A tale of two countries: Green and Gold

By Vas Venkatramani / Roar Guru

In the buildup to the World Cup semi-final between India and Australia, two friends describe their similar journeys to opposing perspectives.

Smacking away the flies gravitating around my face, I inspected the surroundings of that small portion of Carlingford road before I took guard.

You see, I was Mark Waugh, I exclaimed with such audible pride. Down the other end was Glenn McGrath, or my best mate Dushyant or Dush, whose offerings compared little to the metronome of Narromine.

Impersonating your favourite players is the standard way for kids to act on the dreams they wish to fulfil, and we were hardly exclusive in this regard. Dush’s turns to bat included mimicking Steve Waugh, flipping the other way as Mark Taylor, or even wearing the youthful goateed grimace of Ricky Ponting. This continued well into our youth and teens. But at some point, it all changed.

While I was still taking my guard casually ala Junior, or perennially walking back to a Brett Lee-length run up (give it or take minus 80 odd kms), Dush had taken up his stance as Sachin Tendulkar.

I cannot pinpoint the time at which I began supporting the Australian cricket team. Such a notion felt as natural as breathing or having three square meals a day. After all, growing up in the 90s meant watching McGrath and Warne make mincemeat out of batting lineups, while the Waughs wrested back Frank Worrell Trophies, World Cups and clean sweep all and sundry.

You got to hear the dulcet nuance of Richie Benaud leading the call, partnered by the unbridled enthusiasm of Bill Lawry and the convenient contrarianism of Tony Greig. I truly lament the luck of today’s young folk in this regard – they don’t get to learn the game from astute thinkers like these on the telly.

Dush heard all this too, but not with the same focus of following Australia that I did. Like I can’t pinpoint when I actively supported Australia, it’s even more fuzzy on when he supported India. He is very much not alone in this regard.

When Australia play India in a knockout semi-final on Thursday, it is very likely that Aaron Finch or Mitchell Starc will open proceedings facing a visible and audible sea of blue. Some will have made the trek from India to be there. The vast majority though frequent the streets and sights of the very players they cheer against.

In all honesty, I’ve never completely understood this. Through the deepening of my voice box and the greying of hair have I gained appreciation of my former home, but not their cricket team. “Why do you not follow India?” is one of the more frequent questions headed my way, but little do they realise that I plausibly can ask the same question in reverse: “Why don’t you support Australia?” with at least equal merit.

Much has to do with the passing of inherent family loyalties. For my part, it was not my dad or mum who would ferment my “spirit of cricket” (if I was to use such contentious vernacular), but my maternal grandfather.

Until his passing in 2001, he was an avid cricket observer, where he would witness the play in Brisbane, Bangalore and Birmingham often on the exact same day. Even while living in India all his life, he professed his admiration for fielding athleticism, intelligent captaincy and gameface aggression – all qualities he regularly heralded with the Australian team, while lamenting these very qualities from the team of his own nation.

Such views must have subconsciously validated my loyalty for myself, even if I necessarily wasn’t looking to question it.

Yet there was one time I almost did – that being the 2008 Sydney Test. It was in Dush’s living room that we both saw Michael Clarke rip out three Indian wickets to seal out a truly spectacular finish. Yet I could not get past the lack of grace from some of our players, who failed to console the Indians at what they rightly felt was an unfair loss – particularly if you juxtapose our behaviour with Andrew Flintoff and Brett Lee in 2005.

It was Dush’s sheer frustration that day which made me realise that my loyalty did not and should not come at the expense of my moral centre. Indeed, this incident I believe was the catalyst in the evident cricket politics played out to this day, where both India and Australia seek advantage off the cricket field as well as on. I could be wrong, but knowing Dush, I daresay he would agree with me on this score.

It’s for this reason that Thursday is special – a day I can share with the people I’ve grown up with, even if they stand as opponents. One common term that is thrown my way is drohi – Hindi for traitor, and that could be one of the kinder things said. Yet over time, as I moderated my views, so has Dush – so much so that he has worn yellow in an Australia game, while I sported blue in India’s win over Pakistan in Adelaide.

Despite crossing this barrier, there remains no question that India is the team I want my Australians to beat more than any other. Again, it may be my mistake, but Dush may feel the same way in reverse.

Dush is only one supporter of many who will cheer, scream and will their team to success on Thursday, and if they have their way, at the MCG on Sunday as well. But they never made that choice, and followed their passion, the same way I followed mine.

This article is part of a two-part series written by lifelong friends (and cricket tragics) Vas and Dush. Read the opposing perspective.

The Crowd Says:

2015-03-26T09:53:05+00:00

sheek

Roar Guru


Thanks Vas, Wonderful article. I wonder myself why so many Indians domiciled in Australia (for an apparently long time) support India. This morning the fan that Karl Stefanovic (channel 9) asked who was minding the 7/11 stores had a distinctly Aussie accent. As I type this, the Aussies might be back on top with india 4-130 after 27 overs, chasing 328. We'll know soon enough!

AUTHOR

2015-03-25T19:52:58+00:00

Vas Venkatramani

Roar Guru


Again, thanks to everyone for your thoughts. If possible, please leave your thoughts on Dush’s piece as well. These articles really go together. This phemonenon is not exclusive to the Indian cricket team, as you see during the FIFA World Cup, when Australians of all backgrounds sport the colours of the nation of their heritage. Yet it seems to taken to a new level with the Indian cricket team. Way I figure is where does it stop? If I was an Indian fan, do I bring up my kids as Indian fans, then their kids, and their kids after that (and so on). At what point do we begin to feel greater loyalty to the team of our home, as opposed to following heritage? I personally think the rise of Indian Australians like Gurinder Sandhu may cause a big turning point. But it’ll be a gradual change I think.

2015-03-25T19:52:18+00:00

Vas Venkatramani

Guest


2015-03-25T14:15:00+00:00

Ronan O'Connell

Expert


Hi Vas, thanks for this insight mate it's fascinating. My best mate is Italian-Australian (yet supports India in cricket fanatically) and born and raised in Perth (yet supports Geelong with fervent passion). Allegiances are a strange thing. Had Australia played Ireland in the QF, which was possible, I'd have been seriously conflicted!

2015-03-25T13:58:23+00:00

peeeko

Roar Guru


Love the read Vas, it must be a conflicting situation for guys like you. Personally i love when Australia is preferred by new Australians

2015-03-25T13:47:19+00:00

TheCunningLinguistic

Guest


Nice read, Vas- thanks for penning your thoughts. I hope we both have cause to celebrate tomorrow! As a side note, I am a Dutchie, having moved to Australia when I was 9. I support Australia in almost everything, unless we're playing Holland in football (soccer). Although I'm an Aussie, when it comes to football, I bleed Oranje! I'll support Australia against every other team, however.

2015-03-25T09:35:13+00:00

Existentialist

Guest


NIcely penned Vas. I have appreciated your blogging commentary (tautology? I digress) Look forward to a cracker tomorrow C'mon Aussies!

2015-03-25T08:20:29+00:00

sd

Guest


cheers ! vas little bit nervous for semi clash !

2015-03-25T07:42:19+00:00

Anoop Mitra

Guest


Vas, super article ... I agree completely agree with ur views, if I was leaving my life and making my career in Australia then Australia would be the country I support ! Period ... It beats me to understand as well how people who live their life in another country support their home country (irrespective of which country and nationality they hail from)..

2015-03-25T06:44:28+00:00

Will Sinclair

Roar Guru


Yep - read and enjoyed them both mate! For what it's worth, I'll be at the SCG tomorrow afternoon doing my bit and cheering on the Aussies. I bought my ticket in October 2013 and have been praying since then that it will be a game worth attending... I think my prayers were answered! Hopefully it's not as tight as the Kiwis and Proteas game though. My heart is not up to it!

AUTHOR

2015-03-25T06:32:19+00:00

Vas Venkatramani

Roar Guru


Gday Will and Johnno! Thanks both of you for commenting. If you could do the same for Dush's piece, that'd be great. Nah Johnno, not an accountant. Just had an idea with Dush about writing about this game and our own experience. Thing is that winner gets bragging rights, and loser has nowhere to hide. This is no meaningless tri-series game - it's a World Cup Semi-Final in our backyard. Will, I hope you're right, but I do hope for a game that goes the distance. Just want the journey to Australian victory to be sweet! :)

2015-03-25T06:26:18+00:00

Will Sinclair

Roar Guru


I enjoyed that, Vas! Thanks for writing it. I just hope you console Dush when the Aussies crush India on Thursday!

2015-03-25T04:16:19+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Vas a nice journey of folllowing cricket and your grandfather's influence, some nice touches. Giving some insights of what it is to be an Indian cricket fan, and why many Indians don't support the indian team either. And some good words and some amusing stuff from Dush. Are you an accountant by any chance Vas, as the story was so well organised and thoroughly enjoyable.

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