If you track cricket scores online, if you have followed matches at work (or when traveling), if you have furiously refreshed your browser for updates, if you have been part of a chatroom or forum and met (and argued with) fellow fans… you must learn about Prof Sankara Rao 1/
Prof Sankara Rao was a brilliant man with several academic achievements. He was also a passionate cricket fan, who laid the groundwork for the monument that is ESPNcricinfo. I interviewed Professor Rao in 2013 and he told me – over piping hot coffee – about how it all began. 2/
Rao grew up in Eluru in AP in the '50s. He ran two miles to his friend’s house to listen to radio broadcasts. In 1972, Rao moved to North Dakota State University in Fargo. He would later joke: "Even if I had run 200 miles from Fargo, I would have not got any cricket scores.” 3/
If Rao wanted to get cricket updates in Fargo, his only resource was the newspapers in his university library. And they would sometimes reach Fargo a month after the match had actually finished. 4/
In 1988, Rao took a big step. He pumped in $300 into a Sony digital shortwave radio so that he could listen to the BBC’s Sports Roundup. Twice a day, for about 15 minutes, Rao was riveted to the radio.5/
This is an image stuck in my head. Sankara Rao in freezing, snowing North Dakota – bang in the middle of nowhere – tuning his shortwave to listen to the BBC. I consider myself a passionate cricket fan but I wonder if I would have summoned this level of commitment. 6/
A few months later, Rao noted down the scores from the BBC roundups and posted them on his University network. Anyone who accessed his profile could see the scores he had put up.
Then he set up a mailing list to disseminate these daily scores across the US universities 7/
At some point Rao found the cricket group rec.sport.cricket. He posted his scores in a sub group rec.sport.cricket.scores. He allowed other contributors to become moderators and soon it turned into a community where scores were shared from around the world 8/
The set of moderators and contributors would go on to start live bbb commentary of games around the world. In 1993, Simon King – a post-doctoral student in Minnesota – started a bot on the IRC channel #cricket to provide scores on request. The bot was called cricinfo. 9/
I met Professor Rao when he was 73. But I could see the burning passion that would have driven him in his 30s and 40s. I heard the ache in his voice when he spoke about being so far from cricket. And then the twinkle in those eyes when he spoke about tuning the shortwave 10/
Rao did not do any of this for making money. He did it wholly as a passion. Something apart from work. Something that kindled in him a joy he had first experienced as a child in Eluru in Andhra Pradesh. 11/
Today, I received news that he passed away. May his soul rest in peace. May his family find the strength to deal with their loss. May his love for the game inspire us all. 12/
SRT is 50. Hard to think of a cricketer who made you love the game more. His sheer range of strokes, taking on great bowlers, with a perfect technique married to an inventive mind, bowling anything, fielding anywhere, creating magic from nowhere: such a gift.
I still remember that feeling just as the bowler delivered the ball to him. There was excitement but also dread (that he would be out), there was a thrill of seeing something different (but also an anxiety that he would take too big a risk). We were wrecks. We were blessed.
On this day in 1983: Kapil Dev scored an immortal 175* against Zimbabwe at Tunbridge Wells. There were no TV cameras at the ground, which meant the photographs from that day are so much more precious. So who shot many of these gorgeous photos? Here's a little story on that.
2/ The preeminent cricket photographer of that era - Patrick Eagar - was at Lord’s that day to cover Australia v West Indies, by far the more high-profile game. So he asked his younger colleague Jan Traylen to cover the match at Tunbridge Wells
3/ Traylen had never been to Tunbridge Wells before. And he was tense about the assignment, given that he was usually entrusted with the task of making the prints in the dark room.
Indian cricketers’ families are dealing with Covid. Australian cricketers are nervous about travel. Tye has left. Ashwin won’t take part. Ponting and D Hussey have spoken frankly. The IPL may be a welcome distraction for many but don’t discount the mental stress on those playing
Sept 3, 2003 was my first day at cricinfo. I had not studied journalism nor had any work experience. I had written a handful of (terrible) pieces but had never thought of becoming a writer (in cricket or otherwise). I had finished my engineering but knew I was no good at it. 1/
All I was doing was quizzing or watching cricket. I sent a couple of my articles to Wisden Asia Cricket, a magazine that carried really evocative writing. And I was really upset when they didn’t get back. How could they look past such a terrific piece! (I was so naïve). 2/
And so I got damn upset and wrote another piece. Which was even worse than the first because it was written with so much anger. But guess what? A week later I get an email from - wait for it - Sambit Bal. And he was curious to know who I am and what I do. 3/
The fact that 25/30 of these 'greatest' innings were for or against Eng or Aus makes this list dubious. It also tells us how 'greatness' in a cricketing context tends to be so anglo centric. And how poor the other countries are in immortalising their own great innings.
It's one thing to play victim and say the English and Aussie press don't watch cricket elsewhere. But what are our own writers and historians doing? BCCI has actually LOST footage of Gavaskar's 10000th run (among other games). Easy to erase history. Harder to preserve it.
The other issue is this desperate need to be validated in Eng/Aus. Pujara is one of the greatest batsman in Asia. His hundreds in Colombo and Ranchi are stuff of legend. If an Eng or Aus batsman had such a home record we wouldn't have heard the end of it. Our response? Big deal