Sunday, November 16, 2014

Great Sporting Moments - IV: Srikanth beats Lin Dan.. Really?


+Faking News  or +The UnReal Times  would not have blinked twice to use the headlines "Lin Dan beaten in the finals of the china Open in China by an Indian called K Srikanth - not the cricketer". But that is what happened. The enormity of this achievement is quite staggering, imagine vishwanath anand being beaten in a speed chess match in chennai by Liren Ding of China. Or Roger Federer being beaten in the finals of the Swiss Open by David Goffin of Belgium. Why Liren Ding and David Goffin you ask, these players are the number 22 ranks in their respective sports world rankings. K Srikanth is before the Lin Dan win the #22 ranked badminton player in the world.
The match was just after the high of Saina Nehwal winning the China Open womens singles, the first China Open finals where there was no chinese finalist. But what the crowd had come to see was the legend - Super Dan put on an exhibition. The commentators Morton Frost and Gillian Clarke also were gleefully waiting for Lin Dan to turn it on. But what followed was a superlative performance by Srikanth. Not only did he match Lin Dan in defence, he out manouvered him in attack. There were a few uncharacteristic unforced errors from Lin Dan, there were a few net shots that he normally wouldn't have missed, but take nothing away from Srikanth, He matched Lin Dan shot per shot and used half smashes and angles to such effect, that I saw Lin Dan struggling in his movement. Lin Dan is probably the most smooth mover on the court in the history of badminton. He glides towards the shuttle and seems to have so much time to decide which shot to play. That same Lin Dan got wrong footed twice by Srikanth's guile when he returned the short serve. 
To be honest, this was not Lin Dan at his best, I have seen matches where Lin Dan was mercurial at worst and Superhuman at best. His youtube show reel is full of incredible rallies and points. But his play against Srikanth was not his worst either. He was moving well, playing his great shots but not often enough. He didn't attack as much as he should have. His deadly down the line smashes were too few and far in between. Srikanth to his credit has a brilliant all round game and if he develops his strength and fitness will be a top 10 player shortly. These are exciting times for Indian Badminton. To end with an amazing fact, the country with the most number of players in the top 100 is not china, not korea but India..... 


Thursday, November 06, 2014

Great Sporting Stories- III: Yiannis Kouros


Yiannis Kouros who? I was doing some reading up on marathon timings when Dennis Kimetto smashed the world record on Sep 28th at the Berlin Marathon. He did it in 2:02:57. So while reading about the progression of marathon running times, I came about a link on ultra-marathons and while going through the best timings, the name of Yiannis Kouros kept coming up. What was more remarkable about his records were not just the number of them but he had done this in the 1980's. Werent the runners of today much more advanced than those 30 years ago.
EventRecordAthleteDatePlaceRef
50 km Road2:43:38 Thompson Magawana (RSA)12 April 1988South Africa Claremont, South Africa[3]
50 km Track2:48:06 Jeff Norman (GBR)7 June 1980United Kingdom Timperley, United Kingdom[3]
100 km Road6:13:33 Takahiro Sunada (JPN)21 June 1998Japan Yubetsu-Saroma-Tokoro, Japan[3]
100 km Track6:10:20 Donald Ritchie (GBR)28 Oct 1978United Kingdom London, United Kingdom[3]
100 miles Road11.46.37 Yiannis Kouros (GRE)7/8 Nov 1984United States Queens New York, USA[3]
100 miles Track11.28.03 Oleg Kharitonov (RUS)20 Oct 2002United Kingdom London, United Kingdom[3]
100 miles Indoor12.56.13 Donald Ritchie (GBR)3/4 Feb 1990United Kingdom Milton Keynes, United Kingdom[3]
6H Road92.188 km Tomasz Chawawko (POL)7 Mar 2004Netherlands Stein, Netherland[3]
6H Track97.200 km Donald Ritchie (GBR)28 Oct 1978United Kingdom London, United Kingdom[3]
6H Indoor93.247 km Denis Zhalybin (RUS)7/8 Feb 2003Russia Moscow, Russia[3]
12H Road162.543 km Yiannis Kouros (GRE)7 Nov 1984United States New York, USA[3]
12H Track162.400 km Yiannis Kouros (GRE)15/16 Mar 1985France Montauban, France[3]
12H Indoor140.844 km Aleksander Korotkov (RUS)21/22 Feb 2004Finland Lohja Citymarket, Finland[3]
24H Road290.221 km Yiannis Kouros (GRE)2/3 May 1998Switzerland Basel, Switzerland[3]
24H Track303.506 km Yiannis Kouros (GRE)4/5 Oct 1997Australia Adelaide, Australia[3]
24H Indoor257.576 km Nikolai Safin (RUS)27/28 Feb 1993Russia Podolsk, Russia[3]
48H Road433.095 km Yiannis Kouros (GRE)2/3 May 1998Switzerland Basel, Switzerland[3]
48H Track473.495 km Yiannis Kouros (GRE)3–5 May 1996France Surgeres, France[3]
48H Indoor426.178 km Tony Mangan (IRL)16 Mar 2007Czech Republic Brno, Czech Republic[3]
  I decided to dig a bit deeper and came across this amazing documentary on the man. (bottom of post) What an incredible story. This man was rightly known as the "Running God" in Greece and the successor to Pheidippides - the ancient greek hero who ran from Marathon to Athens to deliver news of a war victory. Yiannis Kouros was born in a poor greek family where at birth his father suspected that he was illegitimate and hence shunned him. He received no compensatory love from his mother or older siblings as well. Yiannis channeled his energies into sport - athletics. He would hang around the sports stadium all the time since he loathed going home. He was a loner and continues to be. His calling came when he read about a race from Athens to Sparta (246km) and he wanted to run it since he thought that a Greek should rightfully win that race. He not just won, he decimated the competition. He finished the race in 20 hours, 3 hours faster than the next competitor. They called it a fluke, a possessed man who could do this but once in his life. Next year he ran it even faster 20:25 again 3 hours 15 mins faster than the runner up. That timing in 1984 has still not been broken till today. THe 2014 winner ran it in 22:29 about 2 hours slower than what yiannis ran. Post that Yiannis has broken and held every long distance or time specified records there is. If you look at the table above he doesnt have the records at distances shorter than 100 miles. That is deliberate. Yiannis considers ultra running to be anything above 100 miles, anything below that he says is just not challenging. He feels at 100 miles and beyond, the body becomes "clinically dead" and the mind takes over. Beyond this distance is what makes runners unique. He refused to run anything below this distance or below 12 hours. A unique man who I feel is akin to Jonathan Livingston Seagull - someone who wants to explore the outer limits of his body and mind.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l7UzmKxe3Xk

Wednesday, November 05, 2014

Greatest Sporting Stories- II: Goran Ivanisevic Wimbeldon 2001


1992 Wimbeldon .. A 21 year old croat was making waves at the all england club. He had the best serve on the tour and with his attacking play, was an exciting prospect. His game was made for grass. The ultra fast and precise serve which skidded off the surface made him very dangerous. Ivan Lendl, Stefan edberg and Pete Sampras found that out in 1992, all victims to Goran. Ivanisevic was at his first wimbeldon finals playing against another volatile youngster -A Nick Boliterri academy prodigy, Andre Aggasi who was the world best baseliner and returner of serve. But wimbeldon was Goran's surface, he was born to play here. The finals were meant to be a formality for Goran, he already pictured his hands around the trophy and had probably come up with some humorous lines to regale the crowd with in his winners acceptance speech. But the forces conspired against invanisevic that day, he couldnt convert break points in the 5th set, he double faulted twice in the last game of the match. He had served 39 aces in that match, against agassi's 37 of the entire tournament, but his serve had let Goran down when he needed it most. He lost and Andre agassi shed tears on the grass while Goran waited at the net like a zombie. He couldnt believe this was happening and till today doesnt recall the winners ceremony. Apparently for months after, Goran used to wake up screaming at night, that trophy was his and he had given it away. He would reach the final twice again but both times a much better player stood on the other side of the net - Pete Sampras. So Goran ended up with 3 runners up plates.
2001 wimbeldon: A 30 year old ivanisevic was 125th in the world and that year had the dubious distinction of being disqualified in a match as he bad broken all the rackets he had and didnt have any left to play with. The umpire was left with no choice but to smirk and award the match to Hyung-Taik Lee. He had string of early losses, a shoulder injury and in his own words his tennis strokes had lost that "sound" when the ball hit his racket. In fact he admitted that he was playing tennis since "I dont have anything else to do". He didnt even qualify for the main draw at the Aus Open and he probably wisely gave Roland Garros a miss.
But the stiff british members of the all england club in a gorgeous momentary lapse of reason gave him a wildcard entry to wimbeldon, an act of pity perhaps to let an ageing former finalist have a few more days in the sun (they probably laughed at the word sun in the context of wimbeldon weather). So Goran did arrive at SW19 and slowly but surely got the "sound" back in his racket. He beats 3 former no 1's - Carlos Moya, Andy Roddick and Marat Safin on his way to the semi-finals. The 2001 wimbeldon had already achieved legendary status as the titan of center court Pete Sampras was beaten by a pony tailed, rebellious yet effeminate looking Swiss. So Goran is playing the greatest British hope to lift the trophy - Tim Henman. He starts well but loses the 3rd set 6-0 and is making error after error when suddenly the heavens open and rain delays play. Goran comes back a changed man and breaks British hearts. Divine intervention?
The finals is now with the previous years losing finalist Patrick Rafter - one of the last pure bred serve and volleyers on the tour and a genuinely nice guy whom everyone liked. But really a wildcard going on to win wimbeldon - was that really possible. Any other player and this fairy tale would have made sense, but this was Goran - a man who played at any point in time against 5 opponents, the umpire, the crowd, the ball boys, the court and himself - his own words by the way.
The match is a see-saw of emotions a heady cocktail of emotions. I was watching this match from my hotel room transfixed for 4 hours. I couldnt believe the drama. After losing the 4th set to Rafter, I was seeing the old story - Goran falling apart, line calls, tiffs with umpires, net cords etc. He somehow hung on and at 7-7 in the 5th set, he broke rafter. But it was Goran serving for the match, that had as much certainity as an episode of Game of thrones. Did he really serve a 2nd serve ace down 15-30 in the most important game of his life? Was he starting to cry on court at 40-30 - matchpoint? Did he just serve double faults at both his matchpoints - Crazy bastard. Rafter was just a mute spectator, there was nothing much that he could do. The battle was between Goran and Goran. His 4th match-point and poor rafter nets a return (probably deliberately) and thats it Goran collapses in a heap of relief and tears. I was privileged to have witnessed a great sporting moment. Afterward Goran said that he would probably had gone to the north pole or hung himself off a bridge if he had lost. Rafter himself graciously said "All in all I am happy Goran won, otherwise he would have killed himself"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_hECNfj5G_s

Saturday, November 01, 2014

Great Sporting Stories - 1: Shun Fujimoto


Shun Fujimoto.... There are so many great stories from the olympics that picking out one is close to impossible. But one story which stands out in terms of the selflessness, grit through pain and a monumental comeback is Shun Fujimoto in the 1976 Montreal games. Going into the games Japan were the doyens of mens gymnastics winning the gold in the last 4 olympic games (1960-1972) in the overall team competition. He was part of a strong japanese team that was expected to do continue the tradition of victory in the montreal olympics. The former USSR team were their main threat and infact was leading by a point when disaster struck Fujimoto. Towards the end of his floor routine, he had a bad landing and broke his knee. "I felt air in my knee" is how he describes it later. But fujimoto just grimaced and went back to his chair not telling his team or his coach the extent of his injury. His best events were coming up and he did not want to burden the team by quitting. Now a knee injury for a gymnast is as bad as they get, but luckily for Shun, the pommel horse and the rings required a greater share of hands and core. He performed through the pommel horse in excruciating pain and scored a 9.7. Next up was the rings, an event which he considered to be amongst his stronger events. What really worried him was the small matter of the 10 feet dismount with somersaults and body twists. He took to the rings and gave the performance of a lifetime. His dismount was perfect, but as he landed, he dislocated his knee but ignored the pain to raise his hands and smile to the judges before collapsing in agony. He then hobbled off to a 9.7 score which was the highest score for that apparatus. Inspired by his sacrifice, the japanese team went on to retain gold. Shun fujimoto became a legend of courage and selflessness in japan.

Roger Federer - The End of a beautiful Tennis Era.

It was the eventuality that no true tennis fan wanted to really confront. But finally it happened, Roger Federer announced his retirement la...