Some
call it karma. Some call it fate. But destiny is what it is.
When the entire nation rises and falls as one on the batting
display of one Single batsman, when you are relegated to the
shadows of that greatness for so long that you have self doubts
about yourself, never about your attitude but about others'
gratitude, when you are scoring profligately on a consistent
basis and yet do not find yourself anywhere in any top ten,
top five, most wanted, often targeted, captured dead or alive
lists, when you are made to repeat in press conference after
conference about how exciting it is to bat next to greatness
and walk the same earth as the greatness, while desperately
waiting for somebody to look at the whole equation in a new
light and put you on par with that greatness and for a change,
ask the greatness about how exciting it is for him to march
alongside you, when you are just waiting for that one opportunity,
when your thunder isn't stolen by a stellar performance from
someone else, and that you and you alone rewrite the history,
it is quite fitting that you late cut to behind the point
to score the winning run, marching your team to your tune
and dictating its fate by your destiny, in the match that
mattered the most, while the so called greatness is relegated
to one step behind and clap to your performance. It is destiny
when you single-handedly decide whether the entire nation
is going to celebrate or going to despair. After eluding you
for such long a time, in spite of your repeated heroics, the
spotlight is finally cast upon you and you take a step forward
and take a bow for a cheer that was long overdue, for an applause
that was solely and deservingly yours!
We have come closer here before. On both occasions, nature
played a spoilt sport and denied us of the much wanted win
aboard against the widely despised side in the world. The
first was during the 1991-92 series which witnessed the most
diffident and undeserving double century by any batsman till
date - Ravi Shastri, on his way to waning down in the annals
without a whimper and the most confident century by any batsman,
still in his teens, against a venomous attack - Sachin Tendulkar,
on his way of stamping his brand on world cricket. It was
when Shane Warne hasn't started shining brilliantly yet and
his future nightmares against the Indian batsman were still
taking shape. The second instance, during the 1985-86 series,
when the then Australian side was struggling to find a foothold
on the world arena, in the process of a massive rebuilding
operation under Allan Border, after the former greats have
given way hanging up their boots, and the Indians, fresh from
the success at Benson and Hedges Mini World Cup, Asia Cup
and the Rothmans, were the firm favorites to win the series.
It was a rare spectacle to see Srikkanth holding down his
ground and scoring half centuries and centuries innings after
innings, match after match. It was too much for fate to handle!
Australia's plight was heeded more then India's passion. Rain
Gods beckoned and the clouds gladly gave away! Yet another
series washed away and with that the hopes and the aspirations
of a team well fought to win a series abroad.
It is not so much about the win than it is about the statement.
When Waugh made his tall claims about how India was the last
frontier that has to tremble in its tracks for his war cry,
and that it was not a question of "how" but just
a matter of "when", two men from the opposing team
just thought otherwise and history was made. When the same
Indian team tours Australia, critics, cynics and just about
everybody who knows how to spell cricket, write off the team
declaring it is not a question of "whether" but
just a matter of "how" badly we are going to be
beaten, the same two men thought about it again. It is nice
that history has a good memory that it repeats its glorious
moments, for the brave who are willing to dig their nails
in and battle it out. It is quite a remarkable moment for
cricket, when tenacity wins over talent, when determination
beats down aggression and perseverance claims victory over
flashiness. After a few decades pass by, when the greats,
the glorious, the talented and the tenacious are but a distant
memory, and all that remain are the score cards hidden in
the dusty archives, waiting for the enthusiasts to be rediscovered
and infused life once again, one can have a stroll down the
Adelaide pitch, on a lazy afternoon, during the lunch interval
of a test match, to find a scribbling permanently etched in
grit and determination right in the middle of those 22 yards
- "I was here - Dravid".... and also find "Me
too - Lakshman" next to it. Kudos to the twin towers!
By
Srinivas Kanchibhotla
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