24.3.2008
Dear Ricky,
Humility
makes men look twice as honourable.
As
an impressionable youth who started following cricket in
the early 90s, your team found a fan in one for the resilient
brand of cricket it played under Mark Taylor and Steve Waugh.
As
someone who appreciates cricket played the hard way, nothing
gladdened one's heart more than the sight of a brave Steve
Waugh scoring two hundreds on one leg in the Ashes of 1997,
or the punts Taylor took to inject life into dead games,
often thinking more about cricket's interest than winning
or losing.
Allan
Border made your team courageous. Taylor made them consistent,
and Waugh took them to invincibility. Yet, these three eras
had one thing in common: the will to win wasn't alienated
from respect for opponents. Australia was the team one loved
to see win. Also because its players were never heard on
radio calling an opponent an "obnoxious little weed."
Which
brings us to you and your men, Ricky.
There's
no doubting your muscle. Australia are strong as a thoroughbred,
making cricket look like a one-horse race.
But
when it comes to humility, you are as graceless as a three-legged
donkey.
Are
you from the same country as the great Bradman, whose greatness
was matched only by the modesty and gentleness with which
he was known to conduct himself?
When
one looks at the Australian team today, one sees a bunch
of smug beings who lack respect for their peers, and are
given to dishonesty and double-speak (as we saw in Sydney,
twice over) and their desire to win is as conspicuous by
its presence as their arrogance.
For
the Don's sake, Ricky, open your eyes. Are you blind? Do
you not see what you've done to your team's reputation?
Why
is that team after team has a problem with the conduct of
your men? Why must the talk of sledging arise only when
Australia play? Graeme Smith, Stephen Fleming, Rahul Dravid,
Mahela Jayawardene, Brian Lara, Inzamam-ul Haq --- is there
a captain in your time who hasn't had a problem with the
unsubtle abuse your team has subjected him to?
Has
the meaning of the word 'decent' changed since the time
one looked it up? Or must your desire to win overpower everything
considered decent on a cricket field?
Don
Bradman, Sachin Tendulkar, Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal,
Justin Henin, Tiger Woods --- are these small names? No.
Are they great? Yes. Do we love them? Yes. Why?
One
word: grace.
We
stood up and applauded Taylor when he laid West Indies and
South Africa low. We felt a lump in our throats when Steve
Waugh bid the game goodbye. You too are nearing the end
of your career, Ricky. And though you are a fine player,
one doubts if you'd ever be loved and remembered the way
your predecessors are.
Here
you are, having won every accolade imaginable at cricket's
highest stage. A World Cup here, a Champions Trophy there.
Ashes now, a Frank Worrell then. There's nothing left for
you to win.
Yet
there's one thing you may never be able to win as captain.
Hearts.
Sincerely,
A Cricket Fan
Courtesy
- The Island
|