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Monday, August 11, 2008

Beijing Olympics Medal Tally and Events Widget

I had been looking for a good Olympics medal tally widget to put up on this blog. But didn't seem to find one. The thinness of this blog's side panels add to the problem. Then discovered these (on Google News). But they still can't fit in where I want them to.

With Abhinav Bindra winning the first ever individual Olympic gold for India [Pics], it becomes more appropriate for the occasion.

See whether they fulfill your needs (they aren't mine. Google property).

2008 Beijing Olympics Medal Tally Widget

The Code:

2008 Beijing Olympics Events Widget

The Code:

2008 Beijing Olympics Events/Medals Combo Widget

The Code:



You can customise the widgets before embedding them on your blog/website by making changes to the height and width parameters and change the alignment replacing the align="left" with align="right" or align="center".

Update: This process might no longer be necessary for Blogger blogs as Blogger has introduced Google gadgets for all layout blogs. And there a few Olympic medal tally gadgets listed in there.

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Monday, July 21, 2008

Is Delhi India's ONLY City?

Delhi is IndiaThe other day my brother called up. "Delhi's going to host the Winter Olympics," he joked. But for the people who take decisions on such matters in India might quite possibly be thrilled at the idea.

And a few days later I read that Delhi would be the official host of the 2010 Men's Hockey World Cup.

I don't have anything against Delhi, after all I have been living here for almost half-a-decade now and have started to identify myself with the city.

But then it isn't a nice experience to be a citizen of a single-city nation. To the outside world it would seem that there is only one city in the 32,87,263 sq km area of the country - Delhi or more specifically New Delhi.

Isn't it already enough that the city has already hosted the first ever Asian Games in 1951 followed by the 1982 edition and now the Commonwealth Games in 2010?

In between there was some unsuccessful bids to play the hosts for yet another international sporting event. And now there are plans to bid for the biggest of them all - The Olympics in 2020.

This one-city focus isn't found in many of the countries of the world. Honestly, I hadn't heard of Incheon before it beat Delhi in the race to the 2014 Asian Games.

If we look at the Asian Games, South Korea got the opportunity thrice to host it and only the first (1986) was in the capital Seoul, the subsequent events went to Busan (2002) and Incheon (2014). The 2010 Asiad will be held in Guangzhou and not Beijing.

Amongst the 20 cities that have/will hosted/host the Commonwealth Games (in its different forms) only four are country capitals (and this includes Delhi). And as many as 10 of the host cities of the Olympic Games weren't the cities where the seat of the government resided.

Such international events provide a tremendous potential to overhaul the entire infrastructure of the city. The city of Delhi has been fortunate enough to have good facilities (compared to other cities in the country), that has been augmented by the Asian Games and now the Commonwealth Games. Don't other cities in the country deserve an opportunity to make things better for its residents? Why do we need to be concentrated only to the National Capital?

Before you point it out, Hyderabad did host the inaugural Afro-Asian Games in 2003 and the 2007 Military World Games, but they were comparatively inconsequential.

There is an India beyond the periphery of the NCR. Our media is partially blind to the fact (partially because they at least see the other metros). And to our sports administrators... get a phacoemulsification done.

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Sunday, March 09, 2008

A Master's Pic from When He Was Little

The last time I discovered a cricketing hero's childhood photos, I was quite excited and passed it on to the readers of this blog. Today, I found another.



Continuing with the guessing game tradition, guess who? (and for those hooked to television comedy talent shows - pehchaan kaun?)

Not very tough I think, or maybe it is. I'm sure some of you would have seen this photo, even though it isn't as popular as that of a a wavy-haired little Sachin.

Got it? If not, this is the original Little Master when he was actually little.

This photo of Sunil Manohar Gavaskar is sourced from his 1976 autobiography Sunny Days. And the caption accompanying the photograph reads:

Gavaskar 'the baby' cricketer, in leg-guards stiched by his mother and sweater knitted by his grandmother.

And this photo is when he grew up a little more and tied the knot with Marshaniel.


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Sunday, January 06, 2008

India Vs Australia

Kangaroo court

Kangaroo cricket

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Sunday, September 30, 2007

Crazy for Cricket

Last night's India-Australia ODI at Bangalore was washed out, but what cannot be easily washed away is India's zeal for the game of cricket. Defeats may lower the spirits, but another high is just a victory away. Now again it is at a peak following the Twenty20 win. Here's a SET Max - the cricket and movies channel - ad featuring Kapil Dev and quite an opponent of a bowler for a kid. This also showcases the craze that cricket is in India.


To share/embed this video click here
Download video [00:00:43 FLV 1.04 MB]

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Monday, September 24, 2007

Yoohoo!

Watta match! It did live up to the tag of an Indo-Pak encounter. And India winning it made it even better. It was a thriller with all the twists and turns. And at last when the ball went sky high, millions of throats would've developed lumps on both sides of the LOC and only on one side were there shouts of exhilaration that followed. It was a match which will take this quickie form of cricket ahead.

Two teams bereft of some of the big names, ostensibly rested from a more youthful version of the game. Two teams who couldn't even make it beyond the first round of the 50-overs version of the World Cup went on to battle for the first ever Twenty20 World Cup. But then those teams were a little different from the 22 at the Wanderers.

The BCCI had initially phoo-phooed the idea of Twenty20 only to reluctantly embrace it. The launch of the Indian Cricket League opened the eyes of the custodians of the game of cricket in India to launch their own version of a domestic T20 league. Now with the success of the Indian team at the World Cup the BCCI is attempting to wipe off the egg on its face (it is by now quite used to it) with currency notes worth approximately rupees nine crore (that's what Ravi Shastri announced as reward for Team India and Yuvraj Singh on behalf of the BCCI).

Cricket it is said is a game of uncertainties and even an inept administration cannot always come in the way of a spirited team. Though there will be many clamouring to take the credit, it should always go to where it is due - the team.

And India also keeps it all win record against the arch rivals in both forms of World Cup cricket.

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Sunday, September 23, 2007

It Doesn't Get Bigger than This

India versus Pakistan. World Cup Finals. What more can you ask for? Well, India to win in that encounter.

Prior to the ongoing Twenty20 World Cup at South Africa, I (and also millions of others like me) hadn't watched a single T20 matche. And when they did, I would say they were hooked. The longer versions of the game might have more grace, but this format of the sport isn't about gracefulness, it's just full throttle ahead. And everyone seems to enjoying the exhilarating pace.

Two teams who ingloriously exited in the very first round of the ODI World Cup early this year meeting in the finals of the World Championship of the new format of the game is good for the game. Because it is the Subcontinent which helps sustain interest in the game in all its formats and it is here where the money flows from. And the manner Yuvraj Singh is hitting the ball, the revenues have the potential of going higher than his sixers.

It was the success of the first World Cup (the Prudential Cup) in 1975 which brought One-Day cricket into the limelight and following South Africa T20 is here to stay. Just hope that in the future they don't narrow it down to the five-overs-a-side matches that we played in our locality.

And it feels good to see the Aussies humbled. This also is good for the game.

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Saturday, March 24, 2007

Ha! Ha! India

Caution Cricket is Played in This AreaSo it's all over (well almost). The Blue Billion and the associated mumbo-jumbo. Maybe we lack the spirit, maybe we lack the ability, maybe we lack the will. Maybe we will win the next ICC Cricket World Cup. Maybe.

And maybe BCCI will have a functional website.

[Photo: Aunty P (cc)]

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Wednesday, January 31, 2007

Leather on the Willow

Cricket Ball title=Ouch! The shoulders are still aching, but the pain is sweet. It was worth it. The sound of leather hitting the willow. Bliss! I heard and felt the sound after more than six years. Tennis ball cricket and the congestion and rush of metropolitan life had snatched away the little joys.

It was time for the inter-departmental cricket at work and I was pushed to the practice nets. Wary, whether after so long a time if I still knew how to hold a cricket bat and roll my arm over. The touch was missing and the joints had gathered quite some rust over the years. But the feel of the sewn red cherry between my fingers and later the willow in my hands made the ache and the bruises worthwhile.

It was yesterday and I wasn't in the shape to blog about it. Today, I missed the practice as it is my day off and so is tomorrow. The match is on Friday and therefore I'll not be in the team. Anyway, it was good to realise that even half a dozen years out of cricket, you don't exactly lose your touch, the legs might not move on the crease, the length and the line of bowling may be awry, but it is still there. Maybe cricket is something like cycling and swimming, you've learnt it once and it'll be there with you all your life. The feeling feels good as I cheer Team India to yet another victory over the Windies.

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Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Pictures on the Wall

I don't remember exactly where I got these from, but when Picasa discovered them for me on my hard disk last night I was pleasantly surprised. Maybe some of you have seen the photographs before (if you recollect where - a book, magazine, website - please pass on the info here). The initial photographs are a lot of fun. So let me play a little game.

Can you identify who this cuddly little six-month-old baby is?

[Click on the images for a bigger view]



Here are some more





And more











Not yet? Let me bring in some colour.



Okay, a cricket bat (If that helps).



This one should remove all doubts (The title of the post is also a big clue).



Here's he with his mother



And with his father



Those who are still lost, let me add to the confusion. Here's he (sixth from the left standing) with his hockey teammates.



I think that's enough. Rahul Sharad Dravid has grown up a lot, and has always been the quiet type (as the photos reveal) since his childhood. Always strived to reach for the heights (see third photo from the top). And he did. He might be at the helm of an underperforming team at the moment, but that doesn't take any credit away from his ability as a cricketer. He's been one of my favourites, even though he remains an unexpressive gentleman in the towers of triumph or the depths of defeat.

Many years ago, a cousin of mine came visiting. He was just over a year old and armed with a bladder that went off precisely at the time when there wasn't any diaper to guard the cushions against his wet assault. He was just beginning to talk, and I never heard him say 'Maa' or 'Baba,' as kids usually do. His tongue had a distinct liking for the name, "Daa-bid" and he jumped with excitement every time Rahul Dravid was visible on the television screen. Haven't met him ever since. Putting this post together reminded me of him and his infantile Dravid attraction. To you, perhaps the youngest ever Dravid fan.

Rahul Dravid photo

More bricks from the wall:

Rahul Dravid photo
With classmates

Rahul Dravid photo

Rahul Dravid photo
Athletic ability: School sports day

Rahul Dravid photo

Rahul Dravid photo

Rahul Dravid photo
With brother Vijay

Rahul Dravid photo
During his and his brother's thread ceremony

Rahul Dravid photo
Jammy with Sunny: With Sunil Gavaskar

Rahul Dravid photo
With fellow House Captains at St. Joseph's Boys High School, Bangalore

Rahul Dravid photo
South Zone Under 15 Cricket team (December 1986, Cuttack)

Rahul Dravid photo

Rahul Dravid photo

Rahul Dravid photo
Trophies galore

Rahul Dravid photo
On the field

Rahul Dravid photo
And off it (with the gear intact)

Rahul Dravid photo
With family

Rahul Dravid photo

Rahul Dravid photo

Rahul Dravid photo
With friends


With a python (it looks like one)


And as a Chinese

There were more photographs in that forgotten folder. But that's what you usually see in the papers whenever India is donning the blues to play in the greens.

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Wednesday, June 14, 2006

Ball on the Foot

Ball on the Foot

Photo courtesy CLF
[Some rights reserved]

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Thursday, June 08, 2006

My Football World Cup Schedule

I know the newspapers and the magazines provide double spreads of the same thing and in a more colourful manner. But that shouldn't restrict me from making my own printable Football / Soccer World Cup schedule / calendar. Mine fits into two A4 size pages and is monochrome (well almost) and is according to IST (Indian Standard Time +530 GMT). Anyone who wishes to have an alternative and frill less 2006 FIFA World Cup Germany schedule can download it from the given links (do I need to mention the word 'free). Enjoy the game.

[doc 100 KB]
[pdf 46 KB] [Download Acrobat Reader]

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Wednesday, June 07, 2006

The World Cup According to Soum

Flaming Soccer BallAs I write this post the countdown timer on the official FIFA World Cup website gets closer to 000 00:00:00 by the second. The big day is soon to come - Germany 2006.

The earliest football World Cup that I can recall is Mexico 1986. But the memory is limited to a solitary name - Diego Maradona. The fever was physically and emotionally felt four years later in 1990. "A disappointing FIFA World Cup with too much dull defensive football and matches won on penalty kicks," describes the World Cup website. But to me, with the official logo and mascot painstakingly painted on my schoolbag, newspaper and magazine clippings (Sportsworld used to be a favourite against the duller, stats heavy and designically challenged Sportstar) it was anything but dull.

I yelled for Italy but also expected to see some of Maradona's marathon runs into the goal post, but injuries and the extra focus of the defenders owing to his 1986 exploits played spoilsport. But then there was Cameroon and Roger Milla, who thanks to the President of Cameroon came out of retirement to play two more world cups. Another attraction was the Colombian captain - the wild haired Carlos Valderrama. Though the Latin Americans play more flamboyant football, my support oscillates around the four European teams - Germany, Italy, Holland and France but when it comes to being a fan of the fans, I go crazy over the football crazy Latinas. The finals were a damper - though Germany who took over as my favourite as soon as the Italians were booted out by the Argentine goalkeeper Sergio Goycochea's two saves in the penalty shootout. But Goycochea's hands couldn't stop Lothar Matthaus from lifting the cup.

By USA 1994, I was a house captain in school and ensured that all my house mates (and the rest of the school) took active participation in the greatest individual sport spectacle. Quizzes, contests, games, write-ups, posters, photographs created a football frenzy. The pre-Ekta Kapoor generation girls were active sport-buffs who often beat us boys - sometimes physically - in those contests. Maradona exited early to embark upon a long career in drugs and weight accumulation, Colombian Andres Escobar paid with his life for a self-goal, Russian Oleg Salenko scored five goals in a single match and Roberto Baggio - after all the wonders to take his team into the finals - sent the ball high in the sky in the penalty shootout to let the Brazilians pocket yet another cup.

1998 - I missed the finals, but saw the fluttering of the Croatian flag, the chequered centre proudly displayed on the sides of their jerseys. Davor Suker and fellow Croats came third. The balding Zinedine Zidane made good use of his head and sent the ball twice into the Brazilian goalpost. The mighty Brazilians went down 3-0 and the hosts France lifted their first cup of life^. I was travelling on July 12, 1998. The next morning as the train entered Bengal, I tried to extract some information from the people in the stations and the vendors on the train about the last night's match. I got no answers - everyone avoided the question. The defeat probably shocked Brazil backing Bengalis to temporary dumbness, reminiscent of the 'Maracanazo' match in 1950, where Uruguay beat Brazil 2-1 in the finals and the Brazilian media refused to accept that Brazil had lost, players went into retirement, delirious fans voluntarily kicked the bucket and the team uniform was changed - the existing one was believed to be jinxed.

With telecast rights problems in India, local cable operators in Shillong judiciously switched to the Indonesian channels. While the commentary was in English, the ads were mostly Bhasha Indonesia. The most popular one - probably of a bubble gum (I don't exactly recollect) said, "Yang penting rasanya bung." Couldn't comprehend what it meant, but it was catchy. An online translator generates the English equivalent - "That important it seems Bung." Still doesn't make much sense. Can someone help?

2002 in Korea and Japan was a monochrome world cup for me. Away from home on pretensions of higher studies, my window to the greens of the Far East was a 14 inch black and white television - that too not my own, a generous senior had left it for us to savour the wonders of 22 pairs of feet, two pairs of hands and 440 grams of air filled leather. Watching the biggies getting eliminated in the first round gave sadistic pleasure and seeing South Korea reaching the semis - a high. The Turks came in third. But when the Deutsche clashed with the Samba brigade for the first time in the history of the tournament, the Australians of the footballing world (that is practically the whole of it) reigned for the fifth time. As a cricket lover I don't want the Australians to win another World Cup in the near future, similarly the football fan in me (Only international football, no club affairs. The player loyalty is amiss. It's too money minded for my comfort) wants the Rolandos, Ronaldinhos, Robertos, Rogerios, Ricardinhos, Robinhos and all the other beginning-with-R-and-ending-with-Os to wait for a few more cups for their sixth sip.

I tried this for the last three world cups, with total success. I go up to a guy, talk about the weather and then ask him if he had watched the last night's match between Holland and the Netherlands, where the Dutch referee's partiality was evident? The answer unfailingly till date has been in the affirmative.

^Listen to the song: La Copa De La Vida
Image courtesy: Wikimedia

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Tuesday, May 16, 2006

In Praise of Paes

Leander Adrian Paes
In Greek mythology Leander was a youth in love with Hero - priestess of Aphrodite. He drowned while trying to swim the Hellespont (strait between the Aegean and the Sea of Marmara that separates European Turkey from Asian Turkey) to meet her.

April 9, 2006 - Leander is the hero. Nothing new, he has always been ever since the 1990 Wimbledon Boys title. Beating heat, humidity and cramps, the ace that is Paes won the decider against Pakistan in the Asia-Oceania Davis Cup Group I tie at the Brabourne stadium, Mumbai. Paes was my first indigenous tennis hero - when Vijay Amritraj was at his peak, I was shorter than a tennis racquet. For a cricket crazy nation, Leander is no Sachin, yet his poster adorned my bedroom wall higher than the Little Master.

Today there's a Sania Mania - women's tennis gets more eyeballs then the men's for wardrobe reasons. Leander had to wait for 11 years since that 1990 Wimbeldon for his Padmashree. Sania turned to professional tennis in 2003 and became Padmashree Sania Mirza in 2006. I've got nothing against Sania, because of her we Indians have started counting in series of 15, 30, 40 instead of fours and sixes.

Leander Adrian Paes has recently received the most valuable award in his life - Aiyaana. Congratulations Papa Paes.

Interested readers can now subscribe to Cutting the Chai email feed. Look in the Grab-Bag section on the right panel.

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Monday, March 13, 2006

A Bowler and a Few Berserk Batsmen

Anil Kumble or Jumbo - the latter more suitable for the news headlines - scalped half a chiliad wickets in test Cricket. The engineer's unspinning legspin at a medium pacer's speed baffled many a batsman. When he pocketed ten Pakistani wickets at Delhi's Feroze Shah Kotla, I was running in and out of my Shillong home to update the boys playing outside; and during my last run, when I broke the record-equalling news, a kid innocently asked me, "Who took the remaining one?"

Yesterday, I witnessed another great happening in the world of cricket. Australia scored 434/4 - the highest score in limited overs cricket, only to last for 299 balls. The gritty South Africans, the real challengers to the Kangaroo stranglehold on international cricket finished with 438/9, thereby winning the series 3-2.

872 runs in a ball less than a hundred overs, the chasing side down to their last wicket, winning with only a ball to spare. The greatest one day international ever? Maybe. Maybe not. The greatest because the opponents were the mighty men from down under, and no one ever posted such an obscenely huge figure on the scoreboards. Maybe not, because the opponents there were not India and Pakistan. But again yes, simply because I didn't catch the last Indo-Pak series, nor did I watch Kumble's latest entry into the recordbooks. But watch the fifth one day between South African and Australia? I did.

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