I spent the 15th May evening watching Dravid’s Rajasthan
Royals battle out against the Mumbai Indians. (I am a fan of Royals and Dravid.)
The very next afternoon came the shocking news that three Rajasthan Royals
players, including Indian fast bowler Sreesanth, were arrested for their alleged
involvement in spot-fixing in the Indian Premier League. It is hard to swallow the fact that the match you watched last night involved spot
fixing.
Many cricket fans in the country would be going
through the same feeling that I do. This incident will in fact put suspicion in
the viewers’ mind. There will now be cynicism about every match. Every Tom,
Dick and Harry will become an analyst raising a finger on every game, every
wicket, every six, and every four.
Twitter was flooded with tweets such as this one from
Pritish Nandy (@pritishnandy) Actually the IPL is like our movie
awards, designed for TV and TRPs. Don’t expect too much authenticity there. Its
just another show.
And other loud mouths like Sagarika Ghose (@sagarikaghose)
IPL is a microcosm of New India: Big quick money, graft and
glamour, corruption and crowds, sexism, patriarchy, hype and instant
gratification
True, there have been voices from all around to ban the IPL.
(The loudest of them, as always, coming from news channels). Yes there is ‘glamour’,
‘big quick money’ and 'hype'; no doubt about that. But is it completely justified
to blame a system if a person lacks integrity ? A few people’s hunger for
money, blame it on IPL? India doesn't do well in the T20 world cup, blame it on
IPL? You lose a test match, blame it on IPL? IPL has become a scapegoat for almost everything that
happens in the cricketing world. The mere involvement of some players doesn't
reflect the whole of IPL tournament. We have seen such things in the past in other
sports as well including cycling and soccer. It is sheer greed for more money
that makes people lose their integrity. It is just like the corruption we
notice in every sphere around us.
Yes the IPL system needs fixes. But it definitely does not
deserve to be banned. IPL has brought to light some brilliant cricketing
talent. It has provided a platform for budding cricketers to share the dressing
room with legends of the game. It has also more or less proved India’s
capabilities of conducting a professional league for T20 cricket, six
times over. It has a brand value estimated to be around US$2.99 billion
in fifth season. It has, no doubt, awakened global interest. As far as I
believe , despite this major glitch, and the hue and cry all around, “The Show Must Go On..”
However a major cleanup operation is definitely required if
cricket in India is to retain the loyalty of its fans.