Wednesday, March 25, 2015

 

Super sports psychology piece (Cricinfo) on Brendon McCullum: Let's Delve!


Go read the piece embedded at the end of the post- an article by ex-Hampshire captain Mark Nicholas on Brendon McCullum. I pick out excerpts from the article and embellish with some commentary: 

"His captaincy does much the same: "We are all over you and don't forget it." His tactics challenge prosaic thinking. His bowlers are empowered to take wickets. His fieldsmen are inspired by his own startling fielding performances. This style is more All Black than Black Cap. But for Richie McCaw read Brendon McCullum"

Richie McCaw is the Kiwi All Blacks' team captain, and is one of the greatest Rugby players of all time. He led the All Blacks to the world cup in 2011. The All Blacks' Haka - the Maori war cry/dance ritual - can be fiercely intimidating on the sports ground. Chest thumping at its best, add 40,000 screaming spectators and the atmosphere is truly like what the Collosseum must've been. Here's the Haka performed in the 2011 world cup final, where the Kiwis beat France:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Gbj_ig09WQ 


 While McCullum may not physically be doing the Haka, it seems like he is exhorting his men to play in the Haka spirit. 

"...the Black Caps must, and surely will, continue to play McCullum's game. This means sticking to the flow, not overthinking or overanalysing. The minute you change approach, or even marginalise, you screw up. If you focus too much on the outcome, it becomes difficult to play so freely. An attacking mindset can all too easily become a defensive mindset. The outcome needs to be a given. Concern for the consequences diverts attention from what must be done."

As I said in a tweet- clear strategic differences: McC ready to give Boult 10, ABD brings Duminy early. NZ berserk at the start of batting, SA steady. 

"McCullum's assault against England was a real f*** you of a performance. It said to his men: "They are not worthy"

The same can be said of McCullum's massive over vs Dale Steyn- the world's premium fast bowler- is just not worthy. Carting him for 24 off 5 balls, with the most authoritative being the dance down the wicket, massive straight six. 

McCullum seems to be creating a "reality distortion field", a la Steve Jobs - telling everyone to trust him on his "All or nothing" style. Under this reality distortion, reputations of bowlers like Steyn don't matter, and neither does the superior batting and bowling averages of the Australians (before the Australia game). He coaxed Daniel Vettori out of retirement, and result: Vettori bowled a super spell against Australia, and pulled off the catch of the tournament in that one handed pluck-out-of-thin-air at the boundary. 

His forceful style has the entire nation enthralled. Here's the letter he wrote to the public, published on the Herald cover page, urging them to support the black caps, thus enveloping them in his reality distortion field:



Paeans will be written out of McCullum if the Black Caps go on to win the world cup. I hope they do, and in which case this post will join the long such list. 

Side notes
1. New Zealand and Netherlands are fascinating sporting nations. Despite sparse populations, they seem to produce some champion teams, pioneering fascinating new ways of playing existing games. The Kiwis with their All Blacks team in rugby, and the Dutch with their Total Football in Football. 

2. Did not know that Martin Nicholas (the author of the piece) was an ex-Hampshire captain. I imagined he was a Harsha Bhogle. 

3. Both the Australia and the South Africa matches were narrow wins, and there is the randomness factor of course- if Duminy had not tumbled into Behradin, had ABD not muffed the run out, and so on. Well, two answers:
 a) In the course of 50 overs, there are equal random events in favour of and against. This aint T20. 
b) His captaincy was of this kind despite the results. The results only create a stage for the style, for more people to see and appreciate. 

Mike Nicholas' piece: http://www.espncricinfo.com/magazine/content/story/838569.html


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