Essayer OR - Gratuit
Days of Diamonds, and Rust
Outlook
|June 21, 2025
From Kapil to Kohli, from Doordarshan to Disney+, the journey of Indian cricket has been both epic and intimate
-
GEOFF Boycott travelled to India in 1981-82 needing 230 runs to equal Garry Sobers's record for the highest aggregate in Test cricket. A fortnight after he crossed that mark, he went missing from a Test, choosing to play golf instead, and was sent back home. He was probably relieved.
I had just started out as a reporter then as a second to the main cricket writer, doing features, interviews, profiles. Boycott's attitude didn't surprise anyone in the press box—then rows of wooden benches with desks for the endlessly rattling typewriters and where everybody smoked incessantly (it didn't matter because it was open on three sides).
The received wisdom was that India was a terrible place to tour—the heat, the dust, the spin-friendly pitches, the traffic, the accommodation, food, poor umpiring—there was a long laundry list any player could reel off, and usually did, unprovoked. Only six countries played Test cricket, and India hadn’t played Pakistan since I had learnt the alphabet.
India’s infamy had been built over decades. England’s Phil Tufnell once said he had “done the elephants, done the poverty,” and was ready to return. The Australian opener Gavin Stevens had nearly died in Chennai after an attack of hepatitis. His biography was titled Near Death on the Sub-Continent.
For visiting teams before the 1990s, a tour of India was less a sporting event than a spiritual test. Before the dawn of flush toilets in every dressing room and the comfort of chain hotels, cricketers arrived armed with anti-diarrhoeal pills, mosquito nets, and their own supply of beer. In Kanpur, you could lose your off-stump and your luggage within five overs.
The pitches spun, but the people smiled, yet most visitors didn’t take the trouble to engage—they met more cockroaches in their rooms than people across the country.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition June 21, 2025 de Outlook.
Abonnez-vous à Magzter GOLD pour accéder à des milliers d'histoires premium sélectionnées et à plus de 9 000 magazines et journaux.
Déjà abonné ? Se connecter
PLUS D'HISTOIRES DE Outlook
Outlook
Hating Dating
For many women, dating in their 30s and 40s is defined less by romance than by exhaustion, confusion and a sense of emotional attrition
2 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Rage of Betrayals
THIS is a popular poem often shared when anyone talks of the 4B movement in South Korea. The women in this movement boycott the world of men; boycott heterosexual marriage, relationships, sex, and giving birth.
2 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Class and Caste
Caste hierarchies continue to exist in everyday life and across campuses. Due to the persistence of caste in schools and colleges, long believed to be places for upward mobility and rational thought, these institutions end up becoming spaces where questions of \"merit\", cultural capital, language and access-or the lack of thereof-are highlighted and ridiculed. The discrimination persists from Kashmir to Kerala. From delayed degrees and stalled promotions to verbal abuse, professional isolation, and sometimes death, these case studies underscore not isolated instances but a pattern
18 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
The Misuse Myth
A close look at reported cases over the past ten years shows that there is no pattern of rampant misuse of the SC/ST Act in universities or higher education institutions
6 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
The Higher, The Lower
What is clear is that the entrenched caste hierarchy feels that power is slipping out from their grasp
6 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Writing is Acting by Another Name
My wife spots him first while my attention is focused on the bucket of theatre popcorn (medium, salt and caramel mix). I look up and there he is. Pico Iyer, great travel writer, essayist, novelist, columnist, humanist, and in recent years, friend and correspondent. While the rest gasp when Timothee Chalamet appears in Marty Supreme, we gasp when Pico does.
3 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Sins of Savarnatva
The upper castes believe that the UGC regulations are a death knell to their own existence
6 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Invisible Labour, Visible Costs
Women shoulder disproportionate emotional and domestic work, shaping how they view intimacy and relationships
2 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Between textbooks and court orders
From first choice to uncertainty as HIMSR-Jamia Hamdard dispute leaves students stranded
5 mins
February 21, 2026
Outlook
Aggressive Victimhood Versus Predictable Protests
The current controversy around the UGC regulations is meant neither to promote social justice and equity nor hurt the interests of the dominant castes. It's meant for the two to be at loggerheads and further consolidate their support behind the BJP-RSS combine
5 mins
February 21, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
