Witnessing history - well, almost
From a personal point of view it was a mistake to match Nasser Hussain's decision to bat at the Gabba in 2002 or .
Back home in England before I set off for India, the thought of a 40 or 50-hour train journey north from Bangalore to watch the second Test against Australia and a week in the Milton Keynes of the Punjab that is Chandigarh had seemed like one trip too far in my cricketing journey.
And so, sat in various hotel rooms and bars around Karnataka, Kerala and Goa, I suffered in self imposed exclusion wondering what I had been thinking of to miss in Mohali.
One very, very tiny positive that came from watching from afar was the chance to sample the TV coverage of the Test and I was soon spellbound by the incredibly swift advertising breaks between each over.
With only a handful of ads being rotated throughout the day's play I'm now completely sure what bank (although I guess some British shareholders wouldn't agree!) to choose, which motorbike to ride, which suit to wear and which widescreen plasma TV to watch my IPL, sorry Test match, cricket on!
More importantly, I now can also confirm, thanks to the epic two minute ad during each drinks break, that IS the most beautiful women on earth!
In between the avalanche of ads there was, of course, quite a decent Test match going on between India and Australia.
Rather naively, I thought that when Sachin finally broke Brian Lara's Test runs record, the feat would be recognised, celebrated and then the match would move on.
How wrong I was! Within minutes of Sachin going past the landmark viewers were showered with a series of Sachin stats and it seemed a host of companies had a 'Congratulations Sachin' adverts up their sleeves ready for blanket coverage from the moment the Little Master broke the record.
If you've never been to India before it really is impossible to describe the sheer depth of feeling and interest there is in Sachin Tendulkar and the affection shown to him over the .
I can add little to what has already been said around the cricketing world but I do genuinely believe the game of cricket will never see the like of Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar again.
And it didn't end with Sachin's record of course.
Having sat through two painful Ashes series defeats in Australia in the past it was, and I'll admit it openly here, nice to see the Aussies brought down a peg or two.
But not even I, or those surreptitious drinkers watching the game with me in a drinking den in Bangalore, could believe what we were seeing on the fourth afternoon as five Australian wickets tumbled in what seemed like about five minutes.
I'd like to think they were sober the following morning when and claimed yet another piece of history that I, so foolishly, had missed seeing in the flesh.
Comment number 1.
At 23rd Oct 2008, KingViv wrote:First question...why didn't you fly from Bangalore to Delhi and then take a train to Chandigarh? If you book in advance the flights are almost as cheap as the train yet take 2.5 hours instead of 30 hours so you can only blame yourself for missing one of the greatest moments in test cricket history! I suspect you think you need to take the train as part of the "Indian experience." Those days are in the past, it is not just the elite Indians that fly these days!
I agree with you with regards to advertising in India. It is simply too annoying and it goes a step too far. When I watched the coverage of SLv Ind in India, every time the batsman hit the ball towards the boundary, the screen seemed to shrink and there were adverts on the side and bottom of the screen. In addition, there are adverts after every single over. At least, so far anyway, India has not succumbed to the American football model where TV dictates the game.
Sachin is an absolute legend and has been a wonderful ambassador for the game and for India. For such a great man, he is so humble and comes across as very approachable for a man who is hero worshipped by hundreds of million. I hope he continues for another 2-3 years and ends up with 15,000 test runs and 100 international (test + ODI) centuries.
India were maginificent at Mohali but the key is whether they can keep up that level of intensity for the rest of the series and also against England. That is the test of a great team. The Aussies will be wounded and I fully expect them to come out fighting in Delhi. The toss has been crucial so far in this series so in many ways I hope the Aussies win the toss in Delhi yet India go on to win the match to prove to any detractors that India are capable of becoming the no 1 team. It would be a very fitting end to a glistening career if India are no 1 in the rankings when Sachin hangs up his boots!
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Comment number 2.
At 23rd Oct 2008, FAIRPLAY wrote:PHIL, WHAT NICE READING !
ITS GREAT THAY YOU ENJOY INDIA AS MUCH AS YOU DO.
A QUESTION THOUGH........ DO YOU EVER THINK YOU'LL SEE A SIR TENDULKAR ? OR A SIR GAVASKAR ? LIKE WE HAVE SIR GARFIELD SOBERS AND SIR VIV RICHARGDS ?
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Comment number 3.
At 23rd Oct 2008, jontdog wrote:I've never been to India, but the advertising you describe sounds very similar to what they have in Australia. I watched the Ind v Aus series on TV in Adelaide early this year and was subjected to the most inane, psychosis inducing advertising between overs. The most memorable crimes against sanity (sadly) were ridiculous ads for the colonel's special chicken and an infamous (in Adelaide at least) Metropolitan - "drip" - Plumbing "drip" advert "drip" - (South Aussies will share my pain!). It makes me almost grateful that the capitalist pigs in the UK have stolen our free televised cricket, rather than corrupted it in this way. TMS is a godsend, and with the likes of Blowers painting the picture for us, probably much more aesthetically pleasing than Punter's angry mug...
PS - to state the obvious, all this excitement amongst us English over the last Indian result is downright foolish. a) The poms would have fared little better in Mohali than Australia and their coming tour there is probably their biggest challenge of the next 12 months; b) Australia remain champions and will still be outstanding favourites to win the Ashes next year; and c) If (b) is incorrect, there's no longer any excitement is there? Would a boxer rather fight Ali in his prime, or in his current state?
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Comment number 4.
At 23rd Oct 2008, stevieeng34 wrote:How long before Ponting goes past Tendulkars record, his century record and of course continues to have a superior averge to Tendulkar?
Tendulkar is a great player but no better than Lara or Ponting.
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Comment number 5.
At 23rd Oct 2008, hinnavaru wrote:Steviehullyyy
Would you be able to explain ?
Not that I am keen on Tendulkar being the greatest (I think he got sidetracked from 2003), but I have a problem when people talk about Lara and Ponting..
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Comment number 6.
At 23rd Oct 2008, writehaseeb wrote:Tendulkar is surely one of the great batsmen we have seen but Lara is a genius. It was so so true when Sobers said, He is the only person at this time who plays the game as it should be played. It was simply a treat to watch him on the pitch. We salute you Brian for giving us such a joy. My top 3 batsmen of all time:
Lara, ViV and Sobers no order plz.
Stop comparing Tendulkar or Ponting with Lara.
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Comment number 7.
At 23rd Oct 2008, faiz_00i wrote:hi
every one i just want to express something what I feel don't want to frustrate any one
i think Don Bradman is no where near sachin n LARA....
here is why...
Bradman mostly playe against one OPPOSITION.. and mostly on the same ground...
there wasnt any discovery of swing deliveries yet, NO reverse swing either....No doosra or no such leg spinners as Warne... No Run-Out... No third Umpire....No public pressure..... and only one game to concentrate on and that is TEST matches... played like 2 test matches a month...
now lets take sachins and laras.... more then 10 opposiotn.. with new players constantly coming in... different ground, different pith, different country, different continent.... all types of swing... THIRD umpire, Yes - to Run out.... bowlers like lee and aktar.... TV to find weaknesses of batsman... have to concentrate on 2 types of matces.... plays like 10 odi and 2 tests a month...
the MAJOR one is TV... As u know sachin got out cagut by symonds...cuz they know sachin will air it when he goes for that drive... so they placed a fielder there and thats exactly what happened.....
i dont think bradman IS the best....
ok he was good.. his Avg is good too.. but that was when there wasnt much cricket being played..
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Comment number 8.
At 23rd Oct 2008, writehaseeb wrote:Hey u r trying to commit suicide here :) watch out for those boomerangs coming from AUS !!!
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Comment number 9.
At 23rd Oct 2008, jibberism wrote:faiz,
you are entitled to your opnion, bit its wrong.
bradman nearly averaged 100 on green green wickets with an old plank of a bat. his career was at its pealk when it was interupted by a war
Against India he averaged 178 over 5 tests. which is ridiculous. this after he had been diagnosed with poor eyesight and had lost feeling in his right hand.
Sachin is good, its true, but the best is still reserved for the don
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Comment number 10.
At 23rd Oct 2008, csmyth1974 wrote:er.. wasn't it Nasser's decision NOT to bat at the Gabba in 2002?
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Comment number 11.
At 24th Oct 2008, scragend wrote:... and Allan Donald's decision NOT to run?
(Donald initially turned back when Klusener called for the run as the ball was going near to the bowler. When he eventually ran he hadn't a hope of getting there)
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Comment number 12.
At 24th Oct 2008, anooprawat wrote:hi
In my opinion Sachin is greatest batsman at present cricketing bcoz his 19 yrs careers shows that he play only cricket . In india where there over 100 crore of peopls like cricket he became god of cricket just show that how much he take and do his responsibilities. if we compare sachin with lara and pointing i think sachin is far great among them bcoz his records says in ony day and test career . In one day over 15000 runs, 40th centuries, in test match 13000 runs, 39 centuries. all shows that his is genius. whenever he take retirement he leaves a big landmark records to others upcoming cricketers to achieve his records.
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Comment number 13.
At 24th Oct 2008, writehaseeb wrote:lol, this is really funny ...
In one day over 15000 runs, 40th centuries, in test match 13000 runs, 39 centuries. all shows that his is genius.
ViV Richards not have many records, you dont have to have records to be a genius first of all.
Ponting will probably break sachines test record, is he a genius NO, he has 2 world cup under is belt, is he a better captain than Imran Khan hell NO.
Plus its 12000 runs in test and not 13000, this is a similar way kapil dev keep playing to break Hadlees record of test wickets now Sachin is doing same thing, I dont blame him, it is a good thing to have targets but dont compare him with Lara.
Amazing how people try to deny somebodys genius only because Sachin is your countrymen.
Be real ...
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Comment number 14.
At 24th Oct 2008, RedRedRobin wrote:If things were so easy for batsmen in Bradman's day why didn't his contemporaries score more heavily?
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Comment number 15.
At 24th Oct 2008, stevieeng34 wrote:hinnavaru
What's your problem with people talking about Lara and Ponting?
RE: Test cricket. Ponting's average is better, his centuries per Tests is better, surely in time he will overtake Tendulkar.
What's wrong with stating the obvious?
What will Indian fans say when Ponting surpasses the Little Master with a superior average and superior century record? The very stats used to 'justify' Tendulkar as the best a few years ago will suddenly be irrelevant I bet.
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Comment number 16.
At 24th Oct 2008, bipinbhatt wrote:mhaseeb just because you are from pakistan doesn't make imran khan better than any other player.
records are made to be broken so there is nothing new in it. good luck to ponting if he breaks the record of sachin but there is not a humble cricketer in this present day other than sachin.
get it??
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Comment number 17.
At 24th Oct 2008, bipinbhatt wrote:steve hullyyy
ponting will break the record of sachin but will always be known as childish, arrogant, selfish little so and so.
while sachin is adored througout the world ponting is despised and that is the difference.
ponting will never get the respect and that is the difference
get it old boy???
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Comment number 18.
At 24th Oct 2008, amazinglordkrishna wrote:ponting/Viv ooops sorry sir Viv/Sir sobers/Sir Bradman/Lara/sir Tendulkar ooops just good old Sachin are all greats and cricket is vastly covered with many other greats. I would pay my last £ to watch lara bat and ask Sachin to bat for me if my life depened on it.
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Comment number 19.
At 24th Oct 2008, writehaseeb wrote:bipinbhatt ...
:)
I agree with you on Pontings on field behavior as well as tactics not that honorable.
and since I am from Pakistan I wont say anything about Imran :) world knows him how good he was on the field.
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Comment number 20.
At 24th Oct 2008, clown-man wrote:Mr Phil, it is very dissapointing that you did not go to the match. Sitting in a drinking den in Banglaore is not really the place to watch cricket if you can help it in my opinion. Sort your life out mr Phil and get to the cricket.
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Comment number 21.
At 25th Oct 2008, bipinbhatt wrote:mhaseeb77, so you agree that Tendulkar is far better than anyone else including Imran Khan
I only know Imran Khan due to:
Former Pakistan captain Imran Khan admitted in 1994 that he had "occasionally scratched the side of the ball and lifted the seam". (91Èȱ¬)
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Comment number 22.
At 26th Oct 2008, Mitchell Inman wrote:I wouldn't like to say which is the best of Lara, Ponting and Tendulkar. However, to those who insist it's Ponting, bear in mind that he didn't face probably the two best bowlers of modern times, Warne and McGrath, in test cricket. I wonder how he'd have coped with them.
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Comment number 23.
At 27th Oct 2008, DrCajetanCoelho wrote:Nice stuff Phil.
I think you should have been at Mohali to watch our mighty Sachin Tendulkar who in the company of Saurav Ganguly smashed the record of Brian Lara. Or you could have been atleast in Mumbai or Kolkata where Sachin and Saurav Ganguly have a vast fan following.
Kerala, Karnataka and Goa are nice places for watching Indian football.
Dr. Cajetan Coelho
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Comment number 24.
At 7th Nov 2008, clown-man wrote:Mr Phil Long,
Where is your next blog? is it that because you didnot go to the game in Delhi that you have got the sack? This is a shame but would be your fault as when the cricket is on you should be there, no question
Clown-Man
PS you never seem to reply to any of the posts. does this mean you dont read them? A shame. Clown-Man.
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