden, because of his father’s demise.

A minute of silence on the field, to mark the passing away of Sachin's father

Thirdly, adding to the team’s woes, India were fined a hefty penalty of four overs for slow over rate as well!

Fourthly, another disastrous decision today by the Indian captain Azhar – when India won the toss, but ironically elected to field first!!!

Chennai boy Sadagopan Ramesh and Sourav were the opening duo, because of Tendulkar’s absence!

Sourav fell with just nine runs added to his scorecard. 

Ramesh tried his best to keep the momentum going on a high note, with 55 runs to his score, when he too fell to an unexpected slow left arm spin from Grant Flower! (Interestingly, Ramesh was the highest scorer for the Indian side, in the match)!

Batsmen soon kept falling like nine pins at such regular intervals, in such quick succession!

Having been awarded a hefty penalty of four overs, India now had just 46 overs for them.

And it proved a real cliffhanger when India needed seven runs from 11 balls with three wickets in hand!

All eyes were on Robin Singh, Srinath and Venky, to pull off the unexpected! 

When disaster struck! 

From the thunderous Olonga - one of the fastest bowlers in International cricket!

Henry Olonga struck with such power, lapping up all three wickets in just five balls in quick succession, to hand India one of their worst debacles in World Cup Cricket!

Olonga strikes

A match that India coulda quite easily won!

This led to India ending up last on the Points Tally, in the Super Sixes Stage.

Captaincy really matters! Especially when it’s the Cricket World Cup!

Dravid 13 runs (14b)

Azhar 7 runs (11b)

Ajay Jadeja 43 runs (76b)

Robin Singh 35 runs (47b)

For Zimbabwe, now, it was just a cake walk to their crown and glory, with the famed Flower Brother Duo [Andy and Grant] scoring the maximum runs for their team, along with the winning knock as well, blazing their way to victory with Grant Flower on 45 runs, and Andy Flower (not out) on 68 runs!

the Flower Brothers

Interestingly, there have been a bevy of such brother-bondings enlivening the fields in International Cricket, including the likes of –

the Steve Waugh Mark Waugh duo from Australia,

the Brett Lee & Shane Lee duo from Australia,

the Yusuf Pathan & Irfan Pathan duo from India,

Krunal Pandya & Hardik Pandya duo, again from India,

the Morkel brothers from South Africa,

the Marshall brothers from New Zealand,

to mention a few,

the brother-duos who made for a real Cricketing ‘fraternity’ on the field!

PS: On a personal note, I should confess that, I completely stopped watching the game [all formats of the game] after the year 2000, [when in April 2000, India and the entire world were rattled by match-fixing allegations, and some of my favourite cricketing icons were also banned from the game, after being found involved in match-fixing – especially Ajay Jadeja and Hanse Cronje, and Hanse even admitting to match-fixing!]

Ende deivame!!!

I personally felt it was such a huge disappointment or rather an embarrassment, when you sit at your television set, all day long, eagerly waiting - and praying too - with bated breath for India to strike all sixes and fours for every ball, but then you realise that, all those matches were already ‘tuned’ and fixed!’ by ‘tuners’ and ‘fixers’ far far away from the cricket field, in hotels and in luxury suites!

Days when the betting racket was rampant in cricket, controlling the players from behind the stage, like puppets in the hands of the puppeteers!

But for these tainted clods who gave the game a bad reputation, the game, outwitting them all, has its own aura and its feel, ain’t it?

Those days and days and days of gully cricket, or street cricket as we call them, that we played and played from dawn until dusk, still remains etched in our hearts for ever – and with Wordsworth, we say, ‘The music in my heart I bore, Long after it was heard no more’.

The bestest illustration to this credo, we find in Narayan’s amazing Children’s Cricket Fiction Swami and Friends.

Swami and Friends Pic courtesy: thecricketmonthly.com

And we, like fast bowler Bret Lee’s fictional cricketing hero Toby Jones, indulge ourselves in that blessed time-travel to matches past!

On an aside: Well, Toby Jones is a fictional, budding school-boy cricketer, [quite reflective of the likes of Swami and like all of us who revel and relish the game]! He and his friends live for the game!

Added, the fictional Toby boy has this unique gift of time-travelling to any cricket match that’s happened in the distant past, just by giving one quick glance at the scorecard of the match concerned, from the Wisden Cricketer's Almanack – considered the ‘Bible’ for cricket buffs from across the planet!

To be Toby is to be we! the delightful cricketing bee! Ain’t we?

Statistics and pics: espncricinfo.com | Cartoon courtesy: thecricketmonthly.com

Monday 15 May 2023

'God of the Offside' vs 'King of Fielding' 🥰

ICC Cricket World Cup 1999 | Memories ❤️

Of an Invaluable Match Gone Awry! 

On Azhar, Saurav & Jonty | And their ‘USP’s

#memoriesfromdiaries

15th May 1999 ❤️

World Cup Cricket matches were those memorable high-octane occasions that quite literally had no parallels in giving us all - those goose-bumpy, nail-biting and breath-taking moments! 😊

15th May 1999, India vs South Africa Match | Source: icc-cricket.com

That too, with the holidays in full swing, we were grounded at home, hooked to our TV sets and rooting for Ganguly and Sachin, the world-famous opening duo, whenever India took to batting! 

This particular day was one such occasion, when India faced South Africa in an exciting ‘group stage’ match!

A match that’s still reeling in our minds for the dismal debacle from the Indian side, due to some really bad decisions on field, by the Indian Captain, which coulda been avoided at all costs!

South Africa went on to win this World Cup ‘group stage’ match by four wickets, with a whopping 16 balls remaining! 

A match which was easily tilted in our favour!

Yes! the fret and the fume on my diary entry is evidence to our shock and surprise at India having squandered away such a lovely opportunity because of Azharuddin’s dismal decisions on the ground!

Indeed! India really did have a tough challenge on the bowling front, which our boys were pretty well-equipped to handle!

You see, Sachin and Saurav were very economical on the bowling front!

Sourav – 4 overs – 16 runs – 1 wicket

Sachin – 4 overs – 22 runs – 1 wicket

But they were not considered beyond four overs each.  Don’t know why-o-why! 

Venky was also good on the bowling front! He had given just 32 runs off 8 overs. Even he too wasn’t given his full quota!

Instead, surprisingly, Azhar preferred Srinath, who was giving away runs at 6.90 per over, giving him his full quota of ten overs!

[Although Srinath has been one of the best pace bowlers in India, this particular pitch was not quite favourable for him at all! And this being a World Cup qualifying match for India from Group A!]

Well, we felt so dismayed by the loss that, in those exciting post-match discussions we usually have with friends on the following days, our heated discussions veered on Azhar’s decisions as captain!

Yes! We were so aghast with Azharuddin, for allowing Srinath to bowl, although he was giving away runs on a platter, which indeed proved our nemesis!

A key match squandered away, which in a way, woulda really made us qualified for the next stage of the World Cup Series! 

Azhar coulda! You see!

Still, what’s done is done! And can’t be undone! 

So let’s now move on gently, and look at some tidbits on these iconic cricketers, who played on this particular day!

Ganguly was known for his run-outs! In fact, he has been ‘run-out’ a record 23 times in ODIs. 

And Jonty had always been the nemesis of any batsman with his amazing fielding skills. 😊

In fact, batsmen and spectators are quite wary on the turf when they see Jonty around.

That’s because Jonty, dubbed the ‘King of Fielding’ in cricket history, would spring a surprise from nowhere, like a bolt from the blue, 😊 ‘float like a butterfly, sting like a bee,’ and most of his victims were caught in those quite unexpected ‘run outs’, in that quite unsuspecting microsecond of sorts!

A guy who had really redefined fielding in limited-overs cricket!

A guy who told the world that, ‘saving runs is as important as scoring them’.

So yes! This was yet another instance wherein Ganguly had for a jiffy quite forgotten the fact that Jonty was there ‘on the prowl’ laying in wait for his bait - waiting for his coveted ‘prize on field!’

Jonty in action

And Saurav had quite daringly gone ahead for that audacious ‘running between the wickets’ that quite proved his ‘waterloo’ moment! 

All his fans - yes, including me - 😊watching the match were in for a rude shock to see their master-batsman walk back to the pavilion, with just three runs away to clinching his 7th ODI century!

[Well, he later went on to get his 7th ODI century against Sri Lanka with 183 runs, in the very same month, on 26th May 1999].

Again, who on earth can forget that scintillating knock of 239 runs that Saurav had amassed, against arch-rivals Pakistan, in 2007! 😊

Well, Sourav, popularly known as the Prince of Kolkatta, has also gotten added feathers to his cap! Yes! he is also fondly known by the epithet, the ‘God of the offside!’

And that’s because, his offside shots are a real treat to behold! His knack for finding the gap even in the most brilliant of fieldings, and executing those phenomenal, awe-inducing shots – be it his scintillating square drives, or his charming cover drives – he is indeed a real delight for the avid cricket buff! 😊

On the other hand, Jonty Rhodes was also king on terra firma, in his own domain!

He has claim to fame as the greatest fielder in cricketing history, and hence he is also dubbed the ‘King of fielding’!

So yes! This match, then, was a kinda battle betwixt giants in their own right - God of the Offside on one side, and the King of fielding on the other! 😊

Minus that particular disastrous and dismal decision that resulted in India’s debacle at the hustings, the spirit of the sport was something that made us all spell-bound, and gave us all that ‘unbridled’ joy ‘unbounded’ that remains etched in our hearts forever!

And how! 😊


Pics Source: https://www.icc-cricket.com

Stats Source: espncricketinfo.com