Inside Indian T20

Written by Barbara Kellerman
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How an author guided a T20 cricket team to championship glory

WHAT IS most important while selecting a good cricket team? How do you value a cricket team in a league that has not been launched yet? These are some of the questions Ravi Ramu and his friends had to find answers to after bidding for one of the teams in the inaugural Karnataka Premier league in 2009. The answers to these questions form the crux of the book Inside Indian T20. The book penned by Ramu takes readers into a journey of the process of setting up a T20 squad in a nascent league (KPL) and leading it to victory in the first season. Says Ramu: “We started with just an idea to bid for a team. We had no idea about the returns from the investment from the venture and whether it would be a success. We decided to take a gamble and it paid off.” He adds, “I have worked in many management roles across the globe and was initially wary on how managing a team would be. It has been a great experience and I have enjoyed it thoroughly. It has helped me take to the T20 format of the game as well.” Ramu is a keen follower of the game and felt that a side needs a good captain and a coach. “They need to be people who would rally their players and make everyone give their best. I wanted a captain and coach who have the correct attitude to lead.” “This holds true in a cricket field and a corporate office, ” says Ramu. Giving an example from the cricket field, he contends, “Mike Brearley was a mediocre player, but an excellent captain. He had the knack of managing a team well and getting results from the players. That is the perquisite for any captain.” Ramu says that he met his players only once in the course of the tournament. “I do not think owners have a role to play in how a team performs on field. That is the job of the coach and the captain.” “I feel that it is very important that every player should be in his own zone, when he is on the field,” says Ramu He adds, “I do not agree with the oft repeated statement that cricket is a team game.” “It is not a team game like football or hockey, where you need passes, good saves and a team effort to do a good job. In cricket, when you are batting or bowling, you are playing an individual game. The team does not determine how you bat or bowl as an individual,” says Ramu. The main problem that the Indian team has faced in its slump over the last 18 months has been the lack of a communicative coach and captain, says Ramu. “You need someone who makes you comfortable in the zone or coaxes you into it. That does not seem to be happening, which is a major cause of concern.”

Read 4510 timesLast modified on Friday, 31 May 2013 08:50
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