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Rachna Dhall-Haasnoot's avatar

This is such a beautiful articulation of what some of us are feeling. I wonder if it feels particularly dry this time around because it has come so soon after a high-octane WC, in the same venues, with the same players, the same din, the same cliches by the commentators, and (almost) the same fans.

There have been some classic hits, like Bhuvi, Virat, Rabada, Narine. But somehow it all feels a bit blurry, like one song hasn’t quite faded out before the bass drops on the next.

Ganesh's avatar

I watched the 4th innings highlights of the Aus-Eng 1981 Headingley classic on YouTube recently. Some standout aspects:

1. No aggressive exultation from the fielding side after taking a wicket. No gesticulating to cameras. In fact, after taking his 3rd or 4th wicket, Bob Willis turns back so quickly, after appealing, to walk towards his mark that I thought the batsman was not out. He didn't even venture to meet the exulting fielders. Only when I saw the batsman walk, did I realize that he was, in fact, out. Listening to Bob Willis in his later years, one could see that he was quirky and different. Maybe, he was still fuming at the ignominy of not getting the new ball. It is said that Mike Brearley did this deliberately to get him worked up so that he would bowl with hostility, but I digress.

2. No aggressive commentary. No speaking in breathless tones continuously as if a war is going on out there. Lots of pauses. And almost unbelievably, no clichés. Just observations.

3. No aggressive camera angles following the departing batsman closely, all the way to the boundary, whereby the batsman feels duty-bound to show so much remorse for his dismissal that it makes you squeamish.

4. No aggression from the spectators, aided and abetted by the aforementioned camera angles.

Just a smattering of claps/appreciation/oohs and ahs for anything happening on the field of play.

What I then realized is that, it is that sport that I grew up watching, reading about and loving to bits. It has no connection to the sport that is playing out now, irrespective of the format.

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