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From end of the Earth to World Cup final — the audacity of the Kiwi – Prism


From end of the Earth to World Cup final — the audacity of the Kiwi – Prism

New Zealand in the T20 World Cup final against the most expensively assembled cricket nation on the planet is not a sporting achievement. It is a personality type.

I am writing this from a hospital waiting room where the wi-fi is aggressive, the coffee is optimistic, and my father is currently having his knee surgically improved against his will. The last part is not entirely accurate; he consented to the surgery.

It is the recuperation he is resisting, with the focused, creative energy of a man who has decided that the medical profession, for all its centuries of accumulated knowledge, has fundamentally misunderstood his particular knee.

He will not do the prescribed exercises at the prescribed intervals. He has opinions about his medication schedule that differ meaningfully from those of his surgical team. He listens to advice the way a very senior cat listens to instructions: with complete attention, apparent comprehension, and zero subsequent compliance. I have spent the better part of this week sitting across from him, deploying every rational argument available to a grown adult son, and achieving roughly nothing.

I am told this stubbornness is a family trait. I have been told this, specifically, by my father, which I find to be an extraordinary piece of self-awareness from a man who, 20 minutes ago, informed his physiotherapist that he knew a better way to do the exercise she had just demonstrated.

T20 World Cup, specifically, of a team that has spent this entire tournament doing something my father would deeply respect: ignoring the script entirely, and winning anyway.

New Zealand, ladies and gentlemen.

Which brings me to Sunday. And to the argument swirling in my head.

You know what the Board of Control for Cricket in India actually trades in? Not cricket. Cricket is just the headliner. What the BCCI trades in, with a consistency that would make a Coca-Cola sales manager weep into his quarterly report, is the feeling that if you stop watching for even one afternoon, something irreplaceable will happen without you.

They didn’t invent that feeling. But somewhere in the 1990s, a group of communication mavens in Mumbai figured out how to bottle it, franchise it, and pipe it directly into the nervous system of 836 million people simultaneously. That’s not a board of cricket. That’s a pharmaceutical company. And the drug, the glorious, all-consuming, argument-starting, WhatsApp-forward-generating drug, is Indian cricket: administered 365 days a year, in 11 languages, at a volume that makes reasonable conversation impossible.

Every other cricket board in the world should study this. Not the politics. Not the money, though there is extraordinary money. Study the communication architecture: the decades of smart, obsessive, occasionally chaotic but always emotionally intelligent people who built a machine so effective that a nation of 1.5 billion looks up from whatever it is doing — farming, coding, running a chai stall, performing open-heart surgery, and thinks: but first, cricket.

That is genuinely the only thing worth saying about the BCCI today because Sunday belongs to someone else entirely.

hits the fastest century in the tournament’s history. Thirty-three balls. South Africa, one of the most intimidating bowling attacks on the planet, was reduced to spectators at their own elimination.

This is what New Zealand does. With 100,000 people, a cricket season that runs shy of even six months and then politely steps aside for the All Blacks, and a selection pool so small that your national opener probably knows your national spinner’s mother, they arrive at World Cup finals. They just show up, these 11 men from the end of the Earth, calm and slightly dangerous, like they never read the chapter on being underdogs.

Which is, I suppose, why I keep thinking about dad.

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