Verma's Perspective
Saturday, August 2, 2014
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
ATTENTION
Dear Readers,
Please note that I have shifted my weblogs to http://someshverma.com/.
I shall continue to write regularly on that portal from now on. Thank you so much for coming here. Thank you for coming here so far and expecting you on the new location.
Yours Truly,
Somesh Verma
PS: On the second thought, there could be random posts appearing in these columns once in a while...
Please note that I have shifted my weblogs to http://someshverma.com/.
I shall continue to write regularly on that portal from now on. Thank you so much for coming here. Thank you for coming here so far and expecting you on the new location.
Yours Truly,
Somesh Verma
PS: On the second thought, there could be random posts appearing in these columns once in a while...
Thursday, January 19, 2012
Confessions of a Madhesi
Yours truly has been affected, both emotionally and ethically, with two cases this week.
Case 1: Most of the people who subscribe to daily newspapers were shocked while having their morning tea, reading of the arrest of Former Minister and current lawmaker Shyam Sundar Gupta (Longer power cut hours has made sure not many can watch Television). The reason was simple, somebody as powerful as a former minister getting nabbed in course of investigation of high-profile abduction case. This was certainly no storm in a teacup.
Case 2: Government decided to appoint Nagendra Jha as Director General of Survey Department. Not many have forgotten that the man in question is the same person who has been accused in past, of giving Rs 800,000 to the family of late Hindu Yuva Sangh leader Kashi Tiwari. That was no gift but an offer of payment to keep their mouth shut and not to drag then Land Reforms and Management Minister Prabhu Sah into Tiwari’s murder case. Minister Sah was the prime accused in the murder case. Now Mr. Jha is the same person, who, during his tenure as Chief District Officer of Parsa was held by the locals of Birgunj while using a stolen vehicle last year.
Tuesday, January 17, 2012
A Cause to Worry?
“Hello”
The word is enough to startle you, especially when it’s loud enough and you’re not expecting to meet anyone, walking through the capital’s streets. Your eyes are on the pavement that you’re walking and suddenly you lift your head. It was a stranger, not even remotely close to anyone I’ve seen or met.
In a matter of split second, I realized that he was not calling me, and had stopped another passer-by. But then, as I passed by, I happened to be close enough to hear what they were speaking.
“Nepali blue film, dai,” the caller was saying, carrying a bunch of CDs in his hand.
“What? Have I gone nuts?” Thoughts raced across my head.
This is broad daylight, and this is no lonely alley. For God’s sake, this is pavement in front of Kathmandu Mall, opposite Tundikhel, and has public transport stand, where thousands of people and hundreds of vehicles stop. It is one of the busiest streets of Kathmandu during daytime.
But this was for real. The guy, with worn look but agile movement, was trying to convince another gentleman, perhaps in his Mid-20s, to buy porn.
“Nepali ho dai, ramro chha. Kati bideshi hernu hunchha,” he was saying. (Meaning: It is Nepali and is good. How much of foreign ones would you watch?)
The prospective buyer, who apparently was as shocked as yours truly was, shook his head in refusal and walked off. But yours truly was too shocked to move. Feet stuck in cement. How can this be? I turned back (by then had already passed both), tried to have a glance. This did not look like a joke. He meant business.
This is was not a shop, and there was no hush-hush conversation. He was speaking normally, as if selling socks or other clothing items, just like many others in this pavement do.
Million thoughts raced my mind till then. I also thought – “Why did he not ask me?” – just as I was trying to spot any police nearby. But I hardly would recognize one, even if I saw one. I was blank. Having made a few circles around him, I tried to take a picture with my mobile device. Not to show him in public, but to remind myself, if at all it was real.
I needed some time to cool down. Have a coffee. To reflect upon what was happening. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, walk that street. Children, young adults, women. He was trying to speak to almost everyone.
“Is it legal now?” I was thinking, answering to myself “Of course not”.
“Nobody stops it? Where are those, who talk of market regulation and raid on shops and eateries.” Of course, no answers…
Reminded me of a story I’d read in Nepali Times (English weekly) some time earlier, about how children are exposed to pornography at early age. Maybe last year. Maybe year before that. Luckily, I found it on the internet. It was in the issue #507 (18 – 24 JUNE 2010).
It reads:
[A ten-year-old student was throwing up, complaining of headaches, and refused to go to school for days. Unable to identify any physical causes for the child’s distress, his father (a child counselor) sat him down and asked him if anything out of the ordinary had happened. After much coaxing, the boy revealed that his computer teacher had shown him pornographic images online.]
The same story also quoted an NGO CWIN (Child Workers in Nepal) data saying 79 percent of young Internet users had seen offensive materials online, either accidently or intentionally. It also talked about parents not knowing what their children were viewing in the World Wide Web. It was an interesting story as it said 2 percent of the child respondents (1,430 children aged 12 to 18) said porn sites were among their favorites.
It would be interesting for most adults my age that during our growing up years, we heard of so many stories of dingy rooms in some areas of Kathmandu showing pornographic movies. Those days, it was talked in the hush-hush tones. Those were early 90s. Move over 20th century, this is second decade of 21st century and whatever you thought of as clandestine is ready to be hurled down your throat. That too, with a lot of noise…
Thankfully, yours truly realized, he doesn’t have children. If he had, he would be worried… Very Very worried…
Saturday, January 7, 2012
New Year, New Hopes…
The New Year
has begun for sports sector in slightly unconventional way. Right on the second
day of the brand new year, we saw an exchange of blows on a football pitch. Yes,
don't be surprised… A football pitch. If you witnessed the players in that
exchange, you'd be forgiven for thinking that the players had one drink too
many, while bidding adieu to the past year.
Some went on
to call it undesirable, while some chose to ignore it. Correct me if I am
wrong, but there is no place for violence in sports. I've never ever been able
to understand if there could be 'desire' for such a thing. It has to be
condemned in the strongest of words, and actions. If your children want to be a
football player in future and if they saw it, tell them this is exactly what
they should avoid on a pitch, and off the pitch too. Hopefully, it was a
one-off incident and we don't see it replicated in future. Five red cards in a
match involving top teams cannot be a matter of pride for any.
A few days before
footballers – along with them their clubs and their governing authority –
shamed 'the beautiful game' in a beautiful city called Pokhara, some cricketers
were trying to showcase their talent.
Nepal's
cricket coach, Pubudu Dassanayake was on his mission to find new talent. He
has, in a few months that he's taken charge of the team, said that Nepal needs
more players playing at the highest level. He witnessed some players at the
camps held in Pokhara and Bhairahawa.
"From
what I saw at the camps, the players look very promising," Dassanayake
says. "The good thing is, some of them have raw talent, which can be
developed." Now he wants to bring these players to the capital next week
and have a separate camp for some of these players selected from the camp.
This could,
perhaps be the shot-in-the-arm that Nepali cricket has been looking for. Having
raw, promising talent being groomed at a camp will effectively increase the
player pool for national selection. There is hardly any better sight in cricket
than a raw fast bowler running in and bowling at full throttle or a young
batsman cutting or pulling short balls with a gay abandon, without paying any
respect to their opponents.
It should be
noted here that Pubudu acquired a speed gun – machine that measures speed of
the ball – when his wife was coming to Nepal from Canada. Now this doesn't only
showcase his commitment to Nepali cricket, but also tells us that we will be
able to know exactly what speed our bowlers bowl at. We don't have to talk
about the relative speed of our bowlers anymore. The speed gun was used in
these camps.
"The
fastest bowler I found was clocking 75 miles an hour. And he was a raw
talent," Dassanayake says, "With a fitness regimen in place, he should
be able to bowl at 80 mph."
This means
we could now have bowlers bowling at a lively pace, pushing the opposition on
the backfoot, early on.
Interestingly,
some players that were in the national scheme at some point, Akash Gupta, Antim
Thapa and Dipesh Khatri have also been respotted for future. Akash, despite
being a free flowing batsman, had been fed up of the system and had removed
himself from reckoning. Now that these players have a chance to be back,
there's every possibility that more talents would be positive towards cricket.
At the same time, those players who think national team is their birthright,
may be shaken to perform. It's always good to have healthy competition within
the pool.
Plans are to
have a separate bowlers' camp and a tournament involving 50 best players of
Nepal sometime later this month, followed by a trip to India for the team to
play with local teams. Now it's up to Cricket Association to see it as a cost,
or an investment.
Whatever be
the case, yours truly sees it as new hopes emerging in the New Year. The year,
when we are to play in T20 World Cup Qualifiers…
Saturday, December 31, 2011
Have a start, got to score…
End of the year is always a time for stock taking. What we
achieved in the year; Where we failed; How much could have been done and How
much is left.
But it's also a time to think, what we could do more. As a
year ends, another one begins. That's the beauty of time. That's the beauty of
sport. After every year, another one has to follow. After every match, despite
failures, another is always in waiting. Life goes on.
But some years leave their mark. Some delible, some
indelible. Nepali sport saw a few of those. Both of the popular team sport,
Football and Cricket, saw changes. Both sport got new coaches, foreign bred,
tested. Graham Roberts in Football and Pubudu Dassanayake in Cricket. Both
aggressive in their own styles. Both deserving respect because of their past
deeds. And if initial performances – especially the mindset of players – are
anything to go by, both look capable enough to take their respective teams to
another level.
Coaches come and go. Their contribution is judged with
performance of their team, as long as they stay. But one thing that has long
term effect on the sport is its infrastructure. And that, thankfully, is likely
to change with the beginning of football's National League.
All Nepal Football Association (ANFA) could not have chosen a
better time for the league, as it falls, right at the end of one year and start
of another. This could be the best transition in football that we have seen
yet. It has been long that centralized structure of football has been
criticized in Nepal and rightly so. The game's structure has hardly given much
to the players from out of the valley to ply their trade. Since the leagues,
for years, have been played only among clubs of the capital, it has made the
players from countryside toil harder to make the cut. Likewise, the fan base of
the game has also dwindled. This has been seen several times in Dashrath
stadium, which has had to host close to hundred matches a year. Apart from
matches where some big clubs play, spectators have refused to come to the stadium.
One visit to Dharan, where Budha Subba Gold Cup is held, and Pokhara, where
Sahara Cup is held, is good enough to show you how much football is loved
outside capital. The fan base is there, and unless they see their teams playing
at the biggest stage possible at the national level, European football will
take them away from Nepali football.
Although ANFA hails it as the first ever National League,
football pundits would remember that such similar tourneys were held in 1998
and 1999. In these two editions, four clubs from mofussil played with the
biggest clubs in Nepal. Valley
Sporting from Pokhara and Munal Club from Jhapa had participated in 1998. In
1999, The Boys Group from Dharan and another club from Rupandehi participated
in 1999. The Police Club took the title on both occasions, but if you ask
players from these four clubs about the best experience they've had on football
field, they'd tell you these tourneys meant a lot for them. They played with
who's who of Nepali football, and after the matches, they came back richer in
experience, skill and temperament. Everyone associated with the sport will tell
you, there's nothing like playing at the highest level. No matter how much
drills you have, it's nothing compared to match practice.
Mitra Milan Club of Dharan and Sangam from Pokhara have the
potential to change the game forever in Nepal. If they play hard, which
football lovers would want them to, they might register a strong case in favor
of matches being played out of Kathmandu more often. There could be a strong
case of having home and away matches right now, but at least this is a start.
This would be a very good opportunity for football fans in
Pokhara and Butwal to enjoy nation's best footballers showcasing their skills.
It should, but doesn't happen very often in Nepal. So fans, as the New Year
begins, go to the stadia not only to enjoy matches, but to make sure you put up
a strong case that there are venues outside capital for football in Nepal.
The league is being organized outside the valley, since
capital's venues are being readied for AFC Challenge Cup. Hopefully, ANFA
organizes more such tourneys outside, even when the stadia in the capital are
in good shape.
If that happens, we
know for sure, Nepali sport will be happy in the coming years.(This post, unlike other posts on Sports by yours truly, did not appear in anywhere and is exclusive on Verma's Perspective)
Pic courtesy: cricketfootball.com
Thursday, December 29, 2011
Poem? You must be kidding!
Yours truly had never ever attempted a poem, let alone write one. The idea was simple: You should not ruin something you respect. And never ever try to malign the field. Never ever, for a moment, I could see myself up to it. It was sacrosanct, beyond touch, beyond reach.
At the age when you start thinking more about receding hairline than the lines of verse, there has been an attempt. This is a naive, silly attempt and should not be mistaken as anything serious. Whether yours truly tries any further, should not be an issue of speculation. The idea is: Enjoy it, if you can...
At the age when you start thinking more about receding hairline than the lines of verse, there has been an attempt. This is a naive, silly attempt and should not be mistaken as anything serious. Whether yours truly tries any further, should not be an issue of speculation. The idea is: Enjoy it, if you can...
धड्कन
अपने धड्कन को सुना है आजकल ?
घडी सी, टिक-टिक...
मेकानाइज्ड सा, नन-स्टप सा...
कà¤ी न खतम होने वाली, बोरिङ सी धुन कि तरह...
लेकिन अब, दो टिक टिक के बीच का वक्त...
लम्बा होने लगा है...
इन्तजार, अब मुश्किल हो चला है...
(for my babe)
(for my babe)
Saturday, December 24, 2011
If everything goes well…
"If everything goes according to the plan, we might
qualify for the World Cup," said Nepal's cricket coach Pubudu Dassanayake,
in a conversation to yours truly recently, before he was to present his 3-month
plan to Nepal's cricket leaders.
The point that the Sri Lankan born coach means well for
Cricket Nepal could be denied here. For the line is an optimist one. But the
catch, for many, would be the big 'if' present there. Many would say: If
everything went according to the plan, we would have played previous world cup.
For around a decade ago, we were 'readying' ourselves to become the next big
thing in Asian Cricket.
The fact is, not many things went according to the plan. It
was not us, but Afghanistan, that rode that 'elite' bus, becoming the next ODI
team. For there was no plan, on our side. So there was no following it. Promises
were made. But the promises made were not translated into plans.
But now, Cricket Nepal has a coach, who's not just followed
player's manuals, but has gone through modern coach's manual too. And a modern
day coach plans and helps players execute them. It's a regimen he has to lives
through. It's a talk that he has to walk. It's a routine that he has to follow.
Incidentally, Dassanayake's plans coincide with the historic
change in Nepal's cricket. Historic change being the first ever election in
Cricket Association of Nepal. The historic change being a non-cricketer coming
to lead cricket.
And this event itself needs some reflection, ahead of scrutinizing
whether the plans will be executed or not. The sports journalists are like any
other journalists, except that they're not cynical. We might be skeptic, but
cynicism eludes us. At worst, we still believe in guarded optimism. No wonder
yours truly has taken pride in saying, "Sports page is the one that
records achievements. The front page is full of failures."
To reuse the phrase, 'If everything goes according to the
plan', Cricket Nepal will now be led by Tanka Angbuhang for four more years.
President of CAN has already told media about 'his' plans, which he expects to
carry out during his tenure. And the plans include, National Cricket Academy as
well as development of cricket infrastructure across the country, among several
others. These are noble plans, even if we were to say they're not new. Oft
repeated, they've just not been put into proper implementation.
The point here would not be contesting the plans, but the
manner in which the first ever election at CAN happened. If you ask Pawan
Agrawal, the Presidential candidate who withdrew at the last moment, he'd tell
you, "I withdrew, but I would continue working for cricket." He might
also tell you, the cricketers will get a chance to lead CAN, when the next
election comes, or if the present committee fails.
But the insiders will tell you, what kind of people went to
convince Agrawal to withdraw his candidacy. How some other big names were
sidelined, prior to the election. Here, we would not even go to the extent of
talking about the venue chosen for election. Some would see a plan there, but that's
not the point.
Despite the start, which obviously has not send good
signals, Angbuhang has some credentials that can help. At 30 odd years, he's
young and comes from a regimented background not much different from modern day
cricketer's drills. He's got an organization that could back him to the core.
Not having cricketing background could also help at times, as he would be free
of bias that comes from representing certain regions.
He has plans, he says, which obviously is a good start. But
then, he has to realize, not everything goes according to the plan.
If everything went according to the plan, Sachin Tendulkar
would have become a decent medium pacer (Given his height and the fact that, at
young age, he registered himself to a fast bowling academy).
And if everything went according to plan, Angbuhang would
have become Sports Minister and not CAN President (Given the background he has).
About Dassanayake's plans? Well, we'd definitely know in 3
months whether they work or not!
(PS: The write-up appeared in Yours Truly's weekly sports column - OFFSIDE - in The Kathmandu Post, on 24th December, 2011)
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
The Will to Win
"Winning isn't everything; it's the only thing."
Perhaps the adage exemplifies how sports changed in the
latter half of the 20th century.
Attributed to UCLA coach Henry Russell Sanders and/or American
football coach Vince Lombardi, the saying exemplifies how professionally sports
began to be taken post 1950s.
There was a clear shift from the Olympic spirit from then
on, which preached us that 'The most important thing is not to win but to take
part, just as the most important thing in life is not the triumph but the
struggle '. While the Olympic spirit gave us a 'chance to celebrate our shared
humanity', Sanders and Lombardi taught us how to be 'winners'.
This line made the marketers (read mega brands) crazy, and
the players; along with them the administrators, and also the fans, the
enthusiasts. Players, for their wins, needed more money, administrators needed more
money to sell the sport to mega brands, and mega brands wanted to collect all
the money from the fans. The fans, paying more than ever now, wanted result of
their payment in the form of wins and were desperate for that. And the cycle
continued. The only problem was it happened mostly in the nations that were
ahead of us, in terms of development.
As we lay behind in development, so were our sports administrators.
They found an excuse for their lethargy, saying 'at least we are participating'.
We took the bait, we felt that's true. We knew we deserved better, but we were
ready to wait… eternally.
But now, with the turn of the century and reach of media,
thing are no more same. Tiger Woods' failing marriage is watched as eagerly in
Nepal as in USA. Globalization has made sure same things are offered on platter
everywhere. It has made sure Nepal has F1 enthusiasts, despite knowing hosting
such races in the country would require a miracle of gigantic proportions.
With the change, demands of the fans have changed. They no
longer want their players to lose, nowhere. They back their players, so that
they finish top of the podium.
They become disappointed when their cricket and football
team lose semi-finals on the same day (ACC T20 Cup and SAFF Championship). They
also resort to throwing stones at opponents, in hope and in frustration. Unpardonable,
but something that needs to be understood... The administrators may need to
improve security, but they also need to understand that wins actually help in
these cases.
For that, it needs to be instilled in the players that they
can win. If Nepali footballers can play good enough to be in semi-final and
dominate possession, they can surely win.
Till now our performance shows that: If points were given
for ball possession, our side would edge out many, except perhaps the world cup
winning Spanish side. Likewise, if points were given for crowd presence (and
missiles hurled by them to the visiting teams), Nepal would edge out Australia
(and perhaps, India – unless the match is played in Eden Gardens).
The belief, the push for the win was not visible from the
players' body language – both in football and cricket. Their shoulders drooped
with every advancing moment, fear evident on their faces. Winners prowl with
pride and not crawl in fear.
We saw New Zealand side beating Australia in Australia after
a gap of 26 years. For these many years, they could not, since they did not
have enough belief.
One should note that we have teams better than what the
results has shown us, in both the games. And we need results now to prove the
skill, the class they have.
Before new lines are written in these columns, we are likely
to have new executive committee of Cricket Association of Nepal, following its
first ever election. Whoever leads it, regardless of the political affiliation,
he will have to work on the will to win for the players. Sooner, than later…
Underdeveloped and developing may not be excuse anymore.
Some insiders say, CAN has more money in its coffers than Sri Lankan Cricket
Board. And Sri Lanka, we know, have been the world champions.
Winning isn't everything. The will to win is the only thing.
Saturday, December 3, 2011
The 'F' Factor
2001: An important year in
history of Nepali sport, especially cricket. The year was to change how cricket
was viewed in Nepal. As Kathmandu played host to Youth Asia Cup (later termed
as ACC U-19 Cup), the home team defeated Malaysia in the final, with Roy Dias –
former Test Cricketer from Sri Lanka – in charge of young boys that were to
form a core for the senior team later.
As Malaysian Colts faced Nepali
boys in the final, the Malaysian coach – incidentally a Sri Lankan – told yours truly, during the innings break, "It’s difficult for my boys playing
against a good team and such a huge crowd. When they play at home, not more
than 100-150 people watch them."
That quote sounded like a
forfeit already, although half of the match still remained. Indeed, the size of
the crowd at the Tribhuvan University Cricket Ground was many folds that the
visiting team had ever seen. And they were vociferous too, making it very clear
whom they supported. Every delivery that Lakpa Lama tweaked, every ball Binod
Das swung, were cheered and made even more difficult to face for the batsmen.
For they all came with a roaring noise in the background. And the Malaysian
team succumbed, handing Roy Dias and his wards the biggest trophy for Nepal
till then.
That is what fans can do. Make
their heroes look larger than life, turn them into invincible beings. The
clapping hands and roar can create doubts in the opponents' mind, making them
falter at the slightest opportunity.
2011: A decade has passed and
Nepal stands at another crossroads. There is a change in the team, the
in-charge is different. New Coach Pubudu Dassanayake is definitely a breed that
the previous coach was not. The players have grown up, and are not slaves to
teenagers' anxiety anymore. And together they are working to modernize their
approach to cricket. They are ready to turn a corner.
But the fans are the same. They
still want the trophy. They still want their players to play like invincibles.
They still are ready to back their team, with their claps, with their roars and
quite possibly, with their aggression.
Sports watchers, across the
world, have a sense of solidarity with their teams. While watching sport, their
blood pressure rises, just like the players, and you can see them yelling even
at the television screen at home. Crowded by identical beings, their behavior
on the ground can go awry at times.
Here, we've seen the best of the
fan factor; we've also seen the worst of it. We've seen them queuing up for
autographs; we've also seen them invading the pitch.
Fans, as they are biased, can be
a double edged sword. They can kill for you, and sometimes they can get you
killed. For every cricket enthusiast, it would be wise to remember the incident
of February last year and the embarrassment it caused us internationally. The
pitch invasion by the crowd during Nepal's match against US in ICC World League
Division 5, would always remain as a dark spot in Nepali cricket. As the match
was disrupted, Nepali cricket was shamed. ICC, following its own investigation,
slapped a conditional ban on hosting matches at the Tribhuvan University
Ground.
None, who love cricket in the
country, would want a repeat. And for that, the onus is on the spectators
themselves. They don't want to be taken as a bad host. For that, they have to
prove that they've matured, just as their players have over the years. They
need to ensure that the opponent team has to be respected, even if they don't
receive moral support. After all, they're also trying to prove themselves, as much
as our team does.
And the day fans start being
just, nobody can stop cricket development in the country. Not even political
interference.
(PS: The write-up appeared in
Yours Truly's weekly sports column - OFFSIDE - in The Kathmandu Post, on 3rd December, 2011)
Photo: taken by self
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