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Showing posts with label @BoredCricket. Show all posts
Showing posts with label @BoredCricket. Show all posts

Camera, Action, Lights, Shadows, Shikhar Dhawan

by Gaurav Sethi

 From soaking in the spotlight to shying away from it, Dhawan’s batting continues to reinvent, often in the course of an innings.

Shikhar Dhawan has time. On his hands, off his bat, on his thigh, with that smile, with the victory sign, for the camera. He’s not going anywhere. Yet he seems to be, both a man in a hurry, and one who is not going anywhere. 

Shikhar Dhawan is not going to the World T20. He doesn’t have to, he’s attending his own party. And has been for some time. He seems happy to be there. 

Though of course, he’d be even happier to be at the ICC event. Any cricketer would; but Dhawan is far from any cricketer. 

***

Ajinkya Rahane sits next to Dhawan in the Delhi Capitals’ dugout. That’s when Dhawan breaks into a 1000 Watt smile, and pops up a dazzling victory twig. Rahane obliges the camera, more with a perfunctory smile than anything. Returning to serve us a stoic profile, eyes on the game. 

Shikhar Dhawan is a white ball cricketer for India. Ajinkya Rahane a red ball one. Both have been all-format cricketers. Letting go off formats, or rather being let go off, can be career stalling. Dhawan though, looks like a man who made his peace with all that. 

Only recently, he led an Indian squad to Sri Lanka for a one day and T20 series. It started well, for both Dhawan and India, but ended in losing the T20 series. That after Covid-19 and Sri Lankan spinners ravaged the Indian batting. 

Shikhar Dhawan finished that series with one fifty. A solid 86 not out, chasing, while Shaw, Suryakumar and Ishan Kishan went practically bonkers. Each of the three was gunning for a WT20 spot. Dhawan’s game was focused on an India win, he was the pivot. 

In his post-match interviews though, Shikhar Dhawan was The Dude. That White Russians and CCR were missing meant nothing. 

India won the ODI series, 2-1. Suryakumar Yadav Man of the series. Suryakumar missed the 2nd and 3rd T20s along with Ishan Kishan amongst others. Both made the WorldT20 squad.  

Two 40s and a duck later, Dhawan didn’t make the cut. 

***

Turning 36 in December, Dhawan is a cricketer with enough self-knowledge to stroll on rope bridges over crevices on high mountain passes. He could do them smiling in his sleep, stopping midway to whack his thigh for a lark. 

Sometimes, it seems Dhawan scores runs for a lark. He’s now gone past 400 runs in his last 5 IPLs. A Delhi Capitals’ mainstay, by far their most consistent bat, he has now scored 400+ runs in every edition of the IPL since 2016.

On the face of it, Dhawan’s game can oscillate between extreme ease and high risk. Even when the ease is there, Dhawan appears to be ‘skating away on the thin ice of a new day’ – he cuts Rashid Khan so late, in front of the stumps, you’d think the percentages are stacked against him. 

But this is how Dhawan plays. The perilously late late cuts, the charge down the wicket to seamers, arguably his bailout shot, the meander a few paces down for a defensive block. If you’re looking for stillness, look elsewhere. 

Everything about Dhawan is animated. From face to feet, he is a Jumping Jack Flash. 

The shift to all-out rockstar has happened after moving to Delhi Capitals. Previously, at Sunrisers Hyderabad, he played second fiddle to David Warner. The runs were there, not quite the strike rate.   

Moving to Delhi in 2019, the seeds for a switch were sown. Even though Dhawan had an exceptional last season at SRH, propping them to the finals, the shift to Delhi was definitive. 

As the franchise changed its name, something changed within Dhawan. Previously at SRH, there was often a brooding way about Dhawan; this was apparent in post-match interviews. Perhaps being overlooked for captaincy hadn’t gone down too well with him.

At Delhi Capitals, Dhawan was back home in more ways than one. He started at the franchise, this was the city of his birth. Within no time, it became the city of his IPL rebirth. 

In the 2020 season, Dhawan cracked two back-to-back tons. He led DC’s surge to their first IPL final. 

***

Often regular India players can switch off in the IPL. It has happened in the past with the best, will continue to. There is no way an all-format player can be switched on in league cricket all the time.

But what if you are not a regular India player anymore? What if, as in Dhawan’s case, the T20 exclusion is added to Test absentia?

You have no choice to turn up, be present. Use perhaps the greatest cricketing cliché ever: Make your bat do the talking.

***

Shikhar Dhawan tonks Rashid Khan for six over midwicket. It’s within the power play. But it’s Rashid with that reputation. 

Five overs later, Rashid to Dhawan again. That same old adventurism again. Dhawan holds out this time. 

More often than not though, if Dhawan plays at least 10 overs, DC’s top-heavy batting order will hold sway against most teams. 

Opening with the tumultuous Shaw, adds an extra dose of caution to Dhawan’s batting. One that isn’t inbuilt in his game but something he has warmed up to. With the return of Shreyas Iyer at three, there could be more twists in the plot. 

While Prithvi Shaw has been striking at 165 (after 9 matches), 8 of these matches were played in India. Shaw’s last season, also played in the U.A.E., saw him being dropped after 13 games. 

Between the maverick Shaw and the conservative Iyer, Dhawan will have the added demand of switching gears.

Shikhar Dhawan. Gabbar. Jatji. The One. He’s many things to many people. The time has come yet again for him to reinvent, from one game to the other, often in the course of an innings. 

Dhawan knows how to adapt to situations. Somewhere deep down though, he’d want to make the national selectors bend, and adapt to him.

Therein lies the twist, for DC, Dhawan, this IPL. 

And one more tattoo of an ICC event, who knows?

First published here

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Where does Younis Khan figure in the list of Pakistan batting greats

by K

Twenty-nine centuries and an average of over 53 in Tests. Where do you think Younis Khan figures in the list of Pakistan's batting greats? I think unrelenting Javed Miandad was the greatest that I've seen, he swung many a game, so did Inzamam-ul-Haq, a complete batsman in all senses. Mohammad Yousuf was perhaps one of the most technically sound batsmen they've ever had. The elegant stroke-making of Zaheer Abbas, one hears, made him a joy to watch. Younis makes it to the top-5 with the weight of sheer numbers and consistency. Saeed Anwar maybe just misses out on the top-5 despite his numerous match-winning knocks and effortless strokeplay.

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Wanted: DRS for online piracy

by Gaurav Sethi

Original ideas were killed in making this post

To eke out a few Likes on Facebook, some thugs will pass off your updates as their own. If they could, they'd pass off your selfies as their own. Not surprising then, that a bunch of FB cricket pages (with hundreds of thousands of followers) do this day in and day out, post after post. Do they hire a bunch of underage kids, lock them up in a sweatshop and make them pry through trending topics - "oh wow! #IndvsPak, #ViratKohli, 231 Likes, 159 shares, Troll sir very happy when he sees this".  Ace photoshoppist @NotDavidWarner nails it - "Facebook? Don't even bother trying to police. At least 20 crappy meme sites exist, and they have no talent other than stealing content, just make your watermark bigger than theirs, if that's possible."

Have your say. You can comment here.A message from @TheGoanPatiala informed me that my Shikhar Dhawan cartoon was doing the rounds on Whatsapp - only it came with a massive Troll Cricket logo, and if that wasn't enough, it had a TM too. My signature and credits had been removed. I first posted this Dhawan cartoon on December 31st, 2013, with the World Cup and Dhawan's form on the up it called for a twist. I posted it on 10th March, 2015 again, within an hour and a half it had been reposted by Troll Cricket. Their brazen branding and Trademarking of my work, made me mad. I was determined to show them for what they were - next, I fully expect them to pass this piece as their own.

Photoshop by @Aanchal

My first such experience was when a Kohli-Dhoni cartoon appeared on a cricket website without my consent. I mailed the site but they only paid up when I shared the screenshot with them. Next @hashtagcricket alerted me - my old Baba Ramdev cartoon had resurfaced on a hardcore commercial website (with close to a million followers). There was both an apology and a willingness to take the cartoon down. Having spoken to cartoonist, Satish Acharya, about this, I was in no mood for their nonsense; this is what I told them - "My cartoonist friends and I have faced this problem way too often - we have arrived at only one conclusion that those using content without permission should pay for it. I'd appreciate if you could please pay me Rs XXXX- for using my cartoon on your website." Once again the screenshots helped in a prompt payment. Here's @NotDavidWarner on some of his forgettable experiences -


Photoshop by @notdavidwarner



"Cricket Australia was flying Fawad Ahmed to the UK at the start of an Ashes' series to sure up their spin bowling ranks. By chance I created a #boxoffice film poster called "Saving Private Lyon" with the relevant characters Photoshopped into the relevant places. It was brilliant, but I had never warmed up to watermarks. Twitter was abuzz, unfortunately it buzzed when THE Michael Vaughan tweeted my image, sans watermark, sans credit, and being the first humorous cricket related Ps image to hit Twitter - it was a success. I was bitter as f***. I vowed never to leave a watermark off an image ever again - unfortunately my design sense still forces me to try and hide it in the graphic, unlike our friends at Troll Cricket who will slap an ugly logo across the protagonist's face just so that people think they created the image. Haha, as if. They are as untalented as they are unethical, and luckily they have slowed down in stealing my stuff since I called them out on Twitter.

Some of the bigger Twitter heists I have suffered/ can remember with names that I can think of?@MichaelVaughan (via @nickobrady26) popping my stolen image cherry (142 RT)@warwicktodd_not Enjoying the fruits of my Channel 9 pitch map meme, even giving credit to some half-arsed FB site who stole it from me, all the while my watermark stuck out like a white guy at an NWA concert. (309 RT)@SriniMama16 wanted a piece of the Phillip Hughes pie. Everyone else was mourning, he was stealing. (1.3K RT)Plenty more I can't be bothered to count, most recently AB de Villiers 'fastest 100 race' with Usain Bolt. (TooMany RT) - thank god Harbhajan Singh RT'd the real tweet, restored some faith. @HahaCricket serial offender. Worst of the worst. An ex-employee of theirs recently apologised to me on Twitter for their constant plagiarism."

Photoshop by @notdavidwarner

 "My sportskeeda article was Anu Maliked by someone. I immediately complained to the editor and they were quick to warn the pirate" - @TheGoanPatiala  " It's been happening to my cartoons also. Want to take legal action, but don't have enough time to chase lawyers and all. May be you should consult a lawyer friend." - @SatishAcharya Editorial Cartoonist.

Satish, I really would have liked to consult my lawyer friend @IslandExpress, but he's honeymooning in Vietnam.  

I'm on Twitter, watching the tweets roll by, it's 12:25 AM, still high tide. @saeedsherazi tweets an image to @karachikhatmal in the hope of a Retweet, what else - it's a hilarious image, even funnier when you consider the text that goes with it.  It's been lifted word for word. I can't help myself. I tweet - The image belongs to @notdavidwarner

This is a collaborative post. Please do comment if we missed a mention; if you want to expose an online thug, tweet to us @BoredCricket and @notdavidwarner

First published in daily O

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