The good, the bad and the sad: Sporting moments from 2016

By Anindya Dutta / Roar Guru

The romance of sports is not always in the moment of victory, but often in that second of madness that denies the moment.

It’s not always in holding aloft the trophy, but in the overflowing stream of tears running down the face of the vanquished.

It’s not always in the triumph of the young, but in the poignancy of the passing of the old.

And so it was in 2016.

A year that had its unforgettable triumphs on cricket grounds, tennis courts, and football fields; the 53-seconds of heart-bursting pride as your flag went up in Rio; the exhilaration of flashing past the chequered flag with fist held high; and the somber silence and handkerchiefs held to misty eyes as the greatest golfer of our age was lowered onto the earth he came from.

Not even Hollywood could have scripted the story of the underdog better than the English Premier League triumph of Leicester City. Beating both the odds of 5000-1 and the prospect of relegation, Leicester City showed the world their version of walking on water.

It took 108 years, but by winning the Major League Baseball title, the Chicago Cubs proved that while hope is eternal, eternity has a finish line too.

When a man has the time to smile at the camera, allowing the moment he crosses the 100m Olympics finish line in record-breaking time to be captured for eternity, you know you have been lucky to live at a time when Usain Bolt ruled the track.

You have to have been made of stuff harder than the clay at Roland Garros, if you didn’t jump off your chair, and applaud madly as Novak Djokovic finally emerged from the lengthening shadow of Rafael Nadal, holding the French Open trophy aloft on the red clay, with the bright lights of Paris shining upon him.

For the first time since 2008, the Ryder Cup went back to the USA on the back of an incredible match between Patrick Reed and Rory McIlroy on the last day. On the front nine, these two exceeded expectations as we got phenomenal play and incredible emotion in arguably the greatest Ryder Cup match of all time.

In a story that showed dreams do come true, a young boy from Singapore who had hero worshipped Michael Phelps all his life, came from nowhere to win the Men’s 100m Butterfly at Rio in a record time of 50.39 seconds. When Joseph Schooling pipped Phelps to the finish, he was living his dream.

In an astonishing three-way tie for silver, defending champion Michael Phelps, five-time Olympic medallist Laszlo Cseh of Hungary and defending world champion Chad le Clos of South Africa all clocked 51.14sec to share second place.

Write off West Indies cricket at your peril. After decades of humiliating defeats and decline of the sport, when Malcolm Marshall’s fearsome deliveries and Viv Richards’ swagger had become fading memories, 2016 was a year of great celebration and renewal for cricket in the Caribbean.

West Indies won the Under-19 World Cup. West Indies won the Women’s World T20. And then West Indies won the World T20.

Set 156 to beat England and win the championship, West Indies found themselves needing 19 off the last over, to be bowled by Ben Stokes.

It was all down to Carlos Brathwaite, the allrounder who had emerged on the previous Test tour of Australia.

Six. Six. Six. Six. Job done with two balls to spare. An incredible come back for the West Indies to the forefront of world cricket.

In perhaps the best batting performance in the cause of defeat in about 20-years in Australia, unpredictable, mercurial Pakistan almost pulled off an incredible victory at the Gabba as the year was coming to a close.

Bowled out for 142 after a pathetic batting display, 287 behind, and set 490 to win the match by Steve Smith, Pakistan decided to play, as only Pakistan can.

For a few hours, they made the 950 spectators at the Gabba, dream of the impossible. The 945 Pakistanis in the crowd even chanted “Aussie, Aussie” to bring some competition in the proceedings in the stands.

But when Yasir Shah was dismissed, the over zealous scribes of the record books quickly corrected themselves to reflect a victory for the deserving team – Steve Smith’s Australia.

And then there was India.

Led by the phenomenally talented and aggressive Virat Kohli, a supremely talented, victory-hungry all round Indian team ground Alistair Cook’s England to the dust 4-0 on wickets as sporting as any that India has had for about 10-years.

Virat Kohli’s 650+ runs at an average of 101, the injury hit, constantly changing, but successful opening pairs putting on large stands, a triple century first up from young Karun Nair, and all the while the new spin-twins of cricket, Jadeja and Ashwin, coming in to do their job, was, in the end, too much for England to handle.

When you win 4 tosses out of 5 in India, make 3 first innings scores above 400, and still lose 4-0, there is little you can do other than what the hapless Englishman did – bow to your destiny and vow revenge at Lords on the return visit.

But like everything in life, the highs and the lows of 2016 were accompanied by the sadness that goes beyond the sporting fields.

A senseless encounter with a knife-wielding intruder left the talented Tennis player Petra Kvitova with a badly damaged playing hand which one only hopes, will heal with time.

After floating like a butterfly and stinging like a bee, in the boxing ring and outside, with his lightning speed, deadly punches and inimitable wit, after gamely battling Parkinson’s disease for 32-years, Muhammad Ali passed on earlier this year.

Without “Total Football”, the modern game would be a pale shadow of itself.

It’s inventor, Johan Cryuff, the European Player of the 20th century, and arguably the greatest player to have ever played the game, lost a long battle with cancer this year.

A hundred years on, every time a player makes the ‘Cryuff Turn’, the world will fondly remember this genius in an orange shirt.

And on a final sad note, perhaps the greatest modern exponent of the game of Golf, the first superstar of televised Golf, and one of the best loved characters on the links, Arnold Palmer played his final 18th on this earth.

‘The King’, as he was known, was a man of the people – willing to sign every autograph, shake every hand, and trying to look every person in his gallery in the eye. He will be sorely missed.

As the last notes of Auld Lang Syne die out, and we ring in 2017, the cycle of life will begin anew, and with it, new moments that redefine sport.

Wishing all readers of my columns a Very Happy New Year and a wonderful year of sport to come.

Here’s looking at you, Roarers!

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2017-01-06T04:19:24+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Thanks Ashutosh. Glad you enjoyed it!

2017-01-05T09:06:41+00:00

Ashutosh Mishra

Guest


Hey Anindya, though I am not a sports follower but I got to live (not relive) those moments. Thanks for the emotional summary! cheers

AUTHOR

2016-12-27T03:54:33+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Satish - Thank you so much for the lovely compliment! I am so glad you enjoyed it. Makes my day truly!

2016-12-27T03:08:06+00:00

Satish Menon

Guest


Anindya, what a wonderful tapestry of sport in 2016 that you have painted! From events to emotions - odes to obituaries. Created many levels of experiences on a two- dimensional written canvas. Brought the sporting year alive in the minds eye and gave some of fallible memory's fading colors the touch-ups it badly needed.. Truly a remarkable year in sport and a wonderful piece of verbal collage in piecing it artistically together!

AUTHOR

2016-12-26T04:20:03+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Haha thanks for the lovely words of appreciation. Yes I missed a few including the Cavs, but didn't quite see it in the same leagues as some of the others on that list. Maybe if it had been the Celtics I would have viewed it differently.... ? I quite liked that line I must say and you have my permission to reuse it as long as I have the copyright ?

2016-12-26T03:33:40+00:00

SillyPoint

Roar Rookie


Oh that 8 th hole at Hazeltine..brings back memories.. Reed vs Rory. Epic. Simply epic. While the practical sports fan in me realizes its not possible to include ALL the spectacular stuff that happened this year, the very partial Cavs fan in me is terribly disappointed about Cleveland not getting a mention. But a fantastic article. Nicely written. "The romance of sports is not always in the moment of victory, but often in that second of madness that denies the moment." Is there a statute of limitations on plagiarizing? ;)

AUTHOR

2016-12-26T01:23:51+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


@Chinmoy - so glad you liked it! You have been really appreciative of my writing through the year, and it really matters. Thank you so much.

AUTHOR

2016-12-26T01:21:57+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


@Ahmed - Thank you so much. On Schooling - apologies! I can't believe that typo went thorough! Of course it was the 100m Fly! I don't think I will live to see a man do the 200 in 50 seconds! And you nailed it - I am not a football fan so while I know the Bulldogs moment was precious, I just didn't feel qualified to comment on the sport. Apologies to fans!

AUTHOR

2016-12-26T01:17:47+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


@CaptainMurphy - I read about them, but I confess that since I don't follow the sport, I didn't feel qualified to comment on it! Apologies to fans because I know it was a huge moment.

AUTHOR

2016-12-26T01:16:07+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Thanks Chinmay really appreciate the kind words! Yes I confess I don't follow Rugby so didn't feel qualified to comment on it. Glad you enjoyed it.

AUTHOR

2016-12-26T01:02:42+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Thanks so much Kersi! It could indeed, but I didn't trust myself to be sober enough on 31st to write this and made the call that the Pakistanis are not good enough to give Australia a run for their money twice in 2 weeks.

2016-12-25T21:26:41+00:00

Kersi Meher-Homji

Guest


A superb piece of 2016 summation, Anindya. But still six days to go before 2016 becomes 2017. Boxing Day cricket Test may add to your list.

2016-12-25T20:08:18+00:00

CaptainMurphy

Guest


You forgot the Western Bulldogs which was thebiggest moment for football fansthisyear!

2016-12-25T19:29:11+00:00

Chinmay Hejmadi

Roar Guru


Great article! Summed up pretty much every sport, other than the rugby codes I suppose, but I'll cut you some slack. Hope 2017 can be just as much of a whirlwind year as 2016.

2016-12-25T18:16:44+00:00

Ahmed

Guest


Good article. Well written. I found the Cubs 108 year drought being broken one of the truly historical moments. Back to the Future was only a year off!! Also it was the 100m buttergly that Schooling beat Phelps in. One of my favorite moments. Always good to beat America! I take it that you are not a football fan. The Bulldogs coming from 7th to win the Premiership was absolutely amazing to watch. Every game they played of the finals really was what football is all about. And then in the medal presentation, one of the moments that will go down in Australian sporting history ... Beveridge, Bob, Respect.

2016-12-25T16:56:06+00:00

Chinmoy Jena

Guest


Sweet and succinct. No one else could have summed up the passing year better than Anindya. Every possible sport, every branch of it and the heroic and then the passing of legends has been covered in a commanding sweep. Nothing more to add or omit. Perfect.

AUTHOR

2016-12-25T16:04:07+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


Thanks Asif. It's a tough year to capture in a few words!

AUTHOR

2016-12-25T16:03:28+00:00

Anindya Dutta

Roar Guru


It was indeed a fantastic year for sports. And I agree the number of unlikely results make it a rare year in sports. The Cavaliers was a Miss yes.

2016-12-25T15:56:52+00:00

Asif Karmali

Roar Rookie


Wow you seem to have summed it all. A veritable capsule of the best and the worst.

2016-12-25T15:50:42+00:00

Hero

Guest


Leister winning the EPL was probably the most remarkable thing in sports, least of all soccer, in many-a-year. And I'm a cricket and league dude. 5000-1 odds were there for a reason and to do it over 38 rounds is an impossibility. Being an Aussie but die hard Cubs fan, the most emotional in world sport was clearly the Cubs winning and breaking the 108 year curse. And haven't even mentioned the other year of firsts ... Cleveland Cavaliers (and to come back from 3-1 down take the cake for the most unlikely series win), the Bulldogs and AFL was jist so refreshingly awesome, and of course the Sharks first win ever in the NRL. Quite simply, this year in sport will never be repeated.for the remarkable simply because it's impossible with all the said droughts broken. Usual Bolt ... he is just a loving legend ... were all truly blessed to watch this human perform. However, Wayde van Niekerk was the most remarkable athletic performance since Bolt in 2008. The low points ... who really cares, we're way too.negative these days and sometimes in a sport s@#! happens. But I got alot of joy watching the poms have 4 sixes hit off Ben Stokes in the last over of the he T20 world cup final and losing the unloseable.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar