Cricket :  a game by the leisurely, for the  leisurely
 -          lowest exertion, highest remuneration 
  
 Stan Swamy  
  
 Cricket game  has become a contagious fever. This  fever comes especially to the youth of middle and lower-middle classes. Now that  TV channels are bringing it 'live', which ever be the country where it is played  and whatever be the odd hours when it is played,  the youth are ready to keep awake just  to be able to watch it.  Often it  looks as though these young people have nothing else to do in life. Cricket as a  leisurely and long drawn out game stands in such contrast to other games such as  Hockey, Football, Basket Ball, which are played with tremendous intensity and  exertion so that it is all over within a maximum of two hours.  
 If the Indian team is doing well and is  winning, there is tremendous cheer and fire-crackers are liberally  exploded;  if, on the other hand,  our team is doing badly and is losing, there is grim silence.  When the Indian team returns home as  winners, the players are cheered as 'heroes';  if they return as losers, they are booed  as 'villains'. The State and Central Governments vie with each other in  rewarding the players in cash and kind.
 Unfortunately these young people do not  realize that cricket is used by the capitalist ruling class as a safety-valve to  diffuse  the socio-economic tensions  the youth face and divert their attention from the serious problems such as  unemployment. 
 Let us probe a little on the history of  this game and discover  the  contradictions thereof.
  
 Colonial origin:  The origin of cricket as a game is.to be traced to  the British colonial period. The first rules were written in 1744 and exported  to all the British colonies.  It is  not a surprise, therefore, cricket has become popular in the erstwhile British  colonies such as India, Pakistan, Sri  Lanka, Bangladesh, West Indies, South  Africa. The illegal British occupation of  Australia where the native Aborigines  were massacred  and marginalised,  made it possible to export  cricket  there also.      
  This was a game of the British upper  class and  was meant for their  relaxation. It was played mostly during Sundays which was a day of rest and  relaxation. The elitist character of this game is that the lower class were not  supposed  to play this game. It was  a preserve of  the white ruling  class.  It is significant  to note that although colonialism as a  political factor has come to an end, the local native population is hardly  represented in the teams of Australia and South  Africa. Verily smacking of  racial discrimination.  
  
 Destructive of local traditional games:  Traditional games like hockey  which used to be considered as  India's game and in which we  were so good that India just could not be defeated at  international level has been pushed to lower levels of esteem and attention. Now  many other countries have overtaken India to the extent that the Indian  team could not even qualify to compete in the next  Olympics.
 Another heartening feature of hockey is  that the tribal boys and girls have been excelling in it at local, national and  international forums. It used to be a pleasant sight to see small tribal boys  and girls in villages playing hockey with self-made hockey sticks made out of  small tree branches in open spaces and even in the fields. But sadly, even this  home-game is fast losing out to cricket.
 Another destructive aspect of cricket is  that it takes such a long time to be played. It normally takes two, three, four  consecutive days to conclude. Even the one-dayer takes  one full day.  That means the viewers have to take the  day off from all other occupations inclusive of earning one's livelihood. This  way, cricket encourages laziness in the young viewers and distracts them from  gainfully employing themselves in life. 
 More damaging is the fact these young  people are slowly drawn into outright unethical practices such as gambling and  betting on which team will win. Thus there is every possibility of these young  people will grow up to becoming irresponsible adults.  
  
 Cricketers have become purchasable  commodities in the market :  One writer  observes that today's cricketers are  "being evaluated like prize-bulls bought up by the super-rich" !    Thus we have a handful of  new crorepathis and the only gain the  nation can have is a few crores of rupees realized as income tax.  
 One often wonders what motivation these  cricket-heroes have in playing the game.
 Is it their name and fame?  Is it our country's prestige?  Or, is it the  Dollars?
 From the way the game is organised and  the players are rewarded, it looks that Dollars is the most important and  coveted factor.  This is very  unfair towards the rest of the country men majority of  whom are struggling to make both ends  meet. It is very unjust towards the Indian government which foots their  extravagant air & surface travel, stay in luxury hotels and all other  arrangements for the players comfort and enjoyment.
  
 Show-pieces for cheap advertisements of consumerist  goods:  
 Just like cinema-stars who allow  themselves to be used for cheap money in ads for consumer items like soap /  talcum powder / TVs / computers / motor-bikes  / cars etc
 cricketers also have become show pieces  in cheap ads. Very few of them really stand up in defence of human values and  concerns such us human rights / stand against displacement  / steps to reduce unemployment of the  youth / dignity & respect for women, child-workers etc.  In other words, cricketers by and large  are not desirable models for the rest of society to follow. They are playing for  their own name & fame and are keen on earning as much wealth as they can  when the wind is still 
 blowing  in their  favour.
  
 A capitalist game at home in the capitalist  society:
 Capitalism  by its very nature is promotive of  leisure, comfort, luxury, inequality.. Cricket also by its very nature is a  leisurely game and promotive of the values of capitalism. Mass media, both print  & electronic, in capitalist society make the cricket stars objects of  purchase & sale.  So, as long as  capitalism will prevail, cricket also will flourish.  
  
 10 October  08