Sreesanth: The perils of aggression

*Fiza* thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#1
Sreesanth: The perils of aggression
Rohit Brijnath
By Rohit Brijnath

Sreesanth appealing against Andrew Symonds
'There is a fine line between colourful and immature'
Shanthakumaran Sreesanth is single-handedly doing what many did not think possible. He is handing the Australian cricketers the moral high ground. Adam Gilchrist, one of cricket's finer fellows, implied on Tuesday that the Indian's behaviour is more childish than his son's. It is becoming increasingly hard to disagree. Last week, Andrew Symonds grumbled that India had got carried away with its Twenty20 celebrations (it did, but in a land unused to cricketing victory it was understandable, and Symonds was plainly ungracious), but it was his further assertion that the Australian cricketers were humble in victory that sparked annoyance and amusement.
Sreesanth must remember, too, what first earned him selection for India: a talent for bowling, not an ability to be theatrical
There was something of the ridiculous to an Australian cricketer attempting to hand out lessons in humility and decorum to an Indian. Yet on Tuesday, so egregious was Sreesanth's behaviour (again), so bizarre his run-out of Symonds, so infantile his screaming in Symonds' face after dismissing him, that the Indians are in no position to lecture on etiquette either. Sreesanth may be a talented bowler but he is doing an ungainly break dance on cricket's spirit. Admirable dignity Sreesanth can be amusing at times, and no doubt sport needs free spirits who have a hint of the unconventional. But there is a fine line between colourful and immature, between aggression and silliness, and he appears not to know the difference. So Mahendra Singh Dhoni must tell him, for one player cannot be allowed to bruise a team's reputation.
Saurav Ganguly
'An animated Saurav Ganguly goaded his team to win'
The Indian team through the years has conducted itself with an admirable dignity at most times. Still, it has been argued in recent times that the team needed to be more aggressive in its tone, and its players more confrontational in their attitude. An animated Sourav Ganguly goaded his team to believe it could win, but his players were not encouraged to be rude. In 2001, at home against Australia, India was tough and uncompromising but hardly obnoxious. It was a team whose most aggressive cricketers were also its quietest and most honourable: Laxman, Tendulkar and Dravid. Admittedly not every man is a Tendulkar. All manner of personalities collide in sport and cricket has sufficient room for men to be themselves and for steam to occasionally escape. Thus glares are exchanged, the odd word thrown, intimidating fields set, bouncers hurled. It is a game within a game, a testing of nerve that the Australians enjoy most. When Australian teams cross the line, and they have done so frequently in the past, the response from India has been scathing. To not apply the same standard to Sreesanth would be disingenuous. 'Muscular India' Dhoni's so-called "new India" is seen as a muscular, dynamic India, and acceptably a young generation should be allowed to express itself. So high-five after wickets, run up to pat a bowler, display your exuberance, show off an energy that unnerves an opposition, advertise spirit through shoulders that refuse to slump, don't take a backward step in the face of intimidation. But toughness (or "fearlessness" as this team is supposed to have) is not screaming in another man's face or pointing a bat. If this is the strategy to rattle Australia, it is feeble. India is not going to beat, or impress, or scare Australia by behaving in an aggressive manner but by playing in an aggressive manner. Not by tough talk, but by putting six balls in the right place; not taking a step towards the opposition, but by taking singles constantly; not by a shoulder bump, but by fielding sharply.
Sreesanth and Dhoni
'Dhoni must not allow one player to bruise a team's reputation'
The most fearsome and intimidating opponent is the focused, disciplined, consistent one. The most aggressive teams are the ones that do not allow the pressure to ease, who play every session with fierce concentration. Harbhajan can point his bat all day, it's his wicket-taking which is what matters. Australia's mind games worked only because their cricket was uncompromisingly tough. Australia dominated because it out-skilled, and out-worked, and out-thought opponents, not because it out-talked them. The more Sreesanth visits the match referee, the more he becomes an issue in the media, the more it distracts the captain and team from its mission. He is young, and so people will be indulgent. But patience leaks away. Especially if he has figures of 3-67. If he feels the need to swagger, he must earn it. He must remember, too, what first earned him selection for India: a talent for bowling, not an ability to be theatrical.

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*Fiza* thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Rocker Thumbnail Engager Level 1 Thumbnail
Posted: 18 years ago
#2
lol 😆 ... i lyke what gilchrist said... and i totally agree with the author.. sreeshant and some other players shud take it light... it's just a game... at the end of the day one team has to loose so why not play the game sensibly
farisss4 thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#3

Originally posted by: *Fiza*

lol 😆 ... i lyke what gilchrist said... and i totally agree with the author.. sreeshant and some other players shud take it light... it's just a game... at the end of the day one team has to loose so why not play the game sensibly



yeah i agree and i dont like him as he is over aggressive.. 😆
XxMadhurixX thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#4
lool y does every1 pick on sree!!
leave him alone 😆
but yeh it is just a game
well not 2 me it aint!!
cricket is ma life mate!!
u carry on doin ur stuff sree
if ne1 says nethin tell me 😆
*Fiza* thumbnail
19th Anniversary Thumbnail Rocker Thumbnail Engager Level 1 Thumbnail
Posted: 18 years ago
#5

Originally posted by: farisss4



yeah i agree and i dont like him as he is over aggressive.. 😆

yeah i agree with u fariss.. he is over aggressive... most of the team players are complaining about his behaviour on field... even harbhajan said that sreeshanth needs to control himself when he is playing on the field.

XxMadhurixX thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#6

Originally posted by: #1EijazFan

man, every single post u steal d words outta ma mouth!😛😆

hahaha, u lot are crazy you know that?

aussie players get agressive, den yeah its normal, an indian gets aggressive and everyone gets hyped up...losers.

yeahh, he is agressive, thats why he won us the last ball in the match, thats why we won twenty20, thats why india got the world cup after 24 years.

and people say he needs 2 b chucked outta the team😆i can tell u sumfin, most of dem wont be indians! lol

anit its coz we dnt ave many agressive players

so wen 1 peron ie sree goes agreesive its rong 😕

neway im still gna support him 😃

umi82990 thumbnail
20th Anniversary Thumbnail Sparkler Thumbnail + 3
Posted: 18 years ago
#7
Yea. Take is lightly..it's just a game!!
XxMadhurixX thumbnail
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Posted: 18 years ago
#8
u ave 2 admit tho..sree is a laugh 😆

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