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Undoubtedly
the first sport that comes to
mind when one thinks of Indian
sports today is cricket.
Brought to India by her British
colonisers, cricket so captured
the nation’s imagination that
observers are more or less
agreed that today it is the one
religion that unites
India. (The other favourite
observation being ‘here’s a
country of a billion cricket
experts’.)
In places
like Calcutta, with everybody
glued to their television sets,
life grinds to a halt the days
the Indian team is playing.
One-day fixtures and test
matches excite equal enthusiasm;
for both, if the match is being
played on Indian soil, which by
the way supports spin rather
than pace, you’ll get capacity
crowds and a charged atmosphere
seldom matched anywhere outside
the subcontinent. Allegations of
murky match fixing and a steady
string of matches where the team
managed to “snatch defeat from
the jaws of victory”
notwithstanding, the popularity
of the game continues to rise.
Such is the intensity of
involvement with the game that
it even affects India’s
international relations. In the
aftermath of the 1999 Kargil
war, India unilaterally
suspended cricketing relations
with Pakistan. The debate on
whether politics and sports
should mix enlivens many a
discussion, and is yet
unresolved.
Hard to
imagine but at one time the
place that cricket is accorded
today in the popular
consciousness was reserved for
hockey. The heyday of
Indian hockey was in the Olympic
years from 1928 to 1956 when the
hockey team brought the gold
medal home every time, from six
consecutive games. The
introduction of Astroturf, a
faster surface than grass and
one still largely unavailable in
India, coupled with the
migration of many hockey-playing
Anglo Indians to Australia spelt
the end of the golden era.
Hockey is the national game of
India and a new crop of players
including the charismatic
Dhanraj Pillay has rekindled
popular interest in the game. Of
course, nothing succeeds like
success and the fact that the
Indian team has been posting
wins at regular intervals has
greatly helped the game’s
cause.
Among
indigenous games perhaps the
best known is kabaddi. It
involves two teams standing
across a line on the ground. By
turns the teams send a player
into the opponent’s territory so
that he can ‘tag’ and thereby
send out of the game members of
that team. The catch is that the
player must do this in the span
of a single breath, all the time
muttering “kabaddi, kabaddi,
kabaddi, kabaddi….” so that
if he does take in another lung
of air the team can immediately
tell. The team whose territory
the player has entered must try
to capture the player and keep
him on their side of the
demarcating line till he does
run out of breath. In which case
he is sent out of the game.
Kabaddi has become a formal
institutionalised sport but
basically, it owes its
popularity to the fact that you
don’t need any props, the rules
are simple and it can be played
in any dusty alley so long as
there are enough people with
nothing to do.
Polo
is supposed to have been
invented by Iranian tribes in
the 9th century AD.
By and by it spread far and wide
towards the east, reaching even
Japan. Brought to India with
Muslim conquerors who
established their rule in Delhi,
polo was in India by the last
part of the 12th
century. It captured the
imagination of the ruling elite
in the north, especially of the
Rajput princes of the western
land of Rajasthan who, already
master cavaliers, soon mastered
the game. However, in the
northeastern India, in the state
of Manipur, polo was never an
elitist sport. Anybody who owned
or could loan a horse would play
the game. With the disappearance
of the great eastern empires and
as the political life of India
itself became tumultuous with
the arrival of the expansionist
Mughals, leisure itself and
certainly pleasures like polo
seemed to disappear too. It was
the British rediscovery of the
game in Manipur in the early 19th
century, where it is called
Sagol Kangjei, that breathed
fresh life into the sport. The
fame of the game spread along
with the spread of Empire.
Today, polo is played by a
select section of people -
former princes, erstwhile
nobility, students with a
privileged public school
education, the armed services
and such like. But in Manipur,
the game is still played by
anybody who owns a horse and
mallet or can borrow one.
Other
indigenous sports of India
include kho-kho
(an improvisation of the game of
‘tag’), archery, and board games
like chauser and
pachisi. Still seen in the
gullies of old cities and towns,
particularly where there is a
predominant Muslim population,
are sports like kabootar
baazi and cock fights. A
master of the former can train
his brood of pigeons (kabootars)
to fly up into the sky, round up
his competitor’s brood and usher
them home to him. Though they
have earned the wrath of animal
rights activists worldwide,
cockfights can still be watched
in parts of India.
Kite
flying is a favourite
pastime for children and adults
alike. Come winter (specially
the 14th of Jan – the
festival of Makar Sankranti) and
the skies are filled with
fluttering paper kites of every
hue and shape. There is keen
competition among kite flyers;
the string is coated with glass
dust so that it can cut the
string of another kite when
they're in flight. On the
subcontinent the beauty of the
kite and the imaginativeness of
its shape is secondary to the
dexterity of its owner.
Invented by
some British officers of the
Indian army standing around at a
game of billiards, ‘snooker’
came into being in the Indian
city of Jubbulpore (now Jabalpur).
It spread through the cantonment
towns of India first, was taken
back to England and thereon
taken around the empire.
Undoubtedly snooker is an
expensive game and few can
afford the space and the
attendant paraphernalia. So, it
is its poorer cousin ‘pool’
that has caught the fancy of
Indian youth today. In most
cities you’ll find many pool
parlours where half an hour at a
table can cost as little as 30
rupees.
Another game
thought to have originated in
India is chess. Since the
6th century AD, when
the game is thought to have been
born, many of the rules and
perhaps even the form have
changed. But even in its modern
versions, it is thought that the
basics of the game are the same
as were developed in ancient
India and Persia where it was
introduced by traders from here.
An increasing number of Indians,
both amateurs and professionals
are playing chess at the
international level. The most
famous example is, of course,
Vishwanathan Anand.
Unlike chess
in that they did originate in
India, but like chess in that
they have caught the imagination
of the country in the wake of
international success are
tennis and badminton.
The recent successes of the
doubles team of Leander Paes and
Mahesh Bhupathi in tennis and of
the badminton player Pulela
Gopichand who won the All
England in 2001 have persuaded
many players to take up both
sports seriously.
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