Furball
Evil Scotsman
Ankit - I don't think you've actually disagreed with my point at all. Compare Tendulkar's legacy or Wasim's with Gavaskar's and Imran's - the former pair get the respect they deserve and the respect that was denied to the latter two - in part it's because the game has become more globalised due to TV coverage, which in turn has made the subcontinent more "important" for lack of a better word. If I wanted to, I could stay up until 4am and watch every ball from Mumbai in the 3rd Test - in Imran's day the only way to find out about his exploits would probably have been in Wisden, because it certainly wouldn't have been on TV and I doubt my local newspapers would have carried the result.
There might still be a post-colonial complex in India, but at the same time the patriotic pride that you've talked about in your post makes its way into the wider cricketing media in a way that it wouldn't have 30 years ago, which, along with my first paragraph is what I'm getting at when talking about India's growing influence on the game.
There might still be a post-colonial complex in India, but at the same time the patriotic pride that you've talked about in your post makes its way into the wider cricketing media in a way that it wouldn't have 30 years ago, which, along with my first paragraph is what I'm getting at when talking about India's growing influence on the game.