Monday, February 02, 2009

SUPER TUESDAYS ON SWOOSH0018

The unbreakable South African
Humble, resilient, modest and unflappable, Hashim Amla has overcome plenty and emerged the better for it
January 29, 2009

Easy does it: Amla on the 2008 tour of England

Hashim Amla counts amongst the most serene of cricketers. Nothing seems to ruffle him. Along the way both life and cricket have tried to disturb his tranquility, only to be met with a mild smile and a broad bat. Fast bowlers have pounded him with bumpers. Nothing personal, you understand, just that he was a new kid on the block and his back-foot game was regarded as suspect; mistakenly as it turned out. Refusing to hook, he simply parried the bouncers as he has everything else, and waited for the storm to abate, whereupon he resumed collecting runs in his unflustered way. At times he has struggled against spin and found long tours hard to endure as the attraction of hotels wanes, but he has met every challenge,
scored heavily in India, and finished the Australian tour with a stirring innings in Adelaide.
For that matter, his technique was taken apart in his first few showings in Test cricket, and
by Englishmen. They had a point, and as always Amla listened with detachment and made the necessary adjustments.
Too humble to disdain criticism, too resilient to be distracted, the young Durbanite has a toughness in him not easily detected from afar. But then he has overcome a lot, has fought for his place every step of the way, has managed to remain cool amidst the furies that sometimes rage around him. Always he has retained his inner core while recognising the need to improve, and without judging others. Accordingly he has fit comfortably into cricket teams containing a broad swathe of humanity, and a fair share of ruffians, and has cheerfully joined in activities without ever selling himself short. After the
MCG Test had been won, and with the ground almost empty, Amla accompanied his comrades as they returned to the middle of the ground to celebrate in style. He is no more po-faced than Bill Lawry or Ian Redpath, fellow abstainers and just as popular


Amla has has "fit comfortably into cricket teams containing a broad swathe of humanity" © Getty Images

Throughout, Amla's strong point has been his mind. As much as his game, it has been tested in the crucible. Inane remarks have been made about him, and the offended party has met them with a tolerant shrug, not a withering counter. He was asked to comment on the Mumbai attacks, as if he were a spokesman for an entire faith in all its glories and shames, and not merely an impressive young man who happens to be a Muslim. In his early days he was often denigrated as a quota player, a cricketer who owed his place more to government decree than individual merit. Of course it was unfair.
Perhaps he was promoted a little prematurely into the highest ranks and into the captaincy of his province, but he had been scoring heavily in domestic cricket, was respected by his peers, and had led many youth teams. In any case it is nothing new for selectors to become excited about a gifted 21-year-old. Indeed, it ought to be part of the job description. Amla was duly dropped and duly bounced back, still the same serene and skilful cricketer, just a bit more seasoned.
Of all his achievements, Amla's emergence as the first member of the large Indian community to play Test cricket for South Africa has been the most significant. During the apartheid years the Indians tended to lie low. Shy by nature, resourceful by disposition, aware of their origins as indentured labour, they were caught in a racial no-man's land, and so concentrated on making money and gaining a good education. To them cricket was an enthusiasm, almost an indulgence. Certainly it could not be a profession.
Inevitably the game was played, and well played in places, notably in the strongholds around Durban. It was hard to assess the quality of the players because they were seldom pitted against outside forces. Self-sufficiency was paramount.
Obviously there were exceptions, in politics and cricket. After all, Mahatma Gandhi made his name as an activist lawyer in South Africa, was thrown out of the first-class seats on a train at Pietermaritzburg station in the capital city of Kwa-Zulu Natal (as it has become). It is Amla's home province. Nowadays the Pietermaritzburg city centre contains a statue of the Mahatma. The Indian communities also produced their own parties, and in some cases activists of the ANC - until recently the speaker in parliament was an Indian woman respected for her integrity and admired for her courage in supporting the ANC in its underground years. Nevertheless Amla grew up in an essentially inward-looking society somewhat reluctant to enter the new mainstream.


Throughout, Amla's strong point has been his mind. As much as his game, it has been tested in the crucible

He has played his part in changing all that. Every community needs an inspirational figure capable of lighting the path forwards. Makhaya Ntini has demonstrated the untapped capacity of the black population. Ashwell Prince proved that he was as tough as a trekking Afrikaner, as durable as any desert nomad. But the Indians also needed to break through in the sporting arena.
Sportsmen can become national, and even international, figures in months. Ask JP Duminy. Amla belongs to a younger, bolder generation that had not been involved in all the palaver and patronising and repressing; a generation committed, expressly or by implication, to the ideas advanced by Nelson Mandela, Gandhi, Desmond Tutu, Martin Luther King and the other giants of the era; a bunch that wanted to live in a mixed and united nation, where a person was judged only by the content of his character. A group that wanted to cross the great divide.
And so, without fear or recrimination, he started to climb the mountain. Although he played alongside them or against them in youth teams, Amla may not have realised that he already had allies in AB de Villiers and Duminy. If there was a more heartwarming sight than this pair embracing after the winning runs had been scored
in Perth, then it was that of Graeme Smith and Amla hugging after the Indian had collected the winning runs in Melbourne. And they were joined on the podium by Smith's wholehearted embrace of Ntini after the SCG Test had almost been saved, thanks not least to the supposedly haphazard tailender's defiant 91-minute occupation.
For all the turbulences of the period, with its desperation to find brown-skinned players worthy of advancement, Amla's rise was orthodox even as his background was distinctive. Born into an affluent family whose roots lay in the state of Gujarat, he was reared in a middle-class home and sent to a highly regarded cricketing and academic school, Durban HS, previously the alma mater of Lance Klusener and Barry Richards. His parents are doctors and Ahmed, his older brother, is a fine batsman in his own right, albeit one held back for a time by the hotness that often affects youth. Nowadays Ahmed is so well respected that he captains the provincial team. In short, the Amlas are intelligent, professional, serious but not solemn, and keen on cricket. Evidently the parents are also enlightened because they did not discourage their younger boy from trying his luck in cricket. Previous generations of Indian parents might have pointed him towards a "proper" profession.
Towards the end of his schooldays Amla suddenly gained prominence. Truth to tell, his career moved ahead of his cricket, ahead even of his maturity. He secured selection for the KZN and South Africa Under-19 sides, scored four hundreds in senior cricket as a 21-year-old, and promptly found himself asked to captain his provincial side and bat for his country against England. It was too much to put on anyone's plate. He was not ready to bear such a heavy investment. It was the same with Justin Ontong when he was claimed. A cricketer cannot succeed as a symbol, only as a batsman or bowler. Everything follows from that.
Observers relying on his form that summer assumed that Amla had been promoted too high, as opposed to too early. At the crease his bat and feet seemed to have lives of their own. His game looked about as well organised as a bowl of spaghetti. He had more movements than a Wagner opera. His frailties were exposed and after two matches he was informed that his game was too loose for this company, and he was unceremoniously sent back to domestic cricket. It was the right thing to do. Typically, too, Amla responded calmly to his axing. Rejecting suggestions that he had been dropped on racial groans or because his face did not fit, he gently pointed out that his edge had done more work than his middle and that he had a few technical issues to address. His calmness under pressure, his refusal to agitate, conforms that he has the capacity to captain the team should the opportunity arise.
Amla has has "fit comfortably into cricket teams containing a broad swathe of humanity" © Getty Images

Shortly after losing his place in the South Africa aside, Amla stepped down as KZN captain. He wanted to concentrate on his batting. Again it was a modest and wise decision taken by a man untouched by anger.
Before long, the runs were flowing. Bowlers could not find a chink in his armour. Raised on bouncy pitches in Durban, he was as comfortable as anyone against pace, bounce and movement. But then he has never been remotely as fragile as he seems. Blessed with an ability to play the ball late and to clip it away with posthumous flicks of the wrist, he was also sound against spin. Moreover he could concentrate on the next ball, did not drift into reveries or start thinking about lotto or lattes. He could occupy the crease as another man does a sofa.
Confidence restored, nuts and bolts tightened, the young man recaptured his place in the Test team and reinforced it with a careful hundred
against New Zealand. Now it was apparent that he had the temperament and the technique to accept the responsibilities imposed on occupants of the first-wicket-down position. He could with equanimity face the second ball of the match or the 300th. Always he remained unflustered, understood his task and often carried it out.
And so it came to pass that Amla took his place in a powerful batting order and a successful, jovial and cosmopolitan national aide. South Africa and Amla performed magnificently in 2008, drawing a series
in India, beating England and overcoming the Australians on their own patch. Throughout, the team displayed the tenacity of a spider and the spirit of a Scottish regiment responding to the bugle. Amla played his part, calming nerves, unfurling numerous sweet strokes off the back foot, supporting his colleagues. He is a son, a Muslim, an Indian, a fine batsman and a worthy member of a South Africa team that represents not the poverty of life but its richness.
source:cricinfo

FROM SHOOBS THE UTD MAN
all the way from the UK

Shoobs is graces the Super Tuesday for the first time. He resides in the UK AND IS A MANC.

We will be looking forward to his experiences and escapades out there on Super Tuesdays




The Kop ... Anfield is a football cathedral trading on the memories of past glory I said that last week and Swoosh gave me some story about some “die hard” United topee who’s been to the Nou Camp, OT, Anfield etc and said that the atmosphere is the best at Anfield. Maybe if this old timer was talking about a trip he made in the 80’s I just might agree, but truth be told only a disillusioned scouse would boldy say the atmosphere is the best at Anfield in this current day and age. I personally think a lot of people who fly into the UK for matches don’t really know what “match day atmosphere” really is and I firmly believe not many supporters in South Africa fully understand what a “die hard” or “hard core” supporter really is. Being on the ground here in the UK and working literally around the corner from Stamford Bridge I have been lucky enough to go to loads of games, visit many stadiums and spend time with lots of different supporters and I can honestly tell you The Kop, Anfield and the nostalgic idea many of you have of a Liverpool match day is SEVERLY OVERATED. As much as it pains me to say this ... I have seen more atmosphere and passion at the Bridge (on occasion) then I have witnessed at Anfield. Naturally, as a MUFC fan I’d like to believe the atmosphere at Old Trafford is the best but that would be a lie because the Mancs don’t come close to the Italians when it comes to rocking a stadium, but I will say this ... at present between from the following four clubs Man United, Chelsea, Arsenal and Liverpool – UNITED FANS PROVIDE THE BEST MATCH DAY ATMOSPHERE by far. Now I can already hear the bitching from the Liverpool ouens who have made the trip to both stadiums telling me I talking out of my arse, but from what I know ... most fans that come over for a game do pretty much the same thing, kill an hour in the mega-store, watch the game, try to get some autographs and then leave. At some point on their visit they do stadium tour and then think they’ve been to a game and witnessed it all and know what the club, atmosphere and match day is all about ... far from it !!!If I mention names like The Bishop Blaize (Man United), The Albert (Liverpool), The White Horse aka The Sloaney Pony (Chelsea) and The Gunners (Arsenal), I’m willing to wager that those same okes who’ve been to Old Trafford, Anfield, Stamford Bridge and The Emirates won’t have a clue what I’m talking about. Those are the pubs that fans gather at before a game and simple search on Youtube will make it plainly obvious which fans are the most vocal and most passionate. No footie pub rocks like The Bishops Blaize on match day – FACT. The pre-game singing at a pub is just one part of match day. There’s also the walk to the stadium and unless you’ve marched to the stadium with the old faithful or a firm, your haven’t experienced the real deal. I once got caught up in firm brawl between Spurs and Chelsea firms outside Stamford Bridge and on a separate occasion also spend the night in a spot called the Bobby Dazzler in Moscow on the eve of the 2008 CL Final speaking to United fans, both memorable football moments for me purely because of the passion I witnessed on those occasions, something I’ve yet to witness at Anfield. In fact, the thing that sticks out most in my mind about Anfield is how it’s the only stadium I’ve been to in the UK where LFC supporters sell fellow supporters fake tickets at crazy prices and also how disappointed I was the first time I saw the kop (it’s like a big f**king squatter camp shack but I will admit it does give you the idea that it was a great place at one point in time). For sheer awesomeness, it would have to be the Nou Camp and for that feeling of being in a great club the Bernabeu wins hands down. Looking exclusively within the UK I can honestly say OT rocks the shit more than anywhere else, that being said I’ve yet to experience St James’ Park on match day which I believe is something else but given the current form of the club the Toons don’t have much to cheer for. As for that timer and the many okes reading this who rate that they’re die-hard hardcore fans, think of okes like Pete Boyle (Youtube that name) who has not missed a United home game since 1978 or Mike, the old geezer I stayed with in Moscow who hasn’t missed any United fixture (home, away or friendly) for the last 25 years, 5 of those years he lived in London, a 3 hour drive from Manchester or even the scouse oke I met at Gatwick on the way to the World Cup a few years ago who has the Liverbird and LFC coat of arms tattooed on him and spends every last cent he has travelling to games to a point where he sometimes doesn’t have money for chow, then tell me you’re a hardcore and die-hard. I’m off to the Nou Camp this weekend to witness the Messiah, got prime tickets – centre pitch 2 rows behind the bench ... look out for the chaaro cursing at Henry, that’ll be me !!! I’ll mail Swoosh some pics and stuff for next week’s Super Tuesday.

Check out Shoobs's site http://blog.livesoflondon.co.uk/.

FROM THE KOP END


Keane Returns To Spurs
While Rafa claims that Keane was never a player that he wanted many supporters felt that he was given a raw deal. When Keane arrived in the summer it was hailed as something of a coup and many believed that with his intelligence, a partnership with Torres would flourish.Even the great Kenny Dalglish commented on the importance of a signing like Keane and Rafa got credit for persuading "Mr" Spurs to join his Rafalution.







But when things didn't go to plan with his partnership with Torres many doubted the signing. Keane couldn't capitalise from Torres's injury and failed to impress in his absence. He did manage to score two against WBA and a stunner against Arsenal in the league but was soon dropped from the starting 11 and was an unused sub for a few games and even dropped further behind an unimpressive Ngog.After rejecting the new contract offered by the Americans because he did not have full control over transfers the truth came out about the Keane transfer. Rafa claimed that he never wanted Keane but it was Rick Parry that sanctioned the deal. Rafa only wanted Gareth Barry but Parry refused to pay the 18 Million Pounds demanded by Villa instead he did a deal worth 20 Mil with Spurs for Keane.Keane was never given a fair chance by Rafa to completely settle in having scored just 7 goals in 28 starts in which he was subbed in 18 of those games. Subsequently he was sold back to Spurs for 16 Million Pounds ( as reported by Koptalk ) and with the extension of the transfer window due to the heavy snowfall around the UK , hopefully Rafa signs another striker to strengthen our push for the title. Javier Saviola was strongly linked with us and could prove to be a quality signing if he comes to Anfield.Good Luck Keano...YNWA







http://lfc4lifesa.blogspot.com




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19 comments:

  1. How do you lose 7million pounds in 6 months. Give it to Rafa to sign a doos and then realise his mistake. HAHAHA.
    Keane is gone back to Spurs and they made a quick muck from it

    ReplyDelete
  2. Quaresma at Chelski on loan from Inter

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  3. super 14 starts soon wooohooo
    cnt wait :p

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  4. ZK SWEETHEART WHERE HAVE YOU BEEN? I MISSED YOUR COMMENTS

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  5. well done HASH, you a legend.

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  6. Shoobs

    You an expat now living in the UK, correct?

    Tell me have you ever been for a Soweto Derby?

    Nothing beats matchday @ a Soweto derby!

    I mean where else in the world would you get 40000 spectators HIGH on some Swazi,another 20000 smuggling in Booze in oranges and Buddy cokes.And the rest of the spectators getting the nosies from there?????


    Beats any place in the world if you ask me!!!

    VIVA 2010 VIVA

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  7. come to the la bombanera for a boca juniors game if you want atmosphere!

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  8. 1st defoe, then chimbonda, then keane all gone back to spurs in a few months! who's next berbatov?


    RAFA IS A MUGG!

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  9. "Nothing beats matchday @ a Soweto derby!"

    That's a pretty bold statement Amakhosi. I've been for a quite a few Chiefs/Pirates games and was even at that one at Ellis Park and can tell you, while it's brilliant atmoshphere and rates up there for me, there's a few other spots that beats the "Soweto Derby" hands down.

    Never been to South America, but our man Claudio there makes a fair point.

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  10. Come watch me coach @ Bloch Park on Sunday.

    Beat the Gaffer and the MANCS taining camp!


    OOH AAH BHAI GHORA

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  11. shoobs ma bru

    wots hapennin? remember the pool-utd game @ anfield last season (uhem, where tevez got the winner:) in that scruffy pub outside anfield?

    the expression on the scouse ous faces after the game was a moment to savour....class!!

    lol remember zunu's disposition after the game?? our outie was in sakraat!! i giv him beans till now....reza

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  12. nothing beats an old firm derby be it at ibrox or park head!

    f&*k the poms , want atmosphere come north of the border!

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  13. Al Ahly vs Zamalek..

    Now thats a fokken derby..

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  14. Oi Reza, Zunu is a mug Liverpool fan who's whole time in the UK was spent witnessing Liverpool getting whipped.
    Living with me made it worse, coz he got it every weekend like he did that day in the car when we were coming back from Anfield.
    Poor oke had to resort to chirping me with Arsenal and Chelsea lines. Sad days for Zunu, even more sad for the Kop !!!

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  15. Hey Naeem, remember our trip to Anfield this season to watch Liverpool fuck Man Poo up. Remember their faces when Babel scored.They were like so sad and shit and that fukken dronkie ferguson was pissed with giggs. Remember how their fans got fucked up on Anfield Road on their way home. They were like all crying for their mummies!

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  16. Greatest atmosphere I have ever experienced.

    The Bull Ring chasing that over 400 total. Nothing compares to the Bull Ring.

    JK

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  17. Hey Marty. Do you remember the Lenz Stadium years ago. Gora Ebrahims Dynamos vs Moroko Swallows.

    And Marty do you remember when Chiefs came to Lenasia and as young lads we were exposed to fans pi$$ing from the top grandstand.

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  18. what about India vs Pakistan world cup match in centurion! electrifying

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  19. nothing compares when it comes to passion, then watching rugby at the the old cardiff arms park, or lansdowne road in dublin!

    marty mcfly

    ReplyDelete

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