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Download Free Out Of My Comfort Zone Steve Waugh Ebooking

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Steve Waugh never said “You just dropped the World Cup”. He didn't say it to Gibbs nor to anybody else. It was a ridiculous legend propagated. Jul 31, 2006  'A quintessentially Australian tale, told in a straightforward, unpretentious style.' The Age Rarely does a truly great player reveal as much of himself and his sport as Steve Waugh does in his long-awaited autobiography. Waugh opens up on his personal life in a way few would expect of a man known in cricket circles as 'The Iceman'. He provides revealing insights into life on and off the field.

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BENGALURU: Steve Waugh did not tell Herschelle Gibbs, ‘Son, you have just dropped the Cup’, when the South African messed a simple catch from Waugh in a must-win match for Australia in the Super Six of World Cup 1999. It is one of the many delicious, apocryphal quotes in cricket lore. Waugh, in his autobiography, ‘Out of my comfort zone’ (an impossibly fat brick of 800 pages), says what he told Gibbs was, ‘Do you realise you have just cost your team the match?’ Waugh, the master of mental disintegration who wore down opponents on the ground, had the measure of even as fine a captain as Hansie Cronje in that match. You can sense Waugh exult, as he writes, that Cronje ‘was on edge. The game’s equilibrium had shifted’. Waugh’s 120 not out, chasing 272, was the defining innings of the 1999 World Cup. If he had failed, Australia would have flown home.

Instead Australia qualified for the semifinal where they met the Proteas again. The South Africans self-destructed at the doorstep of victory and that tragic Allan Donald – Lance Klusener run out will haunt South Africa for ever.

The final was so one-sided that Waugh’s team beat Akram’s Pakistan in a game that lasted less than 60 overs. India’s Venkataraghavan, who umpired both the Australia – South Africa games told us that Waugh was the steeliest among captains, a strategist who brought preparation, thought, planning and determination to quell opponents. Waugh’s successor, Ponting helped Australia make it a hat trick of triumphs. Indians will ruefully remember his punishing century that decided the 2003 final at the Wanderers in Johannesburg. Four years later, Ponting again held the trophy after an unbeaten run through the 2007 tournament. He had a very strong team – Hayden, Gilchrist, McGrath et al - but his use of left arm wrist spinner Brad Hogg who finished with 21 wickets, was special.

Audacious and innovative It was only in 1992, in Australia and New Zealand that coloured clothes, black sight screen, white balls, floodlights – and field restrictions – were introduced. Even as other captains struggled with these new rules, Martin Crowe swiftly crafted an audacious bowling and batting strategy that almost won New Zealand the cup. Without doubt, one of the enduring memories of the 1992 World Cup is the stirring captaincy of Crowe. With just two fielders allowed outside the circle in the first fifteen overs, Crowe caught the opposition off-guard by promoting aggressive, middle order batsman Mark Greatbatch to open the innings, giving him the licence to attack the short square boundaries with his trademark slashes and cuts. Crowe also surprised the opposition by opening the bowling with off-spinner Dipak Patel, using long off and long on as outfielders. Patel had an outstanding tournament, snaring eight wickets at an economy rate of 3.1.

Crowe’s form was sublime during this tournament. Had he not pulled a hamstring in the semifinal against Pakistan while batting (he was forced to sit out when the Kiwis fielded) he might not have let Imran Khan’s team win. New Zealand’s semifinal loss was poignant but the innovations that Crowe introduced have stood the test of time. He was a misunderstood man during his playing days, but later, as a cricket columnist and mentor of young cricketers, Crowe was liked immensely. The tributes that poured in when he passed, as a result of cancer, at 54, showed what an adornment he was for the game. Towering leader Imran’s triumph in 1992 was not to be denied.

Pushing 40, his tearaway speed a thing of the past, Imran was however at his field-marshal best. No one gave Pakistan a hope in hell at the half way stage, for they had won just one out of their first five round robin group matches. Saved by the skin of their teeth when rain washed out a game in which they were bowled out for 74 by England, Pakistan grabbed the lifeline that fortune had thrown them. On air during a game last week, Wasim Akram recalled, how at every meeting outside the ground, Imran would keep saying that they will win.

An unrecognizably brilliant team played the rest of the tournament, beating Australia, Sri Lanka and New Zealand to get into the semifinals. When they slacked even a little, Imran gave them a shellacking in choicest Punjabi. Every player quaked; even Miandad, never short of ideas or advice, approached his captain warily. Imran promoted himself to one-drop and his batting gained a Zen like quality. Young Inzamam batted with the freedom his captain had granted him. Wasim’s left arm swing always lethal, acquired a spitting cobra quality. Aaqib’s deliveries seemed invested with all sorts of guile.

A tall, arresting figure always, Imran during those last few games, seemed to have four hands as he commanded and marshalled his fielders. It was as though Imran was ordained to lift the 1992 World Cup. Always a step ahead 1996 was Sri Lanka upstaging every team. Jayasuriya terrorized every bowler he faced. On a mean pitch at Eden Gardens, Aravinda de Silva’s attacking fifty thwarted India in the semifinals. He went one better with a classic century in the finals against Australia. But the man who planned and plotted the Lankan campaign all the way was Arjuna Ranatunga.

For foxiness, there were few to match the Lankan skipper. His body language itself was combative, as if to say, ‘we are much better than you think, and you will find out soon’. Murali became a different bowler, after Ranatunga stood up for him in a series-threatening confrontation with the umpires in Australia after they called Murali for ‘throwing’. Ranatunga and team manager Duleep Mendis, on that same Australian tour – just before the World Cup – converted Jayasuriya, who used to potter around in the middle order, into a superhero opening batsman.

They chose pocket dynamite Romesh Kaluwitharana as Jayasuriya’s partner. Sri Lanka’s batting was transformed.

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With the explosive Jayasuriya at the top, Gurusinha, Aravinda de Silva and Ranatunga in the middle order, and Muralitharan and Dharmasena as spinners, the Lankans had created a champion team for sub-continental conditions. How canny was Ranatunga? One can get an oblique answer to that question, from his running between the wickets. The roly-poly man would waddle between the wickets but one will not remember him missing a run or getting run out. Never out of breath, the wily Lankan skipper, throughout WC 1996, was a step ahead of the others. Winning hearts Brendon McCullum won everyone’s hearts in 2015.

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Like his compatriot, Martin Crowe, McCullum too was unfortunate, losing the final. But such was the goodwill for New Zealand and McCullum, that the Kiwis were everyone’s favourite team. McCullum showed the world that aggressive cricket can co-exist with fine sporting spirit. It was a fairy-tale path all the way to the final for the Kiwis as McCullum led them from the front, opening the batting with a belligerence that made the senses sing. He failed a few times – and heartbreakingly in the final - but he hit four fifties at a mind boggling strike rate of 188.5. As fielding captain, he set a new benchmark for aggression, by providing three slips to his fast bowlers.

All this while playing with great cheer, an ever-present smile, never a sledge and accepting every umpiring decision with equanimity. Four years later, taking them forward with the same good cheer and building even more goodwill for his country is Kane Williamson. A calm, organised and thoughtful leader, Williamson is among the world’s top three all-format batsmen. All class and grace, he has already overtaken Crowe as New Zealand’s best ever batsman.

More than money Test cricket was nearly a century old in 1975 but the game had nothing in the nature of a ‘world championship’. Cricket seemed strangely satisfied with bilateral jousting. It was with the arrival of one-day cricket that the sport had a ‘world championship’. And since the inaugural event in 1975, every four years, the best of cricketing nations compete for what has become the most cherished trophy in the sport. The winners in 2019 will take home £3.2 million, which is 800 times the £ 4,000 that Lloyd’s team got in 1975.

The commerce is overwhelming but even the cynics will concede that for the young athletes passionately competing for the World Cup, all thought of the prize money as incidental. What has driven every player and captain from Clive Lloyd to Michael Clarke is the indescribable elation of holding the trophy in their hands. We will know who will hold the 2019 cup soon enough. The writers S Giridhar and VJ Raghunath are colleagues at Azim Premji University and authors of two books on cricket.

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