I can bet that an Indian fan is more likely to know the averages of Kiwi players than any other fans. They follow all players, they may not follow them all to the stadium.I don't think it's unfair to suggest that the vast majority of the Indian cricketing public only care to watch their own players.
I thought it was a little thin. I saw a few empty seats here and there.The crowds for the Sri lanka and Pak game was great. Shame for them that their team lost
Funnest bit was he got louder applause for reaching 4000 career ODI runs than for his hundred. A very strange crowd to do that.Best part of the WC was how quiet the home fans were when Strauss was batting.
Indians are obsessed with milestonesFunnest bit was he got louder applause for reaching 4000 career ODI runs than for his hundred. A very strange crowd to do that.
Interesting, in the light of some of the posts that have been made in this thread. Though I'm sure someone will say it's because Indian fans only care for batting and just want to see big sixes all the time, or something.Anand Patel who's at the stadium writes in: Amazing to hear the Indian crowd cheer 'Bresnan Bresnan', for a guy who hit the decisive six against India a couple of days ago
41st apparentlyHeck, India is one of the top tourist destinations in the world for a reason.
International tourist arrivals by country of destination 2007
Out of a global total of 901 million tourists in 2007, the following countries were the 60 most visited:
Rank Country International tourist arrivals
1 France 80.9 million
2 Spain 58.7 million
3 United States 56.0 million
4 China 54.7 million
5 Italy 43.7 million
6 United Kingdom 30.9 million
7 Germany 24.4 million
8 Ukraine 23.1 million
9 Turkey 22.2 million
10 Mexico 21.4 million
11 Malaysia 21.0 million
12 Austria 20.8 million
13 Russia 20.6 million
14 Canada 17.9 million
15 Hong Kong 17.2 million
16 Greece 16.2 million
17 Poland 15.0 million
18 Thailand 14.5 million
19 Macau 12.9 million
20 Portugal 12.3 million
21 Saudi Arabia 11.5 million
22 Netherlands 11.0 million
23 Egypt 10.6 million
24 Croatia 9.3 million
25 South Africa 9.1 million
26 Hungary 8.6 million
27 Switzerland 8.4 million
28 Japan 8.35 million
29 Ireland 8.33 million
30 Singapore 8.0 million
31 Morocco 7.4 million
32 United Arab Emirates 7.1 million (2005)
33 Belgium 7.0 million
34 Tunisia 6.8 million
35 Czech Republic 6.7 million
36 South Korea 6.4 million
37 Australia 5.6 million
38 Indonesia 5.5 million
39 Sweden 5.2 million
40 Bulgaria 5.15 million
41 India 5.08 million
42 Brazil 5.03 million
43 Bahrain 4.9 million
44 Denmark 4.8 million
45 Argentina 4.6 million
46 Norway 4.4 million
47 Vietnam 4.23 million
48 Syria 4.16 million
49 Dominican Republic 3.98 million
50 Taiwan 3.72 million
51 Puerto Rico 3.69 million
52 Finland 3.5 million
53 Jordan 3.4 million
54 Philippines 3.1 million
55 Cyprus 2.7 million
56 Chile 2.5 million
57 New Zealand 2.47 million
58 Andorra 2.2 million
59 Cuba 2.12 million
60 Israel 2.07 million
Gotta be honest, I think for most non-subcontinental fans its the total silence whenever an opposition player acheives something which freaks us out. Its just a different culture though.Am I the only one who finds not clapping opposition 50s incredibly poor form? Really grates IMO.
definitely a different culture. I find it poor form too when the crowds in the SC do not applaud the opposition but thats the way it is here in the SC. It is like a war for most of the crowds.Gotta be honest, I think for most non-subcontinental fans its the total silence whenever an opposition player acheives something which freaks us out. Its just a different culture though.
I do wonder whether the apparant silence is exaggerated simply because of the constant level of noise beforehand. Obviously there are plenty of Indian fans who will clap the opposition, its just very hard to notice.
I find it particularly strange, since though I support England in tests (and have been to quite a few), I'm not emotionally invested in them, and for the most part enjoy the games from an almost neutral perspective. I watch mostly for individual performances.
Yeah that was great to see. Even the crowd in Mumbai for the New Zealand-Canada game wasn't as bad as it could have been.Fantastic crowd at Kenya vs. Australia considering the match-up.
I don't think it's unfair to suggest that the vast majority of the Indian cricketing public only care to watch their own players.
Indian fans only come to watch Indian players
The lowest ticket price is more than the average Indian makes in several months (average yearly paycheck is about $700 ?), the cheapest ticket for India-England game was about $250).Always get the feeling that Indians don't like following sport, they just like following India.
No silly point: this time, you?re last in the queue - Times Of IndiaAny links verifying the ticket prices for the India England game? $250 for the cheapest ticket is unbelievable. I know India's middle class is in the hundreds of millions and are known for having little or no taste (like China's new rich) but that's obscene.