Born: 1550 (approx.) in Surrey, England
Died: 26th June, 2014 in
Melbourne, Australia
On a sunny afternoon of June 26,
2014, the great sport of Cricket passed away after a long battle with corrupt administrators.
In her last hours she was surrounded by the three men responsible for her
demise: Narayanaswami Srinivasan, Giles Clarke and Wally Edwards, as well as extended
family from the various governing bodies. The families, whose avarice led to
their selling out without so much as putting up a fight to save the sport that they
had sworn to uphold, protect and serve.
Cricket is said to have had her
beginnings in the town of Guildford, Surrey in England, as early as 1550*; thought
to have been originally conceived as a game for young children. From these
humble beginnings she grew into a great global sport often referred to as a
Gentleman’s game. The same sport that has now been consumed by three corrupt
old men who stand against all that she once represented: fair play, integrity,
honour and chivalry.
In
India, the current mecca of cricket, she held greater sway than religion and was
one of the few things that united the entire country. Indians cricketers are
held in higher esteem than Bollywood stars and Gods. Cricket pitches were the only places where caste, religion,
language, education and wealth never mattered. Such was once the power of
cricket and that is why her demise should concern us all, greatly.
Her
rich and storied life includes Articles
of Agreement being written as early as 1727*
to guide the conduct of matches between teams. The first recorded
women’s county match was played in 1811*
between Surrey and Hampshire at Ball's Pond in London, England in what was
still otherwise completely a man’s world. Over the centuries cricket has
produced legendary figures from the likes of WG Grace, Sir Donald Bradman and Sir
Garfield Sobers to modern day heroes who have been great ambassadors of the
sport, both on and off the field, like Brian Lara, Rahul Dravid and Sachin Tendulkar.
These men inspired generations of young impressionable minds to strive for
greatness through integrity, dignity and the ethics of hard work. (*sources: ESPN cricket and Wikipedia)
Today,
a few wealthy men have hijacked our great love and turned it into their
personal fiefdom. One where a ruthless, unethical few will now be able bend the
rules with complete impunity to enable their thirst for power and single-minded
pursuit of money. Cricket, who once nurtured the souls of the young, all over
the world, will now feed the hunger of three corrupt boards at the expense of
the sport and all her adoring fans.
In lieu of flowers, comments and support may be
offered at Save Cricket in India