John Wright's Indian Summers


As My blog description suggests that they would contain more stuff about Raikkonen, Books, Sports and ME... it has been more of the ME and less of other elements. My beloved Raikkonen hasn't been written about enough either. So I thought, let me write something about the books I'm reading/have read.
These days I'm a bit tied up with studies, so I guess I will write about one of the nicest books I've read in the recent times.

John Wright's Indian Summers is an enthralling read for all the Indian cricket aficionados. Indian cricket's first foreign coach, the New Zealander gives vivid details of his long and successful stint at the helm of cricketing world's most star packed team. Of course, after the World Cup '07 we all label them more as fading stars, but during his time the ream flourished and reached dizzying heights. New stars were born and a new confidence along with team spirit was seen in quite a while.

The book describes Wright's appointment to the job and he tells us about his experience from the moment he landed to the moment he took off. The Cricketing board's meetings over tea, the ruckus that the meetings would turn out to be and above all, we get to see the apathy of the cricket board. Most of it we already know, but much is said, albeit between the lines.

The most fascinating thing for me in the book was the discovery of John Wright as the-not-so-quiet-coach. While in the limelight of things, he never spoke out much to the press. He kept to himself and his job and we always thought here was a soft coach we have who may buckle under the pressure of being in an unknown place. But as one read the book, we get to know the reprimanding side of the coach, who'd settle for nothing less than the best from the boys. He mentions many not-so-dirty-incidents of the dressing room that though make interesting read, fail to lift eyebrows. Mind you. NO NAMES ARE MENTIONED.

Nevertheless, it is a very good read and worth spending money on if you would like to see the Indian cricketing scene from the eyes of a good coach. It is an account of an honest man, who did much for Indian Cricket (read trainers, physio and proper equipments and facilities, previously not available). This one isn't sensational but definitely gets you a few laughs. Here are some excerpts to help you decide on reading it.

ON TEAM SELECTIONS:
"The first six or seven selections were straightforward. But when it got down to the marginal selections, those last three or four spots that determine the balance of the team and your ability to develop new players, the zonal factor kicked in and things would get interesting," he wrote.
"It was easy to tell when selectors had come to a meeting with an agenda... If their boys weren't picked, they tended to cross their arms, clam up and take no further part in the meeting."


Care to guess who Wright's talking about here?

"In Jodhpur, a guy with the biggest diamond ear-studs I'd ever seen wandered into our viewing area as if it was his private box. I went nuts demanding to know who the hell he was and, more to the point, who the hell he thought he was. The answer to both questions was that he was India's biggest beer baron." [page 43] - it's the one and only Vijay Mallya!


The Experience that was India...
"People would stop me in the street to thank for being 'our' coach. It was humbling, but also guilt-inducing, because many of those who thanked me for doing a well-paid job that I loved led lives of day-to-day struggle. The gratitude and support I received from ordinary Indians was the most positive force I've ever encountered, in that it simultaneously lifted me and kept my feet on the ground." [page 70]

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Good for people to know.

Anonymous said...

After getting more than 10000 visitors/day to my website I thought your thecafiles.blogspot.com website also need unstoppable flow of traffic...

Use this BRAND NEW software and get all the traffic for your website you will ever need ...

= = > > http://get-massive-autopilot-traffic.com

In testing phase it generated 867,981 visitors and $540,340.

Then another $86,299.13 in 90 days to be exact. That's $958.88 a
day!!

And all it took was 10 minutes to set up and run.

But how does it work??

You just configure the system, click the mouse button a few
times, activate the software, copy and paste a few links and
you're done!!

Click the link BELOW as you're about to witness a software that
could be a MAJOR turning point to your success.

= = > > http://get-massive-autopilot-traffic.com