
We were part of the celebrating group at the closing ceremony of the Olympics !!!
Poll – What was the most significant sporting moment for India in 2008?
Results – India winning three medals at the Beijing Olympics – 45%
Vishwanathan Anand winning the World Chess title in the classical format -31%
The super success of the IPL – 10%
India’s cricket team winning the one -day tri-series in Australia – 7%
India’s cricket team beating Australia 2-0 in the test series at home -3%
India’s football team winning the AFC Challenge Cup -3%,
In an obvious testimony to the fact that the few people who do visit this website take more than a passing interest in different sports other than cricket, the voters of the latest Commonfan Poll have decided, that no cricketing moment was good enough to the most important one in what has a been a great year for Indian sports. And that in spite of the fact there were three major achievements for cricket in 2008. So did the presence of 3 nominations divide the cricket vote, ensuring that some other sport slipped through? not quite. Even the combined cricket vote couldn’t have been enough. And there are two reasons for that.
One is that the cricket moments weren’t just good enough- even by the sports’ own standards. We did win the tri-series for the first time in Australia but is that even in the top five of India’s greatest one-day performances. Is it bigger than the two appearances in the World Cup finals or the win in the World Championship of Cricket in 1985? Our voters don’t think so.
We beat Australia in t

More fireworks and more champagne but not monumental enough
he home test series but does that even qualify as one of our greatest wins against Australia, forget it being in the all time test victory list. This Australian side wasn’t one of their better ones and hence the win didn’t taste as good as say the comeback victory in 2001 or the triumph in Adelaide in 2003
Coming to the IPL, it did make a huge impression in 2008. But this wasn’t about the Twenty-20 format of the game, which was already quite popular. Rather it was about the first full blown and ICC endorsed International cricket League. As things stand today the league form of the game is still a poor cousin of international cricket. Some years from today, if this format really explodes, and the ICC has to find a window in the IPL calendar to accommodate international matches, like they have to do in football, than yes – we will definitely look back on 2008 as a far more significant moment in the history of cricket and Indian sport. Till that happens, cricket will play second or rather third fiddle to what were the most significant moments for Indian sport in 2008.
Now we come to the second reason – India’s performance at the Olympics and Vishwanathan Anand’s win against Vladimir Kramnik are right up there because they are watershed events – something which the cricket moments were not.
Anand’s win is a monumental landmark in the annals of Chess. He became only the second non-Russian to win it in the classical format after Bobby Fischer. But Fischer’s win is remembered more because an American beat the Russians at their own game at the height of the cold war hostilities. In purely chess terms, Anand beat a far tougher opponent in Kramnik, the only man to beat Garry Kasparov in the classical format. And we all know that Kasparov is the greatest chess player of all time. Fischer beat Boris Spassky who is definitely not remembered as one of the great champions and refused to play Anatoly Karpov for reasons unknown. The win also secured Anand’s legacy. He is now a complete champion and ready to take his place alongside the celebrated masters of the sport.
And now for the most significant moment – India’s feat at the Olympics -Is there even a debate about its position as number one. Enough has been written and said about its significance and long lasting impact and I will not go into repeating it. I will just say that for the first time in my living memory, we Indians were enjoying the closing ceremony of the Olympics and feeling a part of the celebrations. And that, as the voters have already decided, was significant enough.