In my school days I used to
be an ardent follower of Cricket, even when we didn’t have a television at our
home. On a Saturday, our Mathematics Teacher asked my friend and me to get some
stencils for the school stationery, and we being the Cricket buffs that we are,
sneaked for an hour to watch a match at a hotel. When we came back, our teacher
asked us what the score was, and I blurted out it was 96 for 2, with as much
enthusiasm as I could muster, assuming that he was actually interested in
knowing the score. His expression turned serious and he gave us a solid thrashing
after that incident, for absconding the school on a working day.
With no mobiles, laptops or
internet, the portable televisions mounted on 10 Ft. high tables in tiffin
hotels were our only source of keeping track of Cricket matches, but the
efforts never deterred us. As we grew up, life was easier at college where we
faced no such problems knowing the score, heck we bunked even classes to watch
Cricket. One particular incident I clearly recall was the Sydney Test of 2003,
where I woke up early in the morning at 4 AM to catch Sachin scoring his
century after a poor series he had thus far. I was never an early riser, but I surprised
myself when I got up and promptly saw him scoring the hundred at a tea center
near my room. He went on to score 241 that match, and needless to say that I bunked
the college that day.
Graduating from college to
corporate environment brought its own problems. We now had no scarcity of
resources to track the score, but they had to be done in a discreet way, so as
not to be found out by the superiors. So, it was mostly ESPNCricInfo that we
kept open on another tab in our browser forever, so that whenever someone is
approaching us, we used to Alt+Tab back to the application. Not that they didn’t
know, but it was an unwritten code not to get caught watching cricket scores in
office.
However, during the 2011
World Cup, every such unwritten rule was broken when the entire nation was
bathed in euphoria with every victory. The Quarter final between India and
Australia was a ripper, and I was at the client location in New York at that
time. Many of us asked for permission for that day off and were not given. When
5 wickets fell in our chase, people started having doubts. Some of us assembled
near a desk far away from our managers, and started following the score on
desktops and phones. With each run and boundary scored, some of us could not
control ourselves and started screams of ecstasy. The word got out and soon
everyone knew we wouldn’t be much productive that day anymore.
On the big day of India vs
Pakistan, our manager got a clue and talked to the client rep and got us all an
off, to watch the matches at our home. We didn’t mind that he asked us to work
on Saturday, and are only glad to nod our heads and yell our yays for the
decision. With the advent of superior browsers on tablets, and smartphones the going is getting a
bit easier these days, and thanks to the number of apps, whatsapp groups of
Cricket Enthusiasts I joined, along with Facebook and Twitter timelines I’m
aware of almost every single match being played around the world be it a County
game between Essex and Warwickshire or a T20 game in Caribbean Premiere League played
in the between T&T and Barbados Tridents.
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