Insanity rules? Ok!

June 18, 2009


Much as I am dejected by India's loss in the 20-20 World Cup, after our surprise elimination from the tournament we were expected to win, what bothers me much more is the way aspersions are cast on the team. What bothers me is that national dailies - which boast of having on board, the game's stalwarts and insightful columnists - run headlines like 'Team lets nation down' and 'Captain cool or captain lose?'.

The dominant reactions to the defeat seem to be one of anger and betrayal. Anger is a complicated emotion. It's not clear what causes and is caused by anger. There are broadly two methods that people employ to vent their anger. More sophisticated of these are acerbic rants, while others are unabashed physical gestures.

Let's say there are two categories of anger: personal and impersonal. The former is caused by things that have immediate relevance to you (your newspaper delivery boy is lazy) and the later by things with no or very little relevance to you (your friend's newspaper delivery boy is lazy). To be sure, this is not very well defined, but I am concentrating one one single aspect which will be clearer.

Both these angers are perfectly justifiable. The crucial difference between them is what you do about it. First there are some absolute limits on what you can do. For instance, you can't destroy the home of the newspaper boy. Within those limits, personal anger gives you more scope for action. You can fire your newspaper boy. But the impersonal anger almost never permits action. While you can urge your friend to fire his newspaper boy, you can't do so yourself.

The anger generated in many fans by Indian team's loss is impersonal. This is the case even though it may be true that the team's performances are key to many of the fans' happiness. This impersonal anger surely allows for serious criticism, but much of what we see today is unwarranted. Here is where the thin line of difference between the anger and the betrayel gets blurred. It has to be remembered:
the Indian team is not responsible to its fans. (That a fan needs to stand by his team in hours of victory and defeat can be left unsaid in the current climes anyway.) This might sound sacrilegious in today's atmosphere of affected jingoism, but it is true. If the Indian team has the power to cause a fan intense shame and misery, that power is given to them by the fan. The team did not ask for it. The fan can take that power away from the cricketers if he wishes. The fact that cricketers make insane amounts of money is not germane to the issue. Neither is it correct to argue that a cricketer's basking in the glory when he does well requires him to take the obscenities thrown at him when he doesn't. The Indian cricket team does not represent India's pride. Anyone purporting to derive national glory or shame on the basis of cricket team's results is a fool. (Take note, Hero-Honda, Pepsi and others of the ilk!)

It seems to me that this whole affair is symptomatic of a disturbing trend that is emerging in India. Many of the new habits and practices are characterized by instant gratifications and even more instant disillusionment. Shortsightedness isn't just prevalent, it is rampant. Gone in the process are the balancing convictions afforded either by ancient culture, or a thorough education. This is apparent everywhere one sees. In cricket, a player is lifted to the sky after a handful of good performances and his effigies are burnt after a single bad show. Whether it is the national obsession with daily junk on television, or the eager rush to modify education to suit the immediately visible needs, what seems to drive people today is the expedience of the moment.

Does insanity rule?
Think.

5 Wisecracks!:

Mainak said...

Insanity does rule, no doubt about it.

However, I believe it is a part and parcel of their game. Just as the captain says after losing a match - we are humans, we may lose catches [he doesn't say the rest - we are professionals, we shouldn't be missing catches], fans may well say - we are humans, we are bound to get angry!

Neither the cricketers nor the fans are acting a responsible manner.

Insanity rules!

Saksham Agarwal said...

Tell me-
Which professional don't make mistakes? I mean, the world is in the middle of a financial imbroglio only because certain professionals made mistakes.
Do these cricketers(who are just professionals, nothing else) REALLY owe anything to the public, except to whatever sentimental attachments the fans might have? No.
The important thing to understand is that sentiments are of no use when one has to think rationally.

I don't think our cricketers are acting irresponsibly when they accept that they didn't play as well as they should. They just got beat by better teams. That is all there is to it.
It's not as if they did a Flintoff, going missing in the English channel or a Symonds for that matter anyway(which would be acting 'irresponsibly' in my opinion).

Rahul Garg said...

But wouldn't you call it insane when Gary Kirsten blames IPL for India's debacle in T-20 World cup. Kirsten said "lots of players carried injuries into the ICC world T20". Moreover, this contradicts completely with what Indian Captain M S Dhoni said a day before. He said "IPL had no bearing on the ways things panned out in England".
In my opinion, no professional will make these kind of mistakes. This only means team doesn't know the reasons of their unceremonious exit from world cup.

Saksham Agarwal said...

What Kirsten says is the coach's opinion and Dhoni's is the captain's.
While I personally don't subscribe to what Kirsten says, I think it is perfectly normal for two individuals to have contrasting views, even if they're the coach and captain of the same team, respectively. I wouldn't call it insanity, but yes, it does seem that they're not certain about what hit them.
At the same time, what comes out in the media is not always what happens behind the scenes, especially when it's the Indian media that we're talking about. The concerned people are wary of the media for they know that their statements could be used to convey the wrong meaning.

All said and done, does even this evoke the backlash that the team is facing from all and sundry?
I think not.

Anonymous said...

there is no meaning to criticise indian cricketters.
Being true fans of cricket, we should always appreciate the efforts they put in to win the match.. if not sao happens we should encourage them for the next one.


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