Ganguly has it all to prove

Sourav Ganguly: his captaincy is open to question as never before© AFP

Sourav Ganguly was greatly relieved yesterday when the ICC rescindedhis two-match suspension, which allowed him to play the second Test against South Africa in the Kolkata. As Ganguly noted at the pre-match press conference this morning, he had already missed four out of eight Test matches this year to injury, andhad been troubled by the prospect of having to sit out another two Tests.But there is also another reason why the captain does not want to missout on a chance to play. He is in a rather beleaguered state at the moment,and his authority is open to question as never before. But he canjustly claim to have had a major influence of shaping this Indian team, and hewants to prove that he still belongs among them, as both leader andplayer.India’s form in both Tests and one-dayers has been a distinct three orfour notches below that of last season, and there’s only so long thathe can keep fending off the charges being levelled at him by his critics.Ganguly also did he himself no favours by pulling out abruptly of theNagpur Test, and he has spent so much time on the sidelines this seasonthat he has every reason to fear that his players may grow used tobeing without him.There could be nothing better for Ganguly in the short-term than avictory, something to clear the darkening clouds of dissatisfaction andresentment that have built around in the cricket-watching public’sperception of Team India. Critics have asked if he still has thepassion and the energy for the captaincy, a draining task at the best of times.He needs to answer them with results. He could also do with a big score,as it has been a year – Brisbane in early December 2003 – since hisbatting had a major effect on a Test match, and also because his record atKolkata has been poor. Even though he is a veteran, he probably has more atstake in the game than anyone else.It is not without reason that Ganguly’s critics say that the time hascome to give up the top job to another man. It is possible that even some ofthose sympathetic to Ganguly might believe this is the course of actionthat is best for him. Captaining the Indian side, absorbing theintense scrutiny and measuring up to the expectations of millions ofpassionate followers must be the toughest assignment in world cricket,and not something the strain of which a man can bear for more than afew years.An example of this was witnessed by this writer this very morning.After a stint at nets, Ganguly walked off the ground and into the pavilion. Agroup of people, perhaps about 70 strong, had managed to get into theground to watch the players, and as Ganguly passed below they made arush for the railings, calling out: "Dada! Dada! Dada!"Why were they calling out in such a frenzy to a man occupied with his work and with a dozen important things on his mind? For a wave of the bat in return,perhaps, or some other mark of acknowledgement – some little thing totake away as a sign that they had been in proximity to the captain of India,and shared some interaction with him.Sometimes it must seem to Ganguly as if all of India is on its toes,shouting at him in many accents: "Dada! Dada! Dada!" Can he continue tosteer his way through the tumult for much longer? We shall know – maybenot at Kolkata, but soon enough.

Harbhajan warns New Zealand of a tough tour

Harbhajan Singh has warned New Zealand of a gruelling upcoming tour of India, saying that the hosts had not forgotten the 2-0 series drubbing late last year on fresh, batting-unfriendly wickets in New Zealand.”In India we don’t play in gardens like they do in New Zealand,” he said ina television interview. “I can’t wait to get my hands on the ball and have a go at the Kiwis. They will struggle here.”But Harbhajan hastened to point out that India would not prepare vicious turners to defeat New Zealand. “I have forgotten the last time we played on a square turner in India,” he said. “Wickets here are good for both batsmen and bowlers.”The whole team is looking to avenge the defeat in New Zealand. We want toshow we can beat them on good wickets.”

Chaminda Vaas starts LG Abans tri-series with record-breaking bonanza

In was nightmare for the sponsors, but a dream for Colombo’s policeauthorities, who were reportedly in a quandary as to whether to imposeanother post-election city-wide curfew in the afternoon, as Chaminda Vaasensured the first game of the LG Abans triangular ODI series was theshortest ever One-Day International.By midday, after just two hours, Sri Lanka had wrapped up a nine-wicket winhaving bowled out Zimbabwe for just 38, the lowest ever total in ODIcricket, surpassing the 43 scored by Pakistan against West Indies at CapeTown in 1992/3. They then knocked off the required runs in just 4.2 overs.For the second time in the week, it was Vaas who created the mayhem, asZimbabwe’s shocked batsmen wandered across their stumps like rabbits caughtfull-beam. The 27-year-old left-armer took the first eight wickets to falland looked to be heading for all ten before Muttiah Muralitharan took twowickets in four balls to finish off the innings.His eight for 19 was the best ever bowling analysis in one-day cricket’s31-year history, surpassing the seven for 30 taken by Muralitharan last yearagainst India at Sharjah.Vaas bowled well with the new white ball, which does swing more than the redone, and Sri Lanka had won a good toss in the morning on a greasy SinhaleseSports Club pitch, but there could be no proper explanation for such amiserly total. This was no minefield and Vaas has bowled better for lessreward – in fact he probably swung the ball more prodigiously in his lastTest match.But Vaas still deserves great credit for record-breaking spell, which wouldhave pleased no one more than his wife who was celebrating her birthdayalone at home today. Vaas has worked extremely hard during the past year,both on his fitness and skills. Coach Dav Whatmore praised his “focusedattitude to training” and believed that “performances like this don’t happenby accident.” His performance was a victory for the humble hard-workingmedium pacer, who success depends on the twin virtues of accuracy andmovement. Today he was spot on.Zimbabwean captain, Stuart Carlisle, called it a “freak result” and hopedthat his side could quickly flush today’s disturbing events out of theirsystem tomorrow, when they take on the West Indies. But the tourists will beconcerned that they struggled so much against the swinging ball; a weaknessthat cost them both practice matches against young Sri Lankan board XI’s.Vaas started his wicket-taking spree with the first delivery of the match; afull-length inswinger that curved onto the toe of opener Dion Ebrahim.Stuart Carlisle then added 11 runs for the second wicket with Grant Flower -a noteworthy partnership in the context – before Vaas severely dentedZimbabwean hopes by dismissing both Flower brothers in his third over: Grant(1) was bowled and Andy (0) was caught behind for a second-ball duck (11 forthree).Carlisle added a couple of boundaries with Craig Wishart in 25 minute stand,but Vaas’s sixth over singled the start of the end as the last seven wicketsfell for just 11 runs.Nuwan Zoysa has taken a Test hat-trick but no Sri Lankan had taken a one-dayhat-trick till today, when Vaas had Carlisle (16), trying to be positive,caught at third man, Wishart (6) and Tatrenda Taibu (0) trapped lbw withsharply swinging induckers (27 for six).Heath Streak (0) was dismissed in a similar manner and Mluleki Nkala (1)edged to Sangakkara behind the stumps (32 for eight).Sanath Jayasuriya then called up Muralitharan and the off-spinner zipped histhird ball through the defenses of Travis Friend (4) and had last man, HenryOlonga, caught at slip next ball.Sri Lanka started badly, losing Avishka Gunawardene in the first over, butstill cruised to victory as Marvan Atapattu stroked four fours in his16-ball 23 not out and Jayasuriya walloped 13 from seven balls.Zimbabwe now will play West Indies tomorrow and they will take some heartfrom the fact that the West Indies tour slipped further into disarray lastnight when their premier fast bowler, who would have been a real handful onthis SSC pitch, was sent home for disciplinary reasons.

Sehwag quits internationals and IPL

India batsman Virender Sehwag has formally retired from international cricket. On Tuesday, his 37th birthday, Sehwag made the announcement via Twitter, with a crisp message that said he would no longer play the IPL either.On Monday, Sehwag had revealed he would be participating in the Masters Champions League, a UAE-based Twenty20 tournament that requires its participants to have retired from all international formats, and said a formal retirement announcement would follow soon. He indicated that he would continue playing for Haryana till the end of the Ranji Trophy season.”God has been kind and I have done what I wanted to do – on the field and in my life and I had decided sometime back that I will retire on my 37th birthday,” Sehwag said in a statement. “So, while I spend the day with my family, I hereby announce my retirement from all forms of international cricket and the Indian Premier League.”Cricket has been my life and continues to be so. Playing for India was a memorable journey and I tried to make it more memorable for my team-mates and for the Indian cricket fans. I believe I was reasonably successful in doing so. For that, I wish to thank all my teammates over the years – some of the greatest players of the game. I would like to thank all my captains, who believed in me and backed me to the hilt. I also thank our greatest partner, the Indian cricket fan for all the love, support and the memories.”I also want to thank everyone for all the cricketing advice given to me over the years and apologise for not accepting most of it! I had a reason for not following it: I did it my way!”Sehwag is widely considered one of India’s greatest opening batsmen, and he revolutionised the art of batting against the new ball in Test cricket with his aggressive approach, scoring at a strike rate of over 80 in the longest format. He has been out of India’s plans for over two years, having last played for the national side in the Hyderabad Test against Australia in March 2013.Sehwag played 104 Tests, 251 ODIs and 19 T20Is, scoring over 17,000 international runs and picking up 136 wickets with his offspin. His greatest moments came in Test cricket, where he made 23 hundreds including the only two triple-centuries by an Indian batsman, while his ODI achievements included the format’s second double-hundred. He was part of India’s victorious campaigns at the 2007 World T20 and the 2011 World Cup.

Newcastle keen on Seko Fofana

An update has emerged on Newcastle United and their pursuit of RC Lens gem Seko Fofana… 

What’s the talk?

According to French outlet Le10Sport, the Magpies are set to battle it out with Ligue 1 giants PSG to land the Ivorian in the summer.

The report claims that PIF are prepared to make a move for the midfielder and will not ‘hesitate’ to open their chequebook to secure his services, although it remains to be seen how much money the French side want for their star man.

Imagine him & Bruno

Dan Ashworth is reportedly set to become Newcastle’s director of football in the summer and the signing of Fofana could be an incredible first piece of business for the former Brighton man.

He must ensure that he can get a deal over the line for the powerful midfielder as he would be a sensational signing for the club and potentially be an exciting partner for Bruno Guimaraes in the middle of the park next season.

In Ligue 1 this season, Fofana has scored seven goals and averaged 1.2 key passes per game whilst averaging a WhoScored rating of 6.93. He has also completed two dribbles per game and this shows that he is a progressive player who likes to drive at the opposition to make things happen, with his goal tally showing that he has the end product to match the build-up.

Author Tom Scholes once dubbed the £14m-rated player as “unbelievable” and French journalist Tanguy Le Seviller described him as a “monster” earlier this year. These comments and his impressive statistics for Lens highlight why Ashworth needs to bring him in as he would be a big asset for Eddie Howe to call upon with his ability to make things happen from midfield. 

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He could form a strong partnership with Guimaraes in midfield, with the Brazilian having also caught the eye in Ligue 1. In the first half of the season for Lyon, the 24-year-old averaged a WhoScored rating of 7.21 as he made an outstanding 3.6 tackles and interceptions per game.

This suggests that he will be able to provide the defensive anchor to allow Fofana to express himself going forward for Newcastle. Guimaraes would be the sturdy, reliable, operator to win possession back and then the Ivorian would be able to break and attempt to score and create goals in the final third knowing that he has the Brazilian machine behind him.

AND in other news, Howe can find his own Ake for NUFC in “special” £80k-p/w tank who’s “very underrated”…

Holder disallowed from playing PSL

West Indies Cricket Board has withheld the no-objection certificate (NOC) that Jason Holder needed to participate in the inaugural Pakistan Super League (PSL) on the grounds that he is a contracted player and his primary objective is to serve West Indies cricket.Holder, who is the captain of West Indies in Tests and ODIs, was picked by Quetta Gladiators in the player draft held on December 21. It became clear he won’t be able to play for them when he took to twitter and said… According to WICB chief executive Michael Muirhead, Holder had just signed a fresh retainer contract, which allowed the board to hold the rights to grant or deny him permission to play in overseas domestic leagues.”He is a retained player. So it gives us a right to say to a retained player, if you request a NOC in a time, that we have something geared towards the development of West Indies cricket, and then we have the right to say no to him,” Muirhead told ESPNcricinfo.Muirhead also pointed out that Holder had the responsibility to captain the Barbados team, which is currently competing in the Nagico Super-50, West Indies’ List A competition. “We have our premier 50-over competition going on now and it is going to be played at the same time as the league (PSL). He is the captain of the Barbados team, which wants him to play. We need him in the region. It promotes cricket. It sends a sense of unity. It sends the right message.”

Cricket's ultimate sacrifice

Tibby Cotter: died a week after the end of the Great War © Getty Images

Test cricket was hit hard by the two World Wars, and this topic has been brought into focus by the Commonwealth War Graves Commission this weekend as they seek to raise money and awareness during their 90th anniversary.A total of 21 Test players died in service, including several from the Commonwealth such as Albert ‘Tibby’ Cotter, the Australia fast bowler, and Reginald Schwarz, one of the quartet of South Africa googly bowlers in the Edwardian era. The War Graves Commission has set up an on-going exhibition in the Lord’s museum and has organised a charity match at Arundel on Sunday, August 12, featuring an Old England XI against a team of Anzac-South African club cricketers.Dozens of first-class players were lost, though the Commission – prompted no doubt by the current England-India series – could find only one Indian in the list. The Rawalpindi-born Vivian Chiodetti, a regular British Army soldier, played a match for Hyderabad before he was killed in Burma in 1942. The museum at Lord’s tells the Chiodetti story and features England players such as Hedley Verity, Colin Blythe and Ken Farnes.Cricket, with crude equipment, was played in unlikely places by battle-ready troops. The Australians played a game in view of the Turks at Gallipoli in 1915, trying to give the impression of normality and confidence while the entire force was being secretly evacuated from the beach area.Robert Graves recounts a game between officers and sergeants at Vermelles in France in 1915, when a bird cage with dead parrot in inside was used as the wicket. The game was abandoned when German machine gun fire at an aeroplane sprayed falling bullets dangerously close to the pitch. Jim Laker played in a match at El Alamein.Cotter was hit in the head by a sniper’s bullet in Palestine as he peered over a trench parapet and he died the same month in 1917 as his brother John, killed in France. Schwarz, twice surviving wounds, was admitted to hospital on the day of Armistice in 1918 and died of pneumonia seven days later.Blythe, the Kent left-arm spinner, is the only Test player with a gravestone inscription alluding to his cricketing eminence. He lies at rest in Belgium, killed by a shell blast at the age of 38 while working as an engineer in 1917.During the second World War, Lord’s was requisitioned by the War Office for the RAF and Te Oval was prepared as a prisoner of war camp that was never used, complete with wire cages on the playing surface.The Commission cares for graves and memorials for the 1.7 million dead at almost 23,000 locations in 150 countries.This article first appeared on https://www.charlierandallcricket.com/.

Boucher blitz blows Zimbabwe away

Scorecard and ball-by-ball details
How they were out

Boucher slaughtered Zimbabwe during his 147 off 68 balls © Getty Images

At Johannesburg in March earlier this year, Mark Boucher provided the finishing touches to South Africa’s epic chase of 434 against Australia. Today, however, he was their chief destroyer as they stacked up more than 400 for the second time in four matches and swept the series 3-0. Zimbabwe were beaten to their knees by a brutal display of power that began with the openers Loots Bosman and Alviro Petersen before Boucher shot from the hip and reached his first one-day century in his 220th match.The contest effectively ended after the first innings. At no stage did Zimbabwe make any attempt to get near the target although, to their credit, they did bat solidly. Terry Duffin led the resistance with a defiant 88 and ensured that Zimbabwe put in a commendable performance. He was ably supported by Chamu Chibhabha and Hamilton Masakadza, with whom he added 94 and 102 for the second and third wickets. Zimbabwe finished with 247 for 4, thier highest total of the series but it was after the proverbial horse had bolted.After chasing targets to win their previous two matches, Jacques Kallis had no hesitation in batting first when he won the toss for the first time in the series. South Africa wanted batting practice; instead Zimbabwe’s bowlers gave them hitting practice. Ed Rainsford and Tawanda Mupariwa paid the price for spraying it liberally and the support cast of Chibhabha, Elton Chigumbura, and the usually parsimonious Prosper Utseya were hapless as South Africa ran riot. The pitch was as flat as a tarmac and Zimbabwe’s shoddy fielding – Boucher was dropped on 7, 59, 105, 123, 140 and 144 – only added to their misery.Earlier Bosman and Petersen had added 160 off 126 balls for the first wicket but by the time Boucher was done, that partnership was put firmly in the shade. Sixes rained from Boucher’s bat as Zimbabwe’s boundary riders became full-time ball-boys. His third six – there were ten in all – brought up his fifty off just 26 balls and he needed only 18 more more to cudgel the fastest century by a South African and the second fastest after Shahid Afridi. Boucher formed the mainstay of a 91-run partnership, off 61 balls, with Kallis for the third wicket and left an indelible mark on Chibhabha whom he clouted for 26 runs in an over.To put Zimbabwe’s bowling effort in perspective – they bowled only five dot balls in Boucher’s innings, and when he offered one of umpteen catches, Brendan Taylor was heard pleading on the stump microphone “Catch it, please!” Inevitably, it was dropped.The carnage, however, had started with Bosman and Petersen. Both batsmen scored their maiden half-centuries and both reached their fifties with a six as they laid the platform for Boucher’s assault. The first Powerplay cost 67 runs, and Utseya postponed the next till the 15th over at which point Bosman cut loose. They scored 59 runs off the second Powerplay before a rush of blood eventually did Bosman in for 88. He charged Tafadzwa Kamungozi once too often and gave the debutant his first wicket.However, Petersen picked up the pace, Kallis provided the glue with a relatively pedestrian 50 off 59 balls, and Boucher was the wrecking ball as South Africa added 219 runs in 22.1 overs after Boucher’s arrival.South Africa’s bowlers will be disappointed that they weren’t more incisive when Zimbabwe batted. Andre Nel and Johannes van der Wath hit the deck early on but after Nel drew Vusi Sibanda into an indiscreet shot, they had little success. Andrew Hall and Charl Langeveldt strangled the run flow in the middle overs, Roger Telemachus knocked over Chibhabha and Masakadza and the innings merely played out its destined course as South Africa swept the series.

South AfricaLoots Bosman st Taylor b Kamungozi 88 (160 for 1)
Alviro Petersen c & b Utseya 80 (199 for 2)
Jacques Kallis c Chigumbura b Utseya 50 (290 for 3)
Justin Kemp st Taylor b Kamungozi 10 (317 for 4)
Johannes van der Wath b Rainsford 5 (351 for 5)
ZimbabweVusi Sibanda c Langeveldt b Nel 1 (9 for 1)
Chamu Chibhabha c Boucher b Telemachus 46 (103 for 2)
Hamilton Masakadza c Boucher b Telemachus 55 (206 for 3)
Terry Duffin lbw Nel 88 (212 for 4)

Warne pleads for privacy as he tries to save marriage

Shane Warne: ‘I tried to concentrate as hard as I could when I was at the cricket ground but away from that there were some tough times’ © Getty Images

Shane Warne, Australia’s legendary legspinner, arrived home on Thursday pleading for the media to respect his privacy as he attempts to save his failed marriage.Warne, who was outstanding in a beaten Australian side in the Ashes series loss to England earlier this month, told reporters at the airport here that he is seeking a reconciliation with his estranged wife Simone. Warne separated from Simone, the mother of his three children, following a string of lurid tabloid newspaper revelations.Warne asked the Australian media to give him and his family space while he tried to settle his personal issues. He said he had spoken to his wife and children at least twice a day since they returned to Australia.”It’s not an easy situation to be in. It’s something I haven’t experienced before in my life,” Warne said. “I tried to concentrate as hard as I could when I was at the cricket ground but away from that there were some tough times. There were nights when you would sit in your hotel room and think about all the different things.”Warne said he had never wanted to separate from his wife and would try hard to repair the marriage. “It’s not the way I wanted it to be,” he said. “We’re still friends, we still speak all the time, but we’ve just got to work out what we both want, which way we’re going to go and which road we go down. That’s on the agenda – we’ve got lots of things to talk about.”Warne said the Australian media hounded him and urged them to give his family privacy. “Hopefully, you guys [reporters] will respect that and leave us alone, not following us and camping outside our house but I doubt it,” he said. “I doubt whether you guys will, so that will probably make it harder.” Warne said lurid stories about him in the British tabloids were lies, rubbish and fabrication. “I’m not going to sit and defend myself every time some silly person makes up lies and talks rubbish,” he said. “What am I supposed to do, call a press conference? You’ve got to live your life. The public are not dumb, the public understand what is absolute lies and rubbish when it happens. They know exactly what the truth is.”Warne hinted he was nearing the end of his international career, saying the constant travel was beginning to tire him. “I enjoyed living in England but I have to weigh up the whole package, the travel and so on.”

Shiny Happy Flintoff, and outside-in emotions

Write to 23 YardsClick here for the 23 Yards homepageClick here or scroll down for the first post on this topicThursday, September 23, 20044.00pm IST – Woolmer, Botham and Kapil’s four sixesI’d wagered with a friend that after my last post I’d get at least 20 emails with goofy smilies in them, and it pains me to have to inform you that I have lost that bet. Most correspondents, however, agreed with me on the broad theme that I’d set out, though some disagreed with the specifics.Matt Merritt pointed out that positivity “was one of the things stressed by Bob Woolmer when he coached Warwickshire to great success in English domestic cricket in the 1990s, and by his club captain, Dermot Reeve. On the evidence so far, I think we might soon see a happier, smilier Pakistan team, with a corresponding upturn in consistency of results.” Matt continued:

Another example, to my mind, was in the debate during the 1980s over who was the world’s greatest allrounder. Hadlee was the best bowler, Imran probably the most complete allround player, but Botham and Kapil Dev both had a certain magic about them that, in my opinion, was inextricably linked to the fact that they played as though they loved the game and were enjoying every minute of it.

The best example where Kapil Dev was concerned was in 1990 at Lord’s when he smashed Eddie Hemmings for four sixes in four balls to save the follow-on. Probably only he or Botham would have considered even trying such a thing (in fact, even in these much more attacking times, I can’t think of many players who might have tried it), but he made it look like the obvious thing to do, flashed a few dazzling smiles, and carried on. Probably that’s why even people not much interested in cricket (my mum, for example), liked him.

Matt, along with a couple of others, gently chided me for suggesting that Gough is crabby, and endorsed my disclosure of not being too knowledgable about English cricket. Tom Lloyd said that Gough was “from the same mould as Flintoff”, and that the first paragraph about Flintoff could “equally apply to Goughie”. Matt wrote that “Goughie was often the only player who remained buoyant and upbeat during some very dark times, although he could get a bit snarly with opposition batsmen at times”. Hmmm … well, that must be why I referred to him as crabby, he is more crabby than shiny in my memories of England playing India, but I’m happy to admit that I probably got this wrong. Tom suggested that he might not have been displeased if I’d described Andrew Caddick as crabby, and I just realised that would also be an alliteration. Should I change it on the sly? Nah …Matt also said that I was too harsh on Hussain. “He took over as captain with England at a very low ebb,” he wrote, “and his tough-minded approach laid all the foundations for the success England are now having. Under different circumstances (if he had had the young players coming through that we have now) I think he might have been every bit as upbeat as Vaughan. Certainly in his new role as a TV commentator over here he is excellent – very shrewd, and often drily funny. I think history will judge him as one of the best England captains, but I don’t think he’ll mind if the equally excellent Vaughan takes some of the credit that is rightfully his. As he showed with the timing of his retirement earlier this summer, unselfishness was one of his greatest virtues.”Tuesday, September 21, 20049.20pm – The joy of cricketWhen 2004 is done and dusted, one enduring cricketing image from the year will stand out for me: Andrew Flintoff smiling. Smiling after being out for 99; smiling after being hit on the body by a short ball; smiling after a catch is dropped off his bowling; and smiling after hitting one of those sixes that, in their exuberance, are quite of a piece with that smile of his. Flintoff plays his cricket with a delight that is, like delight always is, infectious. The man enjoys playing; but does his enjoyment help him become a better cricketer? And does it help his team become a better side?I believe it does. I was reading Malcolm Gladwell’s wonderful book, , recently, and in it he describes a fascinating experiment carried out by the social scientists Gary Wells and Richard Petty. This is how the experiment went, in Gladwell’s words:

A large group of students were recruited for what they were told was a market-research study by a company making high-tech headphones. They were each given a headset and told that the company wanted to test to see how well they worked when the listener was in motion – dancing up and down, say, or moving his or her head. All of the students listened to songs by Linda Ronstadt and the Eagles, and then heard a radio editorial arguing that tuition at their university should be raised from its present level of [US]$587 to $750.

A third were told that while they listened to the taped radio editorial they should nod their heads vigorously up and down. The next third were told to shake their heads from side to side. The final third were the control group. They were told to keep their heads still. When they were finished, all the students were given a short questionnaire, asking them questions about the quality of the songs and the effect of the shaking. Slipped in at the end was the question the experimenters really wanted an answer to: “What do you feel would be a appropriate dollar amount for undergraduate tuition per year?”

The students who kept their heads still were unmoved by the editorial. The tuition amount that they guessed was appropriate was $582 – or just about where tuition was already. Those who shook their heads from side to side as they listened to the editorial … disagreed strongly with the proposed increase. They wanted tuition to fall on average to $467 a year. Those who were told to nod their heads up and down, meanwhile, found the editorial very persuasive. They wanted tuition to rise, on average, to $646.

Thus, the mere act of nodding their heads made the students who did so agree, subliminally, with the advertorial, with the opposite effect on the ones who shook their heads. The physical expression of an emotion actually brought about the emotion itself – even when it began as a meaningless gesture, something they did because they were asked to. Of course, they would all have rationalised it differently, but they allowed their opinions to be shaped not by thinking about the problem, but by acting out a reaction to it that they did not probably feel to begin with.Interestingly, Gladwell quotes Wells and Petty as concluding that “television advertisements would be most effective if the visual display created repetitive vertical movements of the television viewers’ heads (eg, bouncing ball).” My lesson of the day from this: never try to convince someone of something while they are watching a tennis match.Gladwell, after also discussing how emotions are contagious – when someone smiles at you, you instinctively smile back, don’t you? – sums it up beautifully. He writes:

We normally think of the expressions on our face as the reflection of our inner state. I feel happy, so I smile. I feel sad, so I frown. Emotion goes inside-out. Emotional contagion, though, suggests that the opposite is also true. If I can make you smile, I can make you happy. If I can make you frown, I can make you sad. Emotion, in this sense, goes outside-in.

Well, Flintoff makes me smile every time I see him strut his stuff, and you can bet that his team-mates feel the same way. (Another of my favourite players, Adam Gilchrist, also smiles a lot on the field.) There are plenty of social-science studies that demonstrate that our efficiency and productivity are higher when we are happy than when we are sad. Happiness is infectious, and self-reinforcing, and you will often find that the happiest team in the business is the most successful – and that victory and joy do not necessarily come in that order.We all know that confidence and diffidence can be self-reinforcing. You feel confident, you play better, that gives you more confidence, and so on. (This is why that term “momentum” is used so often in a cricket context.) But what do you do when you are in the middle of a bad run, with the losses piling up, and self-belief getting progressively less? Well, what Wells’s and Petty’s study, along with many others, indicates is that a happy, confident could be a useful start to a resurgence. What you show outside, you may well begin to feel inside, and that could, in turn, begin to affect the way you play. (This does not mean, of course, that wandering around with a goofy smile is enough; you also need talent and hard work, along with that positive attitude, and Flintoff and Gilchrist are a delightful confluence of all three.)I am not very knowledgable about English cricket, but from a distance it seems to me that they have turned a corner in the last couple of years – and the difference in their approach has preceded the upturn in their performances. Stressed-out Nasser Hussain replaced as captain by chilled-out Michael Vaughan, crabby Darren Gough giving way to shiny happy Flintoff. When Flintoff won the ICC One-Day Player of the Year award recently, he thanked Vaughan for allowing him to . With a player like Flintoff in his ranks, who plays cricket with such obvious joy and relish, that is quite the smartest thing that any captain could have done.Amit Varma is managing editor of Wisden Cricinfo in India.Write to 23 YardsClick here for the 23 Yards homepageMore 23 Yards
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We should judge journalists only on the basis of they write, and not their biodata More.Beating up little brother, and harsh Indian fans
Indian cricketers, and other Indian sportsmen, are constantly vilified and denigrated by their “fans”. Why is this so? More.Hayden’s salvo and the angry fat man
Was Matthew Hayden’s salvo at subcontinental batsmen just an attempt at mental disintegration, or was there some truth to it? Was Murali’s brace like Perl, the programming language? What if the fat man is too fat for you? More.Do the right thing. But what?
Is there a moral dimension to cricket distinct from the laws of the game? If so, what is it? More.Murali’s redemption, and our arrogance
Muttiah Muralitharan has proved, with his new documentary, that his action is clean. But what does the controversy reveal about us? Was our judgment based on the available evidence, or on the biases we held? More.Mind games, performance enhancers and the huddle
Twenty20 cricket is good for the sport, and for the commerce of it. What about performance-enhancing drugs? More.A trophy on the mantelpiece, or a pot of gold?
A constant conflict in cricket is that between the long-term interests of a team, and their short-term needs. Generally, the short term wins out. More.Towards a posthuman sport, or a better world?
Should we fiddle with biology? Will genetic engineering make us lose our humanity, or will it improve our lives immeasurably? And what are its repurcussions for sport? More.Current players v past players, and gene doping
There is a strong argument that standards of excellence have risen in just about every single department of every single sport. Are the dominant sportsmen of today, then, the greatest ever? Also, gene doping. More.Headless Ganguly and the fair and lovely worm
A blog of the India-Pakistan match on July 25, 2004. Some great cricket, and fairly unbelievable commentary. More.Twenty20 to the rescue?
Twenty20 cricket draws in spectators and has revitalised cricket. It might also be the key to globalising the game. More.Is there a crisis in cricket?
Has the balance of the game shifted, with the bat dominating ball, as we enter “a batting bull market”? Or is that just alarmism, with bowlers impacting the game as never before, and ensuring that 77% of all Tests end in results? More.

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