Showing posts sorted by date for query sports. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query sports. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Saturday, August 13, 2016

The 'International #LeftHandersDay': 'Let's Make The Way For Southpaws'!

BY M H AHSSAN | INNLIVE

What is common between Amitabh Bachchan, Hugh Jackman, Kapil Sharma and Sunny Leone? Of course they are actors, popular, affluent and have a tremendous fan following. But the fact that they are left-handy is what binds these Bollywood and Hollywood hearththrobs in the most unique way.

Friday, July 29, 2016

Debuting At The Rio Olympics 2016: A Fast And Furious, Twenty20 Version Of Conventional Rugby

By KHALID SHAMS | INNLIVE

Rugby is making a comeback to the Games since 1924, but in a modern, exciting format. Can cricket take a hint?

World Rugby has a luxury problem – not the niggles and quibbles interlinked with an introduction to the Olympic Games, not the deflated mood surrounding the other new Olympic sport golf, but an on-field conundrum: how can Olympic rugby possibly top last year’s Rugby World Cup? There seems only one way: by the Fiji national team winning the Rugby Sevens tournament in Rio de Janeiro.

Doping, Sabotage, Scandal: The Narsingh Yadav Saga Has Turned Indian Wrestling Into A Farce

By VIMAL GILL | INNLIVE

From mysterious intruders to claims of vendetta, it’s the perfect potboiler, except the biggest loser is Indian sport.

Doping, sabotage, incrimination, spiked food. No, this is not the tagline of the Hindi film industry’s next potboiler. Less than ten days before the Olympics begin, Indian sport has been dominated, not by news of Indian medal prospects, but by a tale of doping and deception which has more twists and turns than a Dan Brown novel.

Monday, July 25, 2016

India @ Olympics: The 'Dhan' To Rags Story Of Indian Hockey

By NAG VISHWA | INNLIVE

Khel Ratna Dhanraj Pillay was just an adolescent when India last won an Olympic gold in hockey. A dark and wiry lad, who impressed everyone with his skills and speed, he dreamt of emulating his idol, Mohammed Shahid someday.

Playing on the soft, dusty surface of the Ordnance Factory ground at Khadki, Pune which was tended by his father Nagalingam, for Pillay an Olympic gold medal was an obsession. His brothers and he would pick broken hockey sticks and mend them and play with old, scruffy hockey balls.

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Superstar Rajinikanth, Star Cricketer Tendulkar, Star Politician Modi: Are Indians Prone To 'Celebrity Worship Syndrome'?

By NISHI KHAN | INNLIVE

The euphoria of epic proportions surrounding Kabali, which was released on Friday, poses one important question: Why do Indians have such an astonishing penchant for idolisation? 

Be it Rajinikanth or Sachin Tendulkar or Narendra Modi-or Indira Gandhi in the past-Indians, especially those who live south of the Vindhyas, stretch their adulation for their icons to extremes.

Friday, July 22, 2016

Where Is The Telangana State 'Brand Ambassador'? Is Tennis Star 'Sania Mirza' Really Missing In Action?

By NEWS KING | INNLIVE

As all brand ambassadors do for thier work and cause for endorsement, where is the Hyderabadi Tennis Ace star Sania Mirza, the brand ambassador for Telangana State? Despite the several populist schemes launched and programmers organised since last 2-years, Sania Mirza is missing from her new role?

Exactly two years ago, on July 22, 2014, the Telangana government anointed ace tennis player Sania Mirza as its brand ambassador. And on the occasion, she was also handed over a cheque for Rs one crore.

Wednesday, July 20, 2016

The Tennis Ace Star Sania Mirza Interview: Generation Gaps In Indian Tennis ‘Are Very Larger Than Life'

By M H AHSSAN | INNLIVE

The 29-year-old says she wrote her autobiography ‘Ace against Odds’ to inspire young players to aim for the top.

With just over two weeks to go before the Rio Olympics begin on August 5, Sania Mirza is a busy person. The tennis world No 1 doubles player started her day with practice at 8 am, after a late night shoot. The 29-year-old could train only for an hour before Mumbai’s monsoon showers turned up typically uninformed. She then went for another shoot for a magazine, before attending the official launch of her autobiography Ace Against Odds in the city.

Tuesday, July 19, 2016

Special Report: Can India's Largest Ever Olympics Contingent Bring Back Its Largest Ever Medals Haul From Rio?

By M H AHSSAN | INNLIVE

Shooting, hockey, badminton, wrestling, and archery offer hope.

Despite India's sending its largest ever contingent (till then) to the summer Olympics in 2012 in London, the opening ceremony featured Bangalore-based danseuse Madhura Nagendra, who was seen walking at the head of the Indian team’s march during the Parade of Nations.

She grabbed more attention than the medal exploits of the 83 member-strong team representing India. Considering that India did end up with its best-ever haul of six medals – two silver and four bronze – perhaps it was a little bit unfair.

Friday, July 15, 2016

Can Indian Golfers Take Advantage Of A Depleted Field At Rio Olympics-2016?

By NEWSCOP | INNLIVE

Anirban Lahiri, SSP Chawrasia and Aditi Ashok will be representing India in golf at the Games.

The last time golf was played at the biggest sporting extravaganza in the world, India as a country did not even exist. It was way back at the 1904 Olympics in St Louis in the United States when a men’s individual and team event were held with only the host nation and Canada as the participant nations.

Wednesday, July 06, 2016

Film Review: ‘Sultan’ Is A Biopic Of Salman Khan, The Man Conquered All Odds

By RAMAN KAPOOR | INNLIVE

Director Ali Abbas Zafar’s sports drama is a thinly veiled study of the dark star’s triumph over his off-screen troubles.

Mixed martial arts league promoter Akash (Amit Sadh) needs a star fighter, preferably an Indian, to boost the prospects of his upcoming tournament. His father advises him to go see what Sultan Ali Khan is upto these days.

Thursday, June 23, 2016

Ramzan And Rooh Afza: How The Red Syrup Became The Staple Of Pakistan's Iftaar Table?

By RUMAISA KHAN | INNLIVE

A history of the 'laal sharbat' in advertisements.

Udivided India was experiencing a crisis under Viceroy Lord Minto. This was 1906, the year of the Simla Deputation. It was also the year in which Hakeem Hafiz Abdul Majeed laid the foundation of the Hamdard Dawakhana, in Delhi.
Starting as a small herb shop, Hamdard grew tremendously. Following Partition, the Hamdard Dawakhana was inaugurated in Karachi on June 19, 1948.

Monday, June 20, 2016

Exclusive: Salman Khan Opens His Heart On His Filmy Career

By M H AHSSAN | INNLIVE

Shah Rukh Khan's role as the Team India coach Kabir Khan in the hockey drama Chak De! India (2007) earned the superstar rave reviews.

But several years down the line, it emerged that SRK was not the first choice for the role - director Shimit Amin had previously approached Salman Khan. But Salman turned down the part, and Amin took the project to Shah Rukh.

Sunday, June 19, 2016

In Sundarbans, Hindu Devotees Offer 'Bhog' To Muslim Deity For Protection From Tigers

By SHEEBA ALAM | INNLIVE

A sheer example of the multicultural and unity in diversity among Indians.

Fifty-five year old Bhabotaron Paik is a forest guard at the Neitidopani forest reserve in the faraway western edge of Sundarbans jungles. But before he dons his khaki uniform every day, he bathes, wears his dhoti and puts on an orangegamchha (stole) on his bare shoulders, a red tilak (mark) on his brow and heads out, barefoot, to the "Bon Bibi temple" to present her bhog (the offering of food that is made to Hindu deities).

Monday, June 13, 2016

How Much Is Euro 2016 Worth? Over €1.5 Billion In Revenues Recorded

By RAMAN KAPOOR | INNLIVE

The Olympic investment budget is several times bigger than Euro 2016, coming in at around €9 billion.

There are two ways of viewing the fact that a record 24 national teams are competing to lift the Henri Delaunay Cup at Euro 2016 in France. Some regard UEFA’s decision to include nearly half of its 55 members as a move to leverage football’s ability to bring people together in a celebration of sport and national identity.

Sunday, June 05, 2016

Breaking Noise: Why TV News In India Will Never Change?

By NEWSCOP | INNLIVE

Every few years, one of our news channels rebrands itself as the place for news. News is back, they proudly declare. So apparently, they’d been doing this other thing till now, and they’re letting us know that they’re finally going to try to do the thing that they were supposed to have been doing all along.

It’s like watching an addict clean up his act for the umpteenth time. Sure, he says, the heroin is out of my system! I’m not touching that alcohol again, she assures her support group. That piece of cake was my last sugar high, they promise their dieticians. But the minute things get tough, they’re back to square one, chasing the dragon again.

Monday, May 30, 2016

Virat Kohli And David Warner: One-Time 'Bad Boys' Of Cricket Are Now 'Leading Lights'

By M H AHSSAN | INNLIVE

The IPL final brought together two opponents who had little in common: One team had been a consistent performer throughout, always pushing for a place in the play-offs; he other was languishing at the bottom of the table at the mid-way point, before rising like the phoenix part of their opponent's logo. One had the best bowling attack in the league, the other had the worst.

However, it was with their respective captains - David Warner of Sunrisers Hyderabad and Virat Kohli of Royal Challengers Bangalore - that the journeys became uncannily similar.

Thursday, May 26, 2016

For 'Make In India' To Work, India First Needs To Become Globally Competitive

By LIKHAVEER | INNLIVE

A survey of industrial clusters in four states shows Prime Minister Narendra Modi's big idea isn't exactly working.

Bhoday Sales Corporation is tucked inside the industrial zone of Ludhiana. A small machine tooling factory with a net worth of not more than Rs 10 lakh, it makes manufacturing equipment for other plants in the city.

Of late, it has fallen on bad times. Sales are down. At one time, says its founder, 68- year-old Maan Singh, the company used to make four power presses a month. It now makes one a month.

Sunday, May 22, 2016

Should Cricketer 'Virat Kohli' Be Protected For Bigger Battles Instead Of Being Thrown Into Every Odd Skirmish? 

By RAHUL SHRESTA | INNLIVE
The selectors are thinking of resting India's Test captain for the upcoming Zimbabwe tour, though he may not welcome the decision.

In the summer of 1998, Sachin Tendulkar couldn’t put a foot wrong. After a memorable Test series win against Australia at home, he was unstoppable in Sharjah in the Coca-Cola Cup, which Indian cricket fans know better as “Operation Desert Storm”. Tendulkar, who turned 25 that April, was already India’s best batsman, and most worshipped sportsman. Meanwhile in Delhi, a boy named Virat Kohli, all of nine, was awestruck by what he saw.

Tuesday, May 17, 2016

Popular Culture: Centuries Before Weather Satellites And Crop Science, Farmers Turned To A Poet For Sowing Advice

By MRINAL PANDEY | INNLIVE

Through his poems, Ghagh handed down tried and tested formulae for growing good crops. Even today, his poems help illiterate villagers understand the world.

For the last four centuries and more, Ghagh, literally “the sly one”, has been undoubtedly one of the most popular poet philosophers for farming communities in the Indo-Gangetic plains. An environmentalist centuries before the word was coined, Ghagh was no romantic adventurer looking to project his longings and needs through poetry. His pithy couplets that have been handed down generations through the oral tradition, are based on time-tested linkages between weather and the moon’s path through various star constellations. As an astronomer and agricultural guru, Ghagh was engaged in a struggle for exactitude – for a language free of Sanskrit punditry to discuss crop cycles, seeds, various tips for buying healthy cattle, and sound reflections on vagaries of both man and nature, all without scientific meteorological systems and instruments. His poems still remain invisible pathways for illiterate villagers to understand the world around them. It enables them to access pragmatic tips to read the signs for a good crop year or a bad one.

Since 1900, when inexpensively printed copies of vernacular poetry and popular folk songs became available all over the northern plains, Ghagh has remained a perennial bestseller. At every rural fair, railway station book kiosk and with every roadside bookseller in the vast Hindi belt, little paperbacks on Ghagh ki kahavatein(Sayings of Ghagh) are available. Like the Ramcharitmanas of Tulsidas, most literate rural families will have a dog-eared copy of Ghagh’s poems tucked away somewhere. Little is known about this enigmatic itinerant poet’s personal life. To the academe though, Ghagh remains something of a country mouse. And they tell us it could also be somewhat rash to presume that all the poems ascribed to him are indeed his, and not interpolated at a later date. But isn’t that also true of a large part of Vyas’s Mahabharata, Kabir’s Bijak and Guru Nanak’s writings? Then how does the same academe ascribe these works as theirs?

Hasty conception:
Legend has it that Ghagh was born in village Chaudhary Sarai near Kannauj in what is now central Uttar Pradesh during emperor Akbar’s reign in the 16th century. This is supported by the fact that the poet is believed to have settled a village called Ghagh Sarai, a few kilometers away from Kannauj, on a piece of land gifted to him by Akbar.

Legend has it that Ghagh’s father was a Brahmin scholar who was also renowned as an astute astrologer at the court. The astrologer, once going through his own horoscope, calculated that the hour to conceive a miraculously bright son was near, and decided to rush home to his wife. He soon realised that there was no way he could make it home in time for the required act. So he decided not to let the precious seed be wasted. He found a young woman working in the royal harem as a maid, whom he quickly impregnated with his genius-engendering seed. Thereafter, as in the case of Ved Vyas, Vidur, Tulsidas and Kabir, out of this illicit encounter between a man and woman from different ends of the caste scale, the great poet-philosopher Ghagh was born. He was named Bhaddar.

By this time the astrologer, in the manner of the fathers of the above-named poets, had abandoned the impregnated maid and returned to his court life and domestic bliss. So the precocious young Bhaddar, alias Ghagh, was brought up by his mother in what must have been fairly austere circumstances. Guided by his genes, by the time Bhaddar was six, he knew all about the movements of the various astral bodies and, based on those, began to forecast coming events. His fame as an astronomer-cum-astrologer (in those days they were identical) grew after he made various precocious, but correct predictions, for the palace folk. When he heard of this, Bhaddar’s father came rushing to claim the miracle child as his, and forcibly removed him from his weeping mother. Bhaddar refused to walk so he was carried upon his father’s shoulders. On the homeward journey, the two came to a field where a farmer was scattering seeds almost half of which were being carried away by a strong wind to the neighbouring field.

“When the crop is ready, who will reap the crops that will grow out of seeds being blown into the neighbour’s field by the wind?” asked Bhaddar.

“Crops, son,” the father said, “no matter where the seeds blew in from, will always belong to the land owner, not to the scatterer of the seeds.”

Bhaddar leapt off his father’s shoulders and ran off shouting, “Then I too must leave this man and go back to my mother, whose womb bore your seed for nine months and brought me into the world.”

“Jo har jotey kheti taki, aur nahin to jaki taki (The field belongs to one who tills it, otherwise anyone may come and grab it)” runs one of Ghagh’s famous sayings, inspired perhaps by this early initiation on reproductive rights and wrongs.

Man of many parts:
A lonely precocious child will often invent imaginary companions. We see in some couplets that Ghagh too has an alter ego, whom he addresses as Bhaddari. Since most of the poems ascribed to the poet known as Bhaddari are the same, it is safe to presume that Ghagh was born as Bhaddar or Bhaddari and continued to address his lost self after he took the pen name Ghagh.

As was natural for a fatherless boy, Ghagh developed a deep and compassionate insight into the female psyche and grew up to be something of a ladies’ man. The poems hint that at some point he found himself a devoted and vivacious wife whom he lovingly addresses as his confidant Ghaghini, in some of his couplets.

Like Aesop, a tanner by profession who was jailed later in life, Ghagh too was a man of many parts – scholar, astronomer, astrologer, lover of women and vet. His poems, for instance, offer a cornucopia of information on how to tell a good horse, bullock or a milch cow, or gauge the temperament of an animal before buying, based on certain subtle physignomical details.

In a feudal age dominated by the nobility and major landowners, Ghagh had watched the spectacle of power closely. As a witness-turned-participant, Ghagh was not arrogant but stoutly refused to suffer fools or bullies. “The biggest landlord, if he is no use for tackling my woes, can go hang himself for all I care,” he said. Farming, Ghagh was convinced, was the best among all professions for a self-respecting commoner, giving him the supreme authority of the self-employed. Trading came next. It may uproot a man, but helped him retain financial self-sufficiency. At number three was service, an infinitely worse choice than the first two, but better than begging: “Uttam kheti madhyam baan, nikhid chakri, bheekh nidan.”

Farming, according to Ghagh, was of three kinds: the self-sufficient one, where the owner himself tilled the land, the fraternal kind, where one’s brothers looked after the fields, and the last was the kind where serfs were left to handle all affairs, and even if the land was going to the dogs, they could not care less.

Common wisdom:
As an abandoned son Ghagh turned his face firmly away from a certain sort of classical learning favoring instead the age-old wisdom of the ordinary farmer. He borrowed his authority from the simple folk among whom he lived and loved – farmers, housewives, widows, barbers, cobblers, makers of simple farming tools, farm laborers, tarts, witty thieves and scoundrels. They all revealed to him their hidden desires and secret lives: “Teetar kari badri, vidhawa kaajar rekh, yeh barse, vo ghar kare, ismein na koi mekh,”(If the cloud is the colour of partridge feathers and a widow sports kohl in her eyes, the first, have no doubt, will bring rain, and the other will shack up with another man.)

“She eyes you, then looks at herself suggestively, touches her ornaments, lets her head covering drop to reveal her midriff, after this the harlot does not need to beat drums to get attention.”(Parmukh dekhi apan much govey, choodi, Kankan, besari tovai/Aanchar tarey pet dikhavey, ab chhinari ka dhol bajavey.)

Ghagh also makes some shrewd pronouncements on the downward slide of worldly power and/or natural degradation: “Ochho Mantri raja nasey, Taal binasey kai/saan sahibi foot binase, Ghagha pair bivai “(A foolish minister is the death of the ruler, moss destroys a pond, a flashy lifestyle is killed by insider trading and a foot is destroyed by cracks in the heel).

According to Ghagh, there are four things that may cause sorrow unless one watches out – A pretty wife, a servant who knows your secrets, a well-worn silk garment, and a period of bad governance.

To the farmer, Ghagh handed down many tried and tested formulae for growing good crops. Sow jowar (millet), he said, at a distance covered by a frog in one leap, sow bajra and cotton at the distance of a footstep, and cucumbers at the distance covered by a deer in one leap. Sugarcane is best sown in clumps close together where water is plentiful.

There is also oft quoted advice from Ghagh on a healthy diet for men and women – Jaggery in chaitra (late February, early March), oily food in Baisakh (April and early May), and bel juice in Asadh (July). Food to be avoided during specific seasons are greens during the monsoons, curds during Bhadon (August), buttermilk in Kartik (early winter), cumin in Aghan (late spring), coriander in winter, sugar in Magh (early winter), and chana (gram) during Falgun (early February).

A curious composure exists in Ghagh’s poems, despite occasional cynicism and a sardonic sense of humour. Moralists, theologians, merchants and philosophers may often ignore experience, being exclusively concerned with actions and products. Literature, therefore, will be mostly created by the disinherited or exiled who, even after four centuries, seem to be sitting cross-legged under a tree and smiling at you as they define true happiness:

Khet hoye goinde, hal hoy char

ghar mein grahasthin, bhains dudhar

ann mein gehun, dhan mein gay, agal bagl baithey do bhai

Hans ke anda as dadhi hoye

banke nayan parosey joye

rhreek padti, jdhaney bhat

galgal nimbua aur ghee taat

Oonch atariya bahey batas, Ghagh kahey ghar hee Kailas.”

(Says Ghagh, who would wish to move to another heaven if the family farm lay close to the village, and one owned four pairs of bulls for ploughs, a milch cow, a duo of blood brothers always by his side, and finally a wife, who still gives her man an arched glance each time she serves him a good meal: a ladle full of arhar dal on fragrant and freshly cooked rice served with side helpings of hot butter and slices of lemon, and all topped with a bowl of rich yogurt solid as a duck’s egg, topped with raw sugar.)

Sunday, October 04, 2015

Exclusive: 'Secret Tricks' To Get Lose Weight At 'Old Age'

By M H AHSSAN | INNLIVE

It`s sadly but as we are getting older some evil forces conspire and work against us and we are losing our weight more difficult.

All those years of walking up and down on buildings, playing sports and general moving are making our joints and muscles less cooperative. They are stiffer, they hurt more and make exercising unpleasant.

That is just a beginning. Our metabolism is gradually slowing down and it doesn`t make for us favors as we age. People are burning 1 – 2 percentage fewer calories every year thanks to putting on fat and thanks to losing muscle mass.