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Making a mountain
out of mole! |
By Syed Ahsan Ali.
I
read somewhere that Sreesanth has not been
picked for the Twenty20 version because of his
erratic bowling and behaviour on the ground does
not have too many approvers. Munaf got nod ahead
of Sreesanth. Aren’t we making and taking too
much out of the Trent Bridge incident? Did you
ever hear Graeme Smith stating something about
Andre Nel, the crackpot of South African cricket
having done PhD in untoward words? I never heard
anything of that sort. When Gibbs called
Pakistani team members and players animals on
the ground, the Match Referee caught him on the
spot and reprimanded him with the ban, but there
was nothing coming from the South African camp
against Gibbs, except long silence. Because they
think that it is one, going against your own
player and secondly, losing on aggressive
cricketers who can win them matches in the
future. If they do it themselves, then the whole
cricketing fraternity will get after certain
players. But in India and Pakistan, we do it
ourselves.
What has Sree done? Something which has never
been done before on the cricket field, something
which has been part of history books from now on
or has he been negating holocaust sitting in
England. He just showed a bit of unceremonious
aggression. If the same is done by some White
bowler, would he have been dropped from the team
for such an event where aggression will be
considered as an added advantage?
It has been culture in Pakistan and India.
Instead on honing the skills of such aggressive
characters, we are bent on to scare the hell out
of them either by urging media war against them
or bent on changing their natural styles by
dropping them from the team for worst. Don’t go
too far. Sehwag has been the case. Afridi is
another. We tried every possible thing in our
resources to alter their natural flair into the
mold of our own likeability.
Here we need to support Sree. If we have to talk
to him then we can shut our doors and say
whatever we want to say to him. But not in the
press conferences, not in the papers and
certainly not through the meetings of selection
committee. If he bowls bad, drop him but don’t
drop him on the grounds of behaviour. There are
hundreds of foul-mouthed Aussies playing the
game and have played from their side, but they
never ask anything to them about their
dirty-talking as long as they remain performers
of highest class. Michael Slater was probably
the worst talker on the cricket field, but they
stuck with him. Give Sree and characters like
him some support to help them in becoming
cricketers with mighty hearts, than shaping them
into meek chickens. If you need chickens, you
can contact poultry farms. But if you need
winners, rear them up with bit of support and
encouragement.
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