Tuesday, April 3, 2012

A Hockey dream comes true

It was the first, a never witnessed event, in my life – A jam-packed Hockey Stadium at Bangalore. The occasion was the first semi-finals of World Series Hockey between Karnataka Lions v Sher-e-Punjab.

This was the same stadium I have visited umpteen times in the past 8 years or so watching local matches, school-level matches, Super Division League matches but none of them could ever gather a crowd of more than a thousand people. Stars came and left, displayed their class and played their hearts out but the Hockey synthetic turf located in the heart of Bangalore, remained only a driving direction landmark of the ‘Shanthi Nagar’ locality.

The stadium premises from its either gates, its turf, its stands never stopped anyone from moving around anywhere. But today, it had hoards of people from all directions approaching the stadium with a number of check-points and security guards. Traffic police coordinated the vehicular movement and a brightly lit, noisy stadium greeted its audience from quite a distance.

Karnataka Lions had played its 7 matches here but for me it was the first match at the local stadium.

The view inside was unimaginable. A panoramic view of the East stand revealed people, people and only people. Even in the West stand, our friend found it difficult to hold space for us as the crowd kept pouring with little space left to sit. Desperation levels were high in the massive que waiting to clear a security check.

Children, families, young people, middle-aged people, ladies, gents, singles, couples descended down to the stadium in various colors along with their banners. With electrifying music, cheer girls, dhols, drums, LCD display, electronic score-board, it was a dream-come-true setting for a Hockey fan.

Very interestingly, one got a feeling that spectators around were not much educated in Hockey. They just came to a stadium for a family outing – a Hockey match based family outing. Wow!

As the game progressed, I could see the happiness on the face of my friends who visited a sports stadium for the first time in their lives; they would go on to rate it as a memorable life-time experience. I presented a few facts and figures about the game but the crowd cheer, the dhol noise, the DJ made it difficult to communicate with a person sitting next to you.

The first quarter ended at 1-1 and even though Shers got their share of penalty corner early in the match, it looked like an even game.

The local public, apparently, for over the past one month or so, had developed an affinity for Karnataka Lions and had clearly come out in support of the Lions. As and when Lions picked the ball in the midfield and rallied down the flanks, the crowd roared for the Lions. Whenever Shers missed a chance, there was a ‘hoooooo….’ sound from the audience mocking at them. It was reminiscent of World Cup match in MDC Stadium, Delhi where it seemed that the whole stadium, without an exception, was supporting Indian team – a goal by opponents followed pin-drop silence and simple move by Indians created noise, high enough to reach India Gate.

However, amongst all the hulla-gulla, Lions performance kept disappointing as the game progressed. They wasted a couple of simple chances when Shers’ goalkeeper was beaten and only the formality of the last, well-directed push remained.

Shers had deployed a religious man-to-man marking and their defenders made sure that they matched each and every step of Karnataka forwards. Arjun Halappa in the mid-field was rendered ineffective partly because of his tiredness and mostly because the Shers marked him too.

Lions left huge gaps in the mid-field and whenever Lions would approach the opponent circle, they would be greeted by at least 6 Shers meticulously guarding their circle periphery denying any penetration to the Lions.

At one time, one felt how Shers have such superior field coverage – whenever they attacked, the ball was with their unstoppable forwards, and whenever they defended Shers’ defenders outnumbered Lions’ forwards.

Public shouted often at the Lions for making petty mistakes, missing an injection at the Penalty Corner, Lehn never getting a convincing chance but for the Lions, the problems were much deeper – they looked worn-out, fatigued, short of energy, their sprint was loose and non-committal and they preferred to wait for the ball to reach them whereas Shers intercepted and ran away with the steal.

Even though crowd felt very relieved when a Penalty Stroke was defended by Lions’goalkeeper Devesh Chauhan, but Shers were merciless on penalizing the Lions for their mistakes.

With hardly seven odd minutes left and Shers leading 4-1 there was a visible movement in the crowd – fans had given up the hope and were leaving the stadium. However, a friend was quick was remark, “7 minutes in Hockey a good time to bounce back, isn’t it?”

Complimenting his input, I added, “Yes, a few days back a team pumped in four goals in the eight minutes to pull off a stunning 5-4 victory after trailing 1-4. But the Lions look tired; here there is little hope.”

The people who left early weren’t proved wrong. Even in the dying minutes, it seemed that the Shers may not spare the Lions of further humiliation as they kept attacking.

Alas, a rather one-sided match got over with a much deserved victory for Sher-e-Punjab, 4-1.

However, apart from all the yelling and the disappointment, watching a Hockey match in Bangalore amongst a packed crowd is like a dream come true for any Hockey fan.

A close friend once told me that sometime in mid-90s (possibly in 1995), India played against Pakistan - an international match - at this very stadium in front of empty stands because no one bothered to advertise it well to get public to the stadium.

After today, there will be some sense of redemption for many Hockey aficionados who would have dreamt for almost 15 years to see their own Hockey nursery packed up with local people.

And for once, for the first time, it feels that, may be, an international match in Bangalore may not just a dream anymore.

Friday, March 16, 2012

WSH fails to connect and innovate

Written on: 9th Mar '12

The World Series Hockey might have been branded as the only saviour for the otherwise declining Indian Hockey, but unfortunately, it looks like the projected-professional league has a lot of gaps to be filled up.

Notwithstanding the fact that a die-hard Hockey fans will take whatever comes their way in form of LIVE telecast and watching their favourite players play, but lack of quality in various aspects of the event, makes it look like a fairly ordinary show.

A Battalion of unfit players: Remember any star player of the last decade and you have the pleasure to see those rubbing shoulders with young players in WSH.

Sadly, most of them are unfit. Even when there are rolling substitutions, almost all these stars are far from fit to play high quality, exciting Hockey for a span of 6-7 minutes. Interestingly, there is no concrete reason for these players to be unfit. WSH has been on the anvil for at least 4-5 months before it actually started. If the players didn’t work on their fitness in this while, then who is to blame?

Disjoint units: Almost all the teams are namesake ‘teams’. They hardly have co-ordination between their flanks, forwards and linkmen. Seeing the composition of the teams and their (foreign or Indian) coaches, one fancied that a given team will exhibit shades of European Hockey or Australian Hockey or aggressive Indian style Hockey or may be, skilful or tactful Hockey. Unfortunately, the Hockey being witnessed in this tournament is a hotchpotch, nowhere close to the fan’s delight.

Arguing players: Young players are inexperienced but when the star and experienced players argue on every call by the umpire, one feels, ‘Dude, its OK. Come on. Lead by example, please!’

Flip the channels and watch the game: Ask a layman and they will concede that Hockey is a fast game where two goals can be scored within a minute unlike other team games. However, Hockey in WSH is slow and mostly excitement fizzles out as the game enters the last quarter. Unlike high competition Hockey there are no last minute equalizers or match winners in the dying minutes of the game, thereby, leaving the game as a low on the excitement quotient. When that happens, the viewers tend tochange the channels between the games.

Monotonous commentary and presentation: In WSH, there are very few commentators and hardly any expert panelist. Ones who have been brought in, many a times fumble with their sentences spoiling the show. With so many teams involved, one should have at least 5 experts who can offer variety of opinions. Also, the experts hardly predict the winners and what to check out the match for.

And talking of commentary, if one puts the Hindi Commentary channel then you need only one: either the visual or the audio. The reason being, Hindi channel commentary is radio commentary. English commentary is definitely tolerable but far from the international standards.

Poor Camera angles: Many a times, the camera focus is far from the area of action, contributing to an ordinary viewer experience.

Non-Innovative coverage: The less-than-average viewer who has little knowledge of Hockey and wants to get interested in Hockey has hardly anything to look out for. Who all are the players playing a game remains a maze for the viewers? Visuals explaining the position of players are missing.

One of drawbacks of Hockey telecast is you never get to identify with the players who are on the field and what’s their role? For a naive viewer, they are just ball rotators. Even though circle penetrations, shots at the goal, penalty corner statistics are shown regularly on the television but this is too technical for a common viewer to understand and generate interest in Hockey.

Little for traditional fans: LIVE side-line talk with the players, what coaches instruct during the breaks or what umpires talk during the referrals are missing from the game. Moreover, what was the game-plan of the coach in a match remains unknown as, apparently, there are no after-match press conferences?