SJS
Hall of Fame Member
For a man coming from a close encounter of the type Yuvraj came from one has to be happy about his batting But thats where it should stop really. Take away Yuvi's recent troubles and one would have to think He along with the skipper lost a match India should have won in a canter when Dhoni joined Yuvi at the crease.
This is where we stood at that time . . .
INDIA 120 for 3 in 13.2 overs
- Yuvraj Singh 20* (11b)
- Dhoni . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 (0 b)
Last man : Kohli 70 (41b)
Needed 48 from 40 balls or 7.2 runs per over . . . a strike rate of 120.
They had scored till that time at over 9 an over so with 3 wickets in hand and these two at the crease we should have won with balls to spare.
Of the 40 balls that remained, Yuvi played 13 and scored 14 runs while the skipper scored 23 in 12. Its not as if wickets were falling all around them.
Dhoni played what has become his trade mark now, slow, painfully slow to start with and then, if he is still around, to make up towards the end. Well it works often in the 50 overs game (if he is around till the end) but there isn't much time to potter around when there were 6.4 overs left when you came in to bat.
If this is what he wanted to do, Dhoni should have come in place of Raina so that the left hander sould have come towards the end and tried some Afiridi like stunts in the end. On the other hand, if Dhoni had decided he was going to stay at one end while Yuvi did the job, the amount of strike he (Dhoni) hogged undid the intention.
Not that it may have meant a certain win but why not send Irfan towards the end in place of Rohit Sharma.
Today's papers in Mumbai dont give you a clue as if India has lost a match. Right on top in the centre of the front page is the headline
YUVRAJ RETURNS
- below which is a photograph covering a third of the width of the page of Yuvraj pulling. Below this the byline about what Yuvi did on the comeback trail with his score and balls faced
- and finally a line saying "India lost the second and final T20 against New Zealand (167) by 1 run>
On the sports page you have two headlines screaming at you. One says
NZ finish on a high . . . and the other . . .
Comeback, just short of a fairtale
and there is a picture of Yuvraj here as well four times the size of the one on the front page.
I was at a friend's place for dinner last night and T-20 is not something that I miss watching but many others were keen so the TV was on even and people were glued to it men and women alike with neither group having any idea about the game except that over the fence is better than through it (I kid of course). And when the match ended everyone went on about how narrow a loss it was and how Yuvi had taken us so close to a win . . . just like the papers this morning. . . . "Imagine Yuvi's strike rate was 131!" gushed the nephrologist amongst my friends.
I was watching the same match and what I can recall of that Indian innings is the sparkling 71 in 40 balls by Kohli at a strike rate of 170 and he was the only one who played above India's required strike rate of 140. But not a pip from my friends about his batting at the end let alone talk of how his work was undone by the latter batsmen even though Idia lost only two more wickets !
In India it is a game about individuals and which individuals is decided by the propaganda and hype that the electronic media (primarily), the rest of the media make abut them. So if an individual is not page 3 material he will never be bigger than the team . . . and hence dispensable but if you are THE superstar, it is all about you . . . win or loss is secondary.
This is where we stood at that time . . .
INDIA 120 for 3 in 13.2 overs
- Yuvraj Singh 20* (11b)
- Dhoni . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 (0 b)
Last man : Kohli 70 (41b)
Needed 48 from 40 balls or 7.2 runs per over . . . a strike rate of 120.
They had scored till that time at over 9 an over so with 3 wickets in hand and these two at the crease we should have won with balls to spare.
Of the 40 balls that remained, Yuvi played 13 and scored 14 runs while the skipper scored 23 in 12. Its not as if wickets were falling all around them.
Dhoni played what has become his trade mark now, slow, painfully slow to start with and then, if he is still around, to make up towards the end. Well it works often in the 50 overs game (if he is around till the end) but there isn't much time to potter around when there were 6.4 overs left when you came in to bat.
If this is what he wanted to do, Dhoni should have come in place of Raina so that the left hander sould have come towards the end and tried some Afiridi like stunts in the end. On the other hand, if Dhoni had decided he was going to stay at one end while Yuvi did the job, the amount of strike he (Dhoni) hogged undid the intention.
Not that it may have meant a certain win but why not send Irfan towards the end in place of Rohit Sharma.
Today's papers in Mumbai dont give you a clue as if India has lost a match. Right on top in the centre of the front page is the headline
YUVRAJ RETURNS
- below which is a photograph covering a third of the width of the page of Yuvraj pulling. Below this the byline about what Yuvi did on the comeback trail with his score and balls faced
- and finally a line saying "India lost the second and final T20 against New Zealand (167) by 1 run>
On the sports page you have two headlines screaming at you. One says
NZ finish on a high . . . and the other . . .
Comeback, just short of a fairtale
and there is a picture of Yuvraj here as well four times the size of the one on the front page.
I was at a friend's place for dinner last night and T-20 is not something that I miss watching but many others were keen so the TV was on even and people were glued to it men and women alike with neither group having any idea about the game except that over the fence is better than through it (I kid of course). And when the match ended everyone went on about how narrow a loss it was and how Yuvi had taken us so close to a win . . . just like the papers this morning. . . . "Imagine Yuvi's strike rate was 131!" gushed the nephrologist amongst my friends.
I was watching the same match and what I can recall of that Indian innings is the sparkling 71 in 40 balls by Kohli at a strike rate of 170 and he was the only one who played above India's required strike rate of 140. But not a pip from my friends about his batting at the end let alone talk of how his work was undone by the latter batsmen even though Idia lost only two more wickets !
In India it is a game about individuals and which individuals is decided by the propaganda and hype that the electronic media (primarily), the rest of the media make abut them. So if an individual is not page 3 material he will never be bigger than the team . . . and hence dispensable but if you are THE superstar, it is all about you . . . win or loss is secondary.