Archive for 2013

Loud Thinking November 05, 2013 at 07:36PM

“Never give up on what you really want to do. The person with big dreams is more powerful than one with all the facts.”

Albert Einstein (1879-1955);
theoretical physicist, philosopher, Nobel Prize winner

Cricket rules: Some questions

My letter published by the daily “Dawn” today on 5 November, 2013.

Link:- http://dawn.com/news/1054254/cricket-rules-some-questions

Cricket rules: some questions

FROM THE NEWSPAPER

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Published

2013-11-05 07:51:35

THE question before everyone, particularly the International Cricket Council (ICC) and match referee David Boon, is that whether the umpires changed the ball and granted five penalty runs to the Pakistani team, under the latest ICC Test match playing conditions coming into effect from Oct, 1, rule 42.1.1 or 42.1.2?

If rule 42.1.1 (quoted as below) was applied, then why didn’t the umpires allow the batsman at the wicket to choose the ball as per clearly specified law (a) and did the bowler’s-end umpire inform formally the captain of the batting side of what did occur as per (d) below?

a) Change the ball forthwith. The batsman at the wicket shall choose the replacement ball from a selection of six other balls of various degrees of usage (including a new ball) and of the same brand as the ball in use prior to the contravention.

Additionally, the bowler’s end umpire shall:

b) Award five penalty runs to the batting side.

c) Inform the captain of the fielding side of the reason for the action taken.

d) Inform the captain of the batting side as soon as practicable of what has occurred.

e) Together with the other umpire report the incident to the ICC match referee who shall take action as is appropriate against the player(s) responsible for the conduct under the ICC Code of Conduct.

However, if rule 42.1.2, quoted as follows, was applied:

If it is not possible to identify the player(s) responsible: a) change the ball forthwith. The umpires shall choose the replacement ball for one of similar wear and of the same brand as the ball in use prior to the contravention.

(b) The bowler’s end umpire shall issue the captain with a first and final warning, and (c) advise him that should there be any further incident by that team during the remainder of the match, steps 42.1.1 a to e above will be adopted, with the captain deemed under e) to be the player responsible.Why did the bowler’s end umpire not issue first and final warning as per 42.1.2 (b) to G.C Smith? And if the warning was issued to the South Africa captain, then why after the match AB de Villiers said the following on record, as reported by ESPN cricinfo, quoted as below:

“De Villiers said there was uncertainty as to what they were being penalised for: ‘I don’t even know where the message came from. There were no warnings, no talk of it. I still don’t know the facts’.”

As such, all the above mentioned facts must be cleared by the ICC and the match referee. It should also be explained that whether De Villiers was speaking a white lie, or did the elite ICC umpires, miserably failed in the performance of their duties as per law and gave undue advantages to the South African team at the expense of the Pakistani team?

S. NAYYAR UDDIN AHMAD
Lahore

Loud Thinking November 04, 2013 at 10:38PM

Almost everyone is admitting that Mr. Imran khan today delivered the best speech in the parliamentary history of Pakistan; and it was one of the few best speeches ever delivered in Pakistan, by any leader.

Loud Thinking November 04, 2013 at 06:00PM

Integrity is to act according to what is right and wrong.

Loud Thinking November 04, 2013 at 05:59PM

“Life is an echo. What you send out, comes back. What you sow, you reap. What you give, you get. What you see in others, exists in you. Remember, life is an echo. It always gets back to you. So give goodness. ”

Unknown –

Loud Thinking November 04, 2013 at 04:30PM

DON’T SETTLE FOR ORDINARY!
By David McNally
from The Push
Encouragement can come in many forms. Sometimes it is the courageous, honest words of a friend or loved one that help us make a course correction away from self-defeating and limiting behavior. Such words were spoken to me one cold and windy morning. Perhaps, a little background might help.

As a young person I was very ambitious. Impatience, fueled by an intense desire to succeed, led me to forego college and start my first business straight out of high school. I was not suspicious or afraid of “get rich quick” schemes; on the contrary, I wanted to get rich, and the quicker, the better.
By my mid-twenties my drive had propelled me to a level of success that included fancy cars, a beautiful home, international travel and Europe as my playground. All this was clear evidence that I had joined the ranks of those who had “made it.”

At the age of twenty-eight my business failed. Having merged my whole identity with the business, when it disintegrated, so did I. Besides having nothing, I felt I was nothing. The downhill slide was slow, steady and painful. Convinced that I had blown the most wonderful opportunity life would ever present, I saw no promise in the future whatsoever.

I took refuge in late nights out with friends, which severely threatened my marriage. Ironically, it was my wife who rescued me.

One morning I came to the breakfast table nursing a king-sized hangover—not exactly a time when one is looking for advice! However, my receptiveness was of no concern to my wife who was determined to confront me with the truth.

Quietly, slowly and succinctly, she uttered words that will indelibly be imprinted on my mind: “David, you are becoming so ordinary.”

Ordinary! Ordinary! The words seared my fuzzy brain and haunted me for the rest of the day. At my core I had long believed that there was no such thing as an ordinary human being. “What have you been doing?” I asked myself. “Two years ago you were on top of the world and now you have plunged to inconceivable depths.”

Insight and learning comes only when one is open and ready. My wife’s words had left me a vulnerable yet willing student. I immediately received what is known as a blinding glimpse of the obvious. So life had been unfair to me? So what? Had it not been unfair to millions of others? Had many of them not faced far worse circumstances? Had they accepted defeat?

My reaction for two years had been to not only be a victim but to remain a victim. My behavior of blaming, excuse making and finger pointing was getting me nowhere. The guidepost to a positive future flashed like a neon sign—personal responsibility. It was a road that I knew would not be easy, but upon which I was ready to embark without the slightest hesitation.

Since that time, I have built a successful new business, written several books, produced films and been a guest speaker at conferences all over the world. There has been no greater learning for me, than within the events and circumstances of our lives is the wisdom upon which to build our futures.

My life has taught me that mistakes don’t matter, failure doesn’t matter. What matters is that we continue to move forward and grow from our experiences. Hal Prince, the famous Broadway producer said: “Anyone who hasn’t had a failure is an amateur.”

My wife, Jo, has now passed away. Her words from many years ago, spoken with candor yet great love, are my ongoing encouragement to settle for nothing less than the extraordinary.

“The doors we open and close each day decides the lives we live”.

Loud Thinking November 04, 2013 at 02:47PM

Don’t Extend the Deadline—Plan Better

You may want to rethink postponing that deadline. Although it’s a relief to be “given” more time, we rarely use extensions wisely; instead, we lose motivation, procrastinate, and wind up facing the same situation again later. Address poor time planning with these tips:
Shorten the distance to your ultimate goal. This will keep motivation high, and keep the pressure on for procrastinators. Impose interim deadlines, breaking a larger objective up into mini-targets spaced out strategically in time. These deadlines need to be meaningful, though— if it’s no big deal to miss the deadline, then it’s not a real deadline.
Become a realistic judge of how longs things will take. Consider how long it’s taken to complete similar projects in the past, and try to identify the ways in which things might not go as planned. Break the project down in detail, estimating the time needed to complete each step and allowing for snags in your schedule.

Adapted by HBR from “Here’s What Really Happens When You Extend a Deadline,” by Heidi Grant Halvorson.

Loud Thinking November 03, 2013 at 07:41PM

“We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit.”

— Aristotle

ICC – Wake up before cricket is turned into a sham..!

60 meters boundaries have made the game of international cricket a mockery.

Wake up ICC before people become disenchanted with this glorious game.

An excerpt given below from a news item published by the daily “The Nation”, exposes the worth of cricket records, which are formed on various small and large size unstandardised grounds, having different boundary sizes ranging from 60 to 90 meters.

Here, we must not forget that games like football, hockey, tennis and badminton etc., are not played on different size fields. If the playing areas are not standardised, how can anyone claim that he has created a world record.

It is high time that ICC takes up this important issue of various boundary sizes, used in all forms of cricket and rule that minimum of 80 meters and a maximum of 90 meters boundary sizes are a must, for any match to be recognised as an international game, in all forms of cricket.

Excerpt of the daily “The Nation” published 3 Nobember, 2013 is detailed s belo:-

“India hit 19 sixes in a ground having 60 metre boundaries as they racked up 383; Australia replied with 326, the ninth time in 11 innings that a team passed 300 this series. And though they lost by a sizeable margin in the end, they did not lose the six-hitting contest. Australia’s 19 blows over the Chinnaswamy Stadium’s tiny boundaries helped smash the record for the most sixes in a one-day international. India and New Zealand had hit 31 in Christchurch in 2009; India and Australia hit a numbing 38 today. Vinay Kumar’s 1 for 102 in nine overs were the worst figures by an Indian in an ODI; two Australians were close to owning the record for the quickest 50 by an Australian, and James Faulkner’s 57-ball 100 was his country’s fastest century. It was hard to make sense of it all.”

Loud Thinking November 03, 2013 at 12:08PM

“Anger is an acid that can do more harm

to the vessel in which it is stored

than to anything on which it is poured.”

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