Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

NEW FEATS, SAME OLD SUPERSTARS

DECADE OF UN-CHANGE The Federer-nadal-djokovic trio-poly, the Bolt and Phelps monopolies, and the Messi-ronaldo duopoly continued to thrive as an age of deep analysis gave us glorious certaintie­s instead of fresh sporting narratives

- Kunal Pradhan kunal.pradhan@hindustant­imes.com

In 2004, Billy Crystal returned to host the Academy Awards. In his opening monologue, the actor reflected, in a grand burst of nostalgia, on the state of world at the time of his first brush with the Oscars. “It was 13 years ago when I first hosted the Academy Awards, and things sure have changed since then,” Crystal started, with a mischievou­s glint in his eyes. “Back then, George Bush was president, the economy was tanking, and we had just finished a war with Iraq. Yeah, things really have changed!”

In both 1991 and 2004, the US economy was crumbling, American troops had just won a Gulf War, and there was a Bush in the White House.

You could, with a vaudevilli­an bow to Crystal, get similarly nostalgic about the state of world sport a decade ago.

“It was 2009 when I last followed sport, and things surely were different back then,” you could begin expansivel­y. “Messi and Ronaldo were the world’s best footballer­s; Federer, Nadal and Djokovic were splitting Grand Slams between them; and the only golf tournament­s worth watching were the ones Tiger Woods was playing. Yes, indeed, things have changed!”

The march of time does not factor in dates and decades – these are man-madeimplem­ents created to record history, to map flashes from the past or momentsin the future. So weremember the 1920s for the Flappers, the 1940s for the Great War, the 1960s for hippies and great music, the 1980s for scrunchies and shoulder pads, and the 1990s for our first email id.

These events or trends were not year-, date-, or decade-specific. They just happened in a particular moment, which, when recorded on a calendar, and categorise­d in 10-year bands, allowed us to chart the course of the modern age.

Several events coexisted in each decade, intrinsica­lly linking books, political movements, cinema, human achievemen­t, and sporting icons. So Johnny Weissmulle­r matches the Flappers, Don Bradman the War, Muhammad Ali the civil rights movement, Diego Maradona shoulder pads, and Michael Jordan your first email.

In this narrow but chronologi­cally convenient context, the 2000s emerged as a golden decade for sport – it marked the coming of Lionel Messi and Cristiano Ronaldo; the emergence of Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal, Novak Djokovic and Serena Williams; the rise of Lebron James and Tom Brady; the arrival of Usain Bolt and Michael Phelps; and the consolidat­ion as legends of Tiger Woods and Michael Schumacher.

The 2010s ended many things –

Turning his back on years of denials in January 2013, Armstrong admitted that he owed all his Tour de France titles, his glory and his millions to a concoction of drugs -- EPO, testostero­ne and bloody transfusio­ns. “My mythic, perfect story was one big lie,” he said.

And just like that, it all came crashing down. Once the sponsors left and the titles were stripped away, all that was left was an insecure and insincere man, exposed to be nothing more than a bully and a cheat.

America’s position as the world’s undisputed leader, capitalism and liberal democracie­s as the world’s preferred models – and while the hunger for sporting excellence did not abate, the emergence of new icons reduced to a trickle. It was as if the second batch of Millennial­s was content with applauding, rather than competing with, the first wave of their generation and the last of the Gen-xers.

A few exceptions stood out – gymnast Simone Biles, cricketer Virat Kohli, football’s Spanish Armada as a genuine historical rival to Brazil in the 1960s, and the race for the subtwo-hour marathon – but the 2010s were largely about consolidat­ion, emulation and deep analysis, rather than breaching new frontiers.

So while this was the decade of sport’s greatest rivalry between three age-defying tennis players, of two of the greatest Olympians marching side by side, of two superhuman club footballer­s encapsulat­ing Spanish politics in their scissor runs and one-twos, it was also an era in which the tyranny of champions was scarcely challenged by underdogs.

Playing and watching sport sure became smarter – data-sets crunching every performanc­e, physicians mapping every movement, psychologi­sts analysing every response – as advanced technology and new theories changed how we eat, think, move; even how we discuss sporting achievemen­ts through decimal points that measure conversion rates, consistenc­y levels, and reaction times.

But did this new statistica­l geek-out muffle the really important things that made us watch and play sport: the unconfined joy of victory, the nervous energy of uncertaint­y, and the sweet pain of defeat?

It’s perhaps these new scientific inputs that led to the extension of the playing careers of several stalwarts from the previous decade, equipping them with the informatio­n, fitness levels, and mental agility to quell new challenges from a new breed of sportsmen.

In 2011, close to the start of the decade, when Tiger Woods was trying to make one of his first few comebacks, I’d argued that his biggest test would not be overcoming injuries or internal demons, but competing with a generation of players, more than 10 years younger than him, and ready for him in a way his peers never were. Golfers who started playing after Woods won the Masters by 12 strokes in 1997; some who picked up a club because of him, and were therefore not surprised by what he did on the course; they had trained to be like him, and to beat him.

While Woods may not be the dominant force he was before his personal and profession­al life went into a tailspin in 2009, this is the year he made what could be considered the greatest comeback in history at the Masters. That he could do it may be because of a gamut of inputs that enabled him to first compete with, and then overcome, a new band of competitor­s.

It is perhaps this additional informatio­n that helped the tennis trio-poly, the football duo-poly, and the Usain Bolt’s sprint monopoly (though he may shrug off any such attributio­n) to flourish.

This may also be why, in terms of dominant personalit­ies and new sporting narratives, the 2010s gave us precious little.

In spite of this, the 2010s did witness some convention-defying contests: Iceland stunned England in the Euros, John Isner beat Nicolas Mahut 70-68 in the fifth set at Wimbledon, Andy Ruiz Jr downed Anthony Joshua to become a first Mexican-origin heavyweigh­t champion of the world, Kobe Bryant scored 60 points in his final NBA game, Leicester City won the Premier League, Mahendra Singh Dhoni put together a chase for the gods to give India its second cricket World Cup, and the 2019 cricket World Cup and the 2019 Wimbledon final — played on the same night — produced the fiercest battles you could ever hope to see.

For I ndia, t hi s decade witnessed a long-awaited revolution in non-cricket sport. Evidence of this lies not in how man ny medals were won at internatio­nal events s, but how Indian athletes got into contention n, day after day, event after event, in different partsp of the world.

The Indian sporting horizon also o expanded beyond its traditiona­l areas of strength. Though there had been mini-mov vements in various discipline­s at different time es – athletics in two or three bursts between n the 1950s and 1980s, badminton in the 1980s, weightlift-w ing in the 1990s, shooting in the ea arly 2000s, boxing and wrestling in late 2000 0s -- never before did India fire across sports ata the same time.

PV Sindhu and Kidambi Srika anth; Saurabh Chaudhary and Manu Bhak ker; Hima Das and Neeraj Chopra; Bajrang Punia;p and Amit Pangal, are the new torch-be earers of a spark lit in the 2008 Beijing Olympic cs (the first time India won an individual gold anda multiple medals), stoked at London 2012, and fanned in Rio 2016.

The next decade is when this na arrative is likely to evolve into a larger story. .

So, all told, how will history remem mber sport in the Twenteens? As the era of spo ort’s greatest rivalry? As the time two extra aordinary Olympians walked into the sunset? As the age of Messi and Ronaldo? As the dec cade when Sachin Tendulkar handed the baton n to Kohli?

It will perhaps be known as a tim me of glorious certaintie­s. An era when we were enthralled by exceptiona­l consiste ency and superlativ­e sameness. Sport’s de ecade of un-change.

 ?? Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi on during a La Liga match between Real Madrid and Barcelona on December 23, 2017 in Madrid, Spain.
GETTY IMAGES ??
Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi on during a La Liga match between Real Madrid and Barcelona on December 23, 2017 in Madrid, Spain. GETTY IMAGES
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India