Monday, November 10, 2008

A happy ending to the "Fabulous" Era

P.S: By Indian cricket I am referring to the test circuit

The culmination of Australia tour of India has brought to an end a few long lasting eras' of modern cricket. For a start, the 2-0 result has officially(well not yet, if you want to follow the ICC rankings) put an end to Australia's authority on top of World Cricket. They have been challenged a few times the last decade, by India, almost every time they met, in the Ashes, but this series has showed the huge void left behind by Warne, McGrath, Gilchrist and the fishing adventures of Symonds.

But from an Indian fan perspective, especially, us who have grown watching them, it is finally the end of the Fabulous Era - The era of the Fabulous Four. Sachin Ramesh Tendulkar, Saurav Chandidas Ganguly, Rahul Sharad Dravid, and VVS Laxman (never expanding a gult's name :)).
The longevity of them together itself is a testament to their greatness. As we all know, no community is as demanding as the Indian, and no community is as tough to win over as the Indian, no community is as hungry for the next big thing as Indian. The media, the fans, the politics all made sure in the past that the theatre of Indian Cricket has rarely had actors who played a part in each offering over as long a period as these four gentlemen have. That alone is enough testament to the greatness of this era.

An era so great, that I could not stop myself from coming out retirement, to use my office internet facilities (yeah, I'm still not fired) to celebrate a truely special part of Indian cricket history. One that will be etched in gold and framed, and will be placed right up there where it deserves, on the very top.



For a group as much as it has achieved, the forming of it was anything but trivial. As the Indian cricket fan had got used to by then, this group was plagued by inconsistency in the years before it donned its regal avatar. Inconsistency in direction, policies, selections, and when given the opportunity, the performances itself. It took four years, since the entry of the players in question, before the Fab Four took shape.

The contribution of the Fab Four to Indian Cricket cannot really be appreciated without looking at Indian Cricket through the 90's. The 90's brought to Indian Cricket, its first superstar, Sachin Tendulkar and with it great hope to a nation. And with great hope, unfortunately, came rather huge doses of disappointment. India had the best batsman in the world, it had Mohammad Azharrudin, a great captain, Javagal Srinath - one of the first "fast" bowlers of Indian Cricket, emergence of the next great spinner in Anil Kumble, and lots of bubbles, that would then soon burst, in Vinod Kambli, Jadeja, Manjrekar etc. An Indian fan will have fond memories of Sachin oozing exuberance, style, class, grace and genius in his innings in Sydney and Old Trafford. The amazing counter attack launched by Sachin and Azhar on a bouncy South African track, or the brilliant double century of Siddhu in West Indies, or many a fierce spells of Javagal Srinath and testing seam bowling of Venkatesh Prasad, but the overriding emotion of the decade had to be grief for the ever demanding Indian cricket fan, the sadness of Tendulkar's brilliance only resulting in a defeat by 200 runs, or the failure to chase 120. Most of you know what I am getting to by now. However great India were at home in the 90's, and initially, that was a big thing for young fans like me, even later - like the 98 Australian tour to India, the semi finals of 96 and other highlights of the decade, it eventually got to a point - the disappointment of the 99 World Cup, where the atrocious record abroad finally screamed out to even the most uninformed Indian (has to be a cricket fan). It finally made a fan wonder, if waking up at 4 to watch a test match in Australia was really worth it. The final blow was of course, the match fixing scandal.

From those depths, it needed something as special as these four to revive Indian cricket in the hearts and minds of the fan. From those depths, it needed something as special as these four to make the Indian fan wake up at 4 to catch even the pitch report of matches in Australia and stay up as late as 3 to see the post match analysis for matches in West Indies.

The heroics of VVS and Dravid at Kolkata in 2001, resulting in a dramatic series victory against the invincibles, the first test victory on the soil, in a long long time, of West Indies on the backs of Saurav and VVS, the Headingley assault led by Sachin and Ganguly, after the vigilance of, by now, "The Wall", Dravid's heroics in Adelaide, and finally series victories in Pakistan, West Indies and England and a test match victory in South Africa, the brilliant comeback in Perth, and Sri Lanka tour, and I am only scratching the surface. There were the occasional hiccups like the New Zealand tour in 03, but for the Indian fan brought up in the 90's, that is easy to digest. All this while maintaining their supremacy at home, only blemish being a series defeat to Australia in 04. (There were some drawn series). The 2000's for the first time in Indian cricket, made the Indian cricket fan, revel in the success of a group, and admire a group. That is the biggest compliment that can be put for these four, especially after Tendulkar became God somewhere in the 90's.

The Fab Four marked an era of Indian cricket, where its first serious push to the top of Test cricket was made. The start of the era was anything but a loud statement. But what we witnessed over the last eight or so years is batsmanship of the highest quality, and grit, fight and resolve never seen before in Indian cricket. And it is fitting that it has ended with a defining victory over the reigning test champions. Fitting that it has ended in taking India from being the forever middle of the pack team to the threshold of the best team in the world.

The Fabulous Four have cemented their place in Indian cricket history, and have become immortal in the minds of the Indian cricket fan.

26 comments:

Unknown said...

IN-SANE post...vivid descriptions... what other adventures have these 4 been upto??

Prakhar said...

mhuahaha.... d pic shows fab 3 :D
uv missd d rite guy... bravo !!!

Pavan said...

watz about all this !!! It would have been drafted a lot better !! neways put in more efforts , this post is OK !!

Prakhar said...

shuks !!! doooooood get laxman outta d pic... arghhhhhhhh

Abhi said...

Here's to the FAB 4... the FAB 4 have definitely been the core of the test team over the past decade... and thats leaving out all individual performances before and after the formation of this group (Tendulkar's performances obviously!!)... well written!!

Pavan said...

I take my words bac !! good post yup yup :) !!

Anonymous said...

Nice :)
I didn't hv enough time to read such a big write up. I have gone through some lines. It is awe some.

The_killer said...

waah .. very nicely written post, which tried to cover all the history of FAB4.
FAB4 will never be forgotten.

Unknown said...

keep up the good work..god save mankind. amen

Ashwin Iyer said...

Quite a good analysis this, except that you excluded Kumble, and his evolution as a good spin bowler overseas!!!
U have too much free time on ur hands!

Anonymous said...

A nice compilation of the events taking us back to those glorious moments :) i wish you expanded VVS initials for i don't know it till date.

Sai Hurrish said...

hmm hmm hmm aahh!!!!

Anonymous said...

Well... There contribution can't be quantified, we can only measure there scores but not the conditions... Yeah dude the fab4 are awsome and lemme tell you this is not the ending Sachin, Dravid and Laxman are still there and a lots more to come....

Unknown said...

Well written yup yup.... This got an anti Indian like me to (forcibly?) read the glorious victory of the Indian Cricket Team with the 4 oldies but surely goldies shining and twinkling their bit to shape up what we see today as Team India.

Anonymous said...

Nice post.....
Contribution of FAB4 to the Indian cricket will never be forgotten.

Arpit Mohan said...

Dude , you've tried to write exactly what the cricinfo guy wrote. Only he wrote it much better. Too many stats. Might as well have posted the cricinfo links to those matches and let the reader infer the rest. You've just put numbers into words.
Horrible post. Painful to read the whole thing (even though I did. This shows how much work I have)

Unknown said...

Well written indeed. I tried hard to find some mistakes but there were none.But VVS should retire

Ashwin said...

nice one...planning to include a bit more later?

Anonymous said...

this is a comment...as you asked for it...about cricket....frankly, I dont give a damn

Anonymous said...

anonymous is me....yogesh...that makes it 2

mrugen said...

wow ! pretty insightful stuff ....
I guess every indian cricket fan will more or less echo your sentiments for the FAB4....great going ...

Sai Manohar Rudramaina said...

Firstly, very well written stuff about some of the greats of indian cricket. No matter how much we might talk, we cannot describe how great cricketers these were: Sachin Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly, Rahul Dravid, Vangipurapu Venkata Sai Laxman (whom we all know as Very very special Laxman) and also Anil Kumble. One thing which is common in all of these players is the passion towards and the passion to perform. Vivek has added a lot about the achievements of the batsmen, let us also talk about the magnanimity of Kumble's passion towards the game; remember how he got Lara out with a dislocated jaw back in antigua, i guess; thats just one of those many great memories he has given to us.

I'd like to talk about couple of things here; i was mentioning about passion being the common thing in these players, however, it is notable that this comes out in different ways in different players: Sourav Ganguly, passion comes out as aggression; Rahul Dravid and Anil Kumble, passion comes out as dedication; VVS Laxman, passion comes out as utmost concentration and Sachin Tendulkar, passion comes out talking with the bat. It hurts me when someone questions the character of a great like Sachin. Well, if it was only for personal milestones, he would not have been the great that he is now. lets just leave it right there.

Anyways, all said and done, as vivek says, the era is coming to an end and rightly so. All good things have to come to an end for better things to happen. These great cricketers have taken Indian Cricket from darkness of match-fixing scandals, from the brands of 'tigers at home-cats abroad' to what it is now: Competing with the top teams at the highest quality of cricket.

It's time for them to move aside and let the news kids to take Indian Cricket to New Highs. At the same time, we have to take the services and brains of such legends to put to a good use for the future generation. Their greatness should not just be restricted to history books and halls of fame; its time we make use of their quality in some capacity. BCCI should make sure that these legends stay with Indian Cricket in a way that the legacy is carried forward. We have already missed the services that THE GREAT KAPIL DEV could have given to Indian Cricket (thanks to cheap politics led by Mr. Sunil Gavaskar) and also India's FIRST FAST BOWLER Javagal Srinath could have been used in a lot better way (instead of Venkatesh Prasad being the bowling coach who is only fit to put a fake accent). Such Mistakes should not be repeated in the future.

Bottom Line: Let the legacy continue

Thanks

Cricket is my Religion and Sachin is, still, my GOD

Unknown said...

a master piece
a virtuoso in the making

Sarath said...

You like most Indian cricket fans stuck to only the batsmen. What about Kumble man? All these people were in it together.
Anyway, as ever, India is a batting team, whether on field or on a fan's article

Anonymous said...

gem of an article...great english, poetic description, in depth analysis..i have done enough for 100 bucks i got..

porcelain said...

Nicely written! I'm not big on Cricket but I still found myself reading the entire post.