Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai)

Give marks to put sports on a par with studies

- Press Trust of India ROAD AHEAD

FORT LAUDERDALE, US: India almost pulled of the highest ever successful run chase in T20 Internatio­nals with Lokesh Rahul smashing his maiden hundred but fell short by just one run in a nerve-wrecking last ball finish to lose the first of the two T20 match against the West Indies here on Saturday.

Rahul, who was included in the playing eleven ahead of Shikhar Dhawan, hit 110 not out from 51 balls with the help of 12 fours and five sixes and India were on the verge of chasing down West Indies’ mammoth 245 for 6.

India needed just eight runs from the final over and they should have have won the match with set batsmen Rahul and captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni in full flow.

India needed two runs from the final ball to win the match but Dhoni failed to get those runs as he was caught by Marlon Samuels, slicing a slower delivery off Dwayne Bravo to the heartbreak of the large system is followed and we have to adopt this. In India too we have this, but it’s restricted to policies.

GRADED METHOD

The first tier is quantity based. We have to attract more and more kids to the playground and provide them basic facilities. The next stage is about quality. We have to pick the best from the base and provide them better facilities in terms of coaching, infrastruc­ture, equipment and scientific backup. The third stage is about super speciality, from where we will get our national players.

When I was Director of Sports, Punjab, I got a chance to study the sports policies of various states and countries. In China’s three-tier policy, they have a base of nine crore children. They pick nine lakh for the next stage and finally have 9,000 athletes to represent the country. We have to follow China’s model.

Like China, we have to put sports on a par with education. Calculated on the basis of time spent on the playing field, China gives 25 % weightage marks to those who progress to the second tier and 50 % to those who enter the final bracket. In India, especially the middle-class families are afraid of letting their kids pursue sports as a profession. The main reason is that they are worried that if their child fails to make it big in sports he or she won’t be left with options in terms of career. But by bringing sports on a par with education, they will get many options.

number of Indian supporters at the stands. India ended the run chase at 244 for 4 from 20 overs.

India thus failed to pull off the highest ever successful run chase which still stands at 236 for 6 which the West Indies pulled off against South Africa in January last year in Johannesbu­rg.

Dhoni’s men, however, had the consolatio­n of knocking off the highest ever T20I second innings score which is also the same 236 for 6 which the West Indies made against South Africa.

The 24-year-old Rahul, who was dropped on 36 by Andre Russell, became the third Indian to hit a century -- and the highest scorer — in T20 Internatio­nals after Suresh Raina and Rohit Sharma.

Playing in his fourth T20I, Rahul reached to his 100 in 46 balls, the joint second fastest in T20 Internatio­nals along with South African Faf du Plessis and just one ball short of South

African Richard Levi’s fastest 45-ball hundred against New Zealand in 2012 in Hamilton.

The match, the first internatio­nal outing for India in United States, was in fact a competitio­n of show of batting prowess between the two teams on a featherbed of a pitch on a small ground at Lauderhill and Dhoni’s men came second at the end.

West Indies’ score of 245/6, the third highest T20 score, was amassed riding on Rookie opener Evin Lewis’ 100 (49 balls; 5x4, 9x6) and Johnson Charles’ (79 of 33 balls; 6x4, 7x6) as the Caribbeans mauled the Indian bowlers after being put into bat by Dhoni.

This was the highest ever T20 Internatio­nal score against India by any team, surpassing the 219 for 4 by South Africa in Johannesbu­rg in March 2012.

The way the West Indians were hammering the Indian bowlers, it seemed that Dhoni’s decision to insert the opposition in backfired but his boys were up to the task and they were on the verge of turning the match on its head with a vintage batting performanc­e only to fall short by just one run.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Evin Lewis reacts after scoring a century during the first T20I.
AP PHOTO Evin Lewis reacts after scoring a century during the first T20I.
 ?? PTI PHOTO ?? Olympic silver medallist PV Sindhu at the Akkanna Maddanna Mahankali temple in Hyderabad on Saturday
PTI PHOTO Olympic silver medallist PV Sindhu at the Akkanna Maddanna Mahankali temple in Hyderabad on Saturday

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India