Tiger Woods on the importance of winning |
Barack Obama with Tim Kaine On the importance of winning |
Bhagawan Sri Krishna with Arjuna On the importance of winning |
Tiger Woods on the importance of winning |
Barack Obama with Tim Kaine On the importance of winning |
Bhagawan Sri Krishna with Arjuna On the importance of winning |
Pujara being hit a bodyline delivery from Pat Cummins |
Is anybody in the cricket media/ establishment even asking
that question?
The Aussies were bowling bodyline. There is no other word for it.
In the just concluded India-Australia series, the Aussie quick bowlers were clearly trying to hit and intimidate the batters. They targeted top order batsmen like Pujara, who took eleven bodyhits during his heroic resistance in Brisbane. They also targeted lower order batsmen like Shami, whose fractured arm deprived India of a pace spearhead.
Pujara's body-blows on the last day at Brisbane |
Media coverage has been mainly about India's courage in
braving this assault, not about whether this kind of assault was cricket in the
first place.
The Aussie leadership behind this bodyline attack – Tim Paine
and Justin Langer – are supposedly the clean-cut role-models who are creating a
wholesome new culture, after the win-at-all-costs sandpaper-gate culture created
by Steve Smith and Darren Lehmann. They have copped a lot of flak for sledging
and losing, but not for bowling bodyline.
The leaders of the cricket world - Gavaskar, Ganguly, Shane Warne,
the Waugh twins, the Chappell brothers, England’s Michael Vaughn, thoughtful commentators
like Harsha Bhogle – have had little or nothing to say about this tactic. The
only murmurs of protest Google could find me are on niche Indian and Kiwi websites.
Michael Atherton seems to have brought up the appropriateness of bodyline in 2017, when Mitchell Johnson was peppering the English top order
as well as bunnies like Jake Ball and Jimmy Anderson with short stuff.
Steve Smith, then the pre-sandpaper-gate Australian captain, dismissed Atherton's
view as "a bit over the top. No doubt, if they had the kind of pace that
our bowlers can generate, they'd do the same thing."
Maybe bodyline is the new normal.
Maybe anyone who complains about bodyline is a wuss.
Maybe it is just naïve to expect professional cricketers to
respect unwritten codes of conduct.
Maybe.
Mohammad Shami being hit by a bodyline delivery from Pat Cummins. Shami was sent home with a fractured arm |
Team India at the Gabba with the Border-Gavaskar Trophy |
Rishabh and Siraj celebrate |
These memes are missing the point. Kohli
deserves a ton of credit for this win.
Kohli’s biggest contribution to this moment
was in making winning test series abroad India’s #1 priority.
In the later years of MS Dhoni’s
captaincy that commitment was never clear. There was always a feeling that
Dhoni’s test team were going through the motions rather than playing with
belief, intent, or purpose. That sense of drift was obvious on the abysmal England
tours of 2011 and 2014. It seemed obvious that MSD enjoyed limited overs cricket
more than test matches. The fog never really lifted until Dhoni retired from test
cricket.
At that time, it was easy to imagine that
Indian cricket would become IPL-land, happy to have some T20 fun, but with no
higher aspirations. With a different leader that could easily have happened.
Fortunately, Kohli never had any doubts
that his ambition was to make India a great test team.
He brought in other leaders, like Ravi
Shastri, who shared this vision. He committed to the workload of playing more
tests, to the more arduous scheduling, to the fitness culture needed to
maintain a pack of 8-10 genuine quick bowlers who could bowl with intensity
after an entire day’s play in any conditions. Kohli prepped India's test team with away-wins in Sri Lanka and the West Indies, with home wins against New Zealand,
South Africa England and Australia before setting out to conquer the final
frontier – away wins in the SENA nations.
That prize almost eluded him. With a bit
of luck India could have won in South Africa in 2017-18. We lost chasing fourth
inning targets of 208 in Cape Town and 287 Pretoria. With a bit more luck India
could have won in England in 2018. We lost chasing fourth inning targets of 195
in Birmingham and 245 in Southampton. Compare that with the 328 we hunted down
against a better attack in Brisbane.
Mother Cricket finally smiled down on
Kohli’s team when India finally beat Australia in Australia in 2018-19 for the
first time in history. Captain Kohli’s noble quest hadn’t been in vain. The
final frontier had been conquered.
If India had the resources to win again
in Australia in 2020-21, it is in significant part because of Kohli’s legacy. There
is nothing inevitable about having a team of young test players with the chutzpah
to beat the Aussies in Australia. Kohli’s ambition, faith and patient team
building set this win up.
The point is not to take anything away
from the rest of the leadership group.
Most great achievements have many fathers.
Rahane’s calm, Shastri’s mental toughness, even Bharat Arun’s tactical nous all
contributed to this glorious moment. But leadership is about more than being the
khadoos Maratha rock the rest of the team bat around, it is about more than
being calm presence in the dressing room, it is more than making the smart
field placings. Leadership is also about having a vision for what we will
achieve together and having the resourcefulness and patience to develop a team
to deliver on that vision. To that extent the leader who gave us the joy of
Brisbane 2021 is the nappy-changing daddy Kohli.
Let there be no doubt that Virat has fire in his belly... |
...even if he does have a softer side. |
Note: I was surfing the web for pictures of Virat and Anushka with the daughter, who was born on the day India saved the Sydney test. The photos on the net right now are all stock images or fakes.
Planning a trip from Mumbai to Goa? Drive. It’s more satisfying than flying.
Our family drove from
Mumbai to Goa and back last week. It’s a long drive - about twelve
hours each way. It was worth the effort because Goa looked so much more
beautiful on this trip than on the many earlier trips when I’d just taken a
flight into Dabolim.
Why?
Robert Pirsig explained this effect in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance:
“To arrive
in the Rocky Mountains by plane would be to see them in one kind of context, as
pretty scenery. But to arrive after days of hard travel across the prairies
would be to see them in another way, as a promised land.”
Similarly,
to get off a flight, pick up stuff from the baggage carousel, find the coach sent
by the beach resort, and then notice the pretty sunset while sipping a welcome
drink is one kind of experience.
To leave
home early in the morning, drive on to the Eastern Freeway overlooking Mazgaon
docks, across the Vashi bridge from Bombay island to the Indian mainland,
through the concrete jungle of Navi Mumbai, and then to zigzag up Bhor ghat to
Lonavla, spot Duke’s Nose across the range in Khandala, trundle through the anonymous urban sprawl
of Pune and then past acres of sugarcane fields in Satara, the railway
bridges across the Krishna and Koyna rivers, the brick kilns at Karad, the
movie studio signs in Kolhapur, and to then cross the border into Karnataka, zigzag
back down to the plains through the waterfalls of Amboli ghat, drive through
the buffer zone of the Radhanagari National Park while troops of monkeys bound across the road, get lost on a kuccha road, meet young water buffalos
who won’t give way to a car, discover an unexpectedly lovely temple tank at
Sawantwadi, reconnect with National Highway system and discover that NH66 is
still a kuccha road because of construction work, get off the highway to
drive through banyan tree canyons to get to our villa just before dark, and to
then notice the sunset on the water while swigging a welcome drink; that is a
totally different kind of experience. Goa does objectively look so much more
beautiful, more unique, after that experience.
Here are some pictures we took along the way:
On the Mumbai - Pune Expressway |
Across the Koyna River |
Service Road along NH48 |
Highway pitstop (desi-jugaad style) |
Ghat roads |
Ghat roads - will be a tough drive after dark |
School @ Ajara |
Vista @ Amboli Ghat |
Down Amboli Ghat |
Monkey Troop @ Amboli |
Entering Sawantwadi |
Sawantwadi Talao |
Sawantwadi Talao |
Kalash @ Sawantwadi Talao in the evening light |
Next time, maybe we’ll do the scenic route through Harihareshwar and Ganpatipule. Maybe we’ll do that route on a motorcycle that we actually know how to look after, like Pirsig did in Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance.
Just do it. By Serena Williams. |
Say you were Nike’s Chief Marketing Officer.
Say you were searching for a tagline that would define your brand.
Just do it. By Alex Morgan. |
Would you choose a line associated with good karma, with success, with victory? Or would you choose a line spoken by a notorious serial killer facing the death penalty?
You’d choose a line associated with success, right? Or maybe not.
Nike’s famous Just do it slogan is derived from the last words of the serial killer Gary Gilmore.
The story is that the unrepentant serial killer was facing a firing squad and was asked if he had any last words. He said, “Let’s do it”.
Dan Weiden, the head of the ad agency handling the Nike account, took Gilmore’s words and changed “Let’s do it” to "Just do it". The rest is history. Just do it remains one of the most powerful and successful marketing campaigns ever.
To be fair, "Just do it" is not really comparable to my previous post about VW Phaeton. “Let’s do it” and “Just do it” could be general purpose English words in a way that Phaeton clearly is not. But the interesting point, the counter-point to the VW Phaeton story, is that good ideas need not originate from sources with good karma.
Let's do it. By Gary Gilmore. On his way to being executed. |
A VW Pheaton rolling out of its "Transparent Factory" |
Say you were searching for a brand name for your new super-premium flagship product.
Would you choose a name associated with good karma, with success, with victory? Or would you name your product after one of history’s most notorious losers?
You’d choose a name associated with success, right? Or maybe not.
Back in 2002, Volkswagen chose to name their flagship luxury car the Phaeton.
The Phaeton was the most premium car in VW’s history, a luxury sedan positioned alongside the Mercedes S class range, priced at over USD 100,000 in today's money.
The German engineering worked. By most contemporary accounts the car was superb, with a Lamborghini class engine, with refined road-handling, fully loaded with features like passenger-specific climate control. It was made in VW’s famous Transparent Factory in Dresden, where customers could visit the shop-floor and watch their cars being assembled.
Yet, despite the superb product, the Phaeton was a commercial disaster. Production had to be stopped in 2014.
VW Phaeton’s story follows the same narrative arc as that of the mythological Phaeton, the demi-god the car was named after.
The original Phaeton was born to Apollo and a water-nymph Clymene.
In those days, the sun rode around the heavens in Apollo’s chariot, drawn by four white horses, guided by the charioteer Helios.
Phaeton had not trained as a charioteer. But the teenager ignored his own unreadiness, took advantage of an unwise divine promise and took control of his father’s sun-chariot. Unable to control the sun-chariot’s incredible power he steered it too close to the earth (therefore scorching the Sahara), he then overcompensated and steered too far away from the earth (therefore freezing the tundra). At this point he panicked and was plunging the sun towards Greece itself. Zeus had no choice but to throw a thunderbolt at his grandson to strike Phaeton dead. Zeus had his duties. He had to save the planet.
So, why did Volkswagen’s Phaeton fail?
Like all big events this failure doesn’t have a single cause. But let’s not rule out the possibility that Volkswagen invited Zeus’ wrath by invoking Phaeton’s name.
Maybe the Chief Marketing Officer would have been better off choosing a classical sounding name that Zeus didn’t have strong feelings about, like Lexus or Acura.
Phaeton the unready charioteer plunging toward the earth |
P.S. This blogpost was triggered by reading the chapter about Phaeton in Mythos, Stephen Fry's excellent retelling of the Greek epics.