Had fun on Spaces today with @allaboutcric_ where we discussed cricket photographs. The conversation moved from pace bowling to run outs to crowd banners before the Spaces crashed. Thanks to all who joined. Here's a thread on some of the photos that I talked about
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Since we discussed the pace trio of Akhtar, Lee and Tait, I talked about this particular photo that I find really iconic when it comes to Akhtar. This is from Pakistan vs Sri Lanka match in the 2011 World Cup. And he was still rocking the speedometer.
The conversation then moved to run-outs courtesy my old tweet on Mayank Agarwal's strange run out from a 2015 match b/w India A and Australia A which led us to talk about Misbah's runout from 2007 Delhi Test and then we landed here - Inzi's run out from 1999 World Cup
Runouts also led us to Rob's famous video of Steve Waugh running his mates out which led us to this incident from the 1995 Perth Test where Steve was stranded on 99 in a Test because Mark failed to make his ground running for McDermott. The expressions on those faces tell a story
Then we talked about crowds in cricket and a bit on how hostile the New Zealand crowd is when Aus tours the country and vice versa. But we brought out one sweet little moment from the otherwise hostile history that includes flinging toilet seats and beer bottles. This one
where the vegan man, Peter Siddle, who worships Bananas and dismisses KP, is given one by a member of the crowd while playing in New Zealand. And then we realised that it's just not Aussies who get a spray from the Kiwi crowds, even Hardik Pandya was at the receiving end in 2019
for obvious reasons. Then the discussion moved to crowd banners in Australia in the late 90s and early 00s where people competed for $500 prize due to a contest run by Toyota and Channel 9 and how it led to some really funny and witty banners like this one aimed at Alan Mullaly
and not so funny and witty, and downright atrocious like this aimed at Darren Gough (credit for the hard work though. Rhyme and innovative use of Toyota's slogan 'Oh What a feeling')
And sadly, at this point, the Spaces crashed after 40 minutes of me blabbering about photos.
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What happens when it’s Shaun Tait x Justin Langer? This story that I am going to tell. But before that a bit on the protagonists of the story.
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Maybe it had to do with his fondness for Martial Arts (he obtained the rank of Shodan-H- 1st degree black belt in Zen Do Kai, a kind of kickboxing) or just plain bad luck, but somehow Justin Langer attracted the most vicious of deliveries from the most ferocious pacers.
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It began right from his Test debut against West Indies when Ian Bishop welcomed him to the highest level with a blow on the helmet with the first ball the 22-year-old faced. It continued till the end of his career where his appearance in his 100th Test was reduced to only one +
Much of my childhood was shaped by what I watched on DD and one of my best memories of DD remains watching this reality show called Cricket Star that aired from Dec 2006 to Mar 2007. By that point, reality shows were ruling the roost on TV but a reality+
show on cricket was quite unheard of for the 13-year-old cricket obsessed me and to watch it on DD which by then had become a dumping ground of poor and retro content was amazing. The show was produced by Emerging Media and it was later we came to know that it was broadcasted+
simultaneously on Zee and DD and was the first major reality show to simulcast on Zee and DD.
The format of the show was the same that was used by all reality shows back then. 25,000 participants gave a trial and a few talented individuals got the chance to be a part of Cricket+
THREAD ON A CLASSIC IRANI TROPHY CONTEST B/W SOURAV & SACHIN'S MEN
It was 2003 and the Indian team hadn't played much cricket post the high of the World Cup final. As the team was to play New Zealand at home and Australia in Australia in the coming months, BCCI decided that the
players need to play against each other to get back into rhythm. So, after the Challenger Series, a full-fledged Indian side took on the Ranji Trophy winners Mumbai led by Sachin Tendulkar for the Irani Trophy fixture played at Chennai. The Rest of India team was led by Sourav
Ganguly, the then Indian captain. Zaheer Khan, who was at the peak of his prowess back in 2003 brought the Mumbai batting lineup on its knees on the first morning itself as they found themselves knee-deep in trouble at 98-5. Sachin, who watched wickets tumble at the other end
Since we are still a few days away from the cricketing action to resume in the India-England Test series, here are a few photo based stories from the history of this rivalry that you might have missed but are worth reading. #INDvsENG
Hey good folks of Twitter, I'm looking for uplifting stories done on fans of Indian cricket. Stories of people who overcame challenges and hardships in their pursuit of love for cricket. Attaching a few links in the replies for you to get an idea. Would really appreciate the help
Two years ago, my mom left us. What follows here is not a story of how, why, and when because all of that is too personal to recount here. However, what I do want to share though is a lesson that I learned the hard way and one that I feel should be shared here since some of you
have been a part of that learning.
I was 25 when it happened and after leaving academics (something I loved) and moving to sports and television, I'd done fairly well for myself professionally, thanks to the support and guidance of some people who I'll remain forever indebted.
Strangely though, I never thought too highly of myself, largely because of an impostor syndrome and also because I was too ambitious and always chasing the big breakthrough in life. So, in front of that grand goal, nothing seemed big enough. I was always on the chase.