Lillian Thomson
Hall of Fame Member
Everything is God's Will - even this thread.
Time to bust out one of my favourite youtube videos.
Michael Holding maybeNah, Bond often got flustered, as did Wasim.
I'd probably look at Joel Garner & Mohammad Asif (if we can forget about his indiscretion) with the ball
You mean the guy who jumped into the stands and started beating the **** out of a spectator?Man of Peace XI
1. Amla
2. Dravid (c)
3. Williamson
4. Inzamam
5. ABdV
6. Chanderpaul
7. MS Dhoni (+)
8. Akram
9. Vettori
10. Bond
11. Murali
Really hard to think of a peaceful fast bowler who was any good. Went for Wasim because of his short, languid run up and Bond because he never got flustered.
Hey, the guy called him a rotten potato. I think some violence was justified.You mean the guy who jumped into the stands and started beating the **** out of a spectator?
Joe Root has a punchable face. I still wouldn't call Dave Warner a man of peace.Hey, the guy called him a rotten potato. I think some violence was justified.
Thread to be renamed Scoring runs is the will of Sachin.Sachin is so Zen. Childlike joy in all his cricket. Never got nasty.
If a jinxed player averages 40+ and gets his name on the Lord's honours board at his first opportunity, unjinxing him would create the new BradmanGiven how thoroughly kiwiviktor jinxed Williamson in the Test series I'm now expecting him to average about 15 over the next year.
Why no Laxman and Azharuddin?Just had a thought.
I've noticed a handful of batsmen over the years who aren't just good but are so good that they bring a certain serenity to the crease. The sort of serenity that enlightened spiritual masters possess and impress people with. That you only get when your every action is perfectly harmonised with the will of the universe and with God.
Now I'm asking if it's possible that God (non-denominational God) has actually put certain players on Earth specifically to score runs. This explains the serenity that these players have at the crease, knowing that by batting for a long time they are doing God's work.
Of the players I have seen who seemed to be at peace with eternity and the universe, I'm thinking Amla, Dravid, Inzamam and Williamson.
Interestingly, these four guys are always spoken of by their teammates as especially humble and upstanding.
It also makes me think of the concept in Taoist spiritual practice of active meditation, i.e. remaining fully aware of oneself while performing a task that might be otherwise distracting.
Seeing someone like Williamson bat while in the zone makes me think he could be a monk that just happened to bat. Like someone who is at perfect peace with what he is doing.
Does this make any sense or is my tobacco a bit naughty?
At moments like these, it's best to quote SehwagWhile I thin k the OP is a load of very funny bull****, experiences in sports can come very close to meditation. The state of 'flow' or being in the 'zone' is often characterized by the sort of complete immersion that monks try to achieve.
Sehwag: I have asked Sachin many times what the zone is. He tells me that's when "I see nothing except the ball". I ask how that is possible. I have never felt something like that. I have asked Rahul Dravid the same thing. He says sometimes when he is in really good form, he sees only the ball - and not the sightscreen, the non-striker, the umpire or who is bowling, he just sees only the ball. But I have never entered that zone even if I've scored triple-centuries twice. Maybe I will enter that zone they talk about in future.
Question:Perhaps you are always in the zone?
Sehwag: You can say that, maybe.