This article was first published in my column on Ekalavyas on March 10th, 2014. You can find the original post here.
TJ ‘Air India’ Sahi dunks over a taxi during a dunk contest as part of the 2011 Indian basketball All Star weekend at the Mastan YMCA Courts in Nagpada, Mumbai. |
I may call
myself a die-hard basketball junkie now, but when I was a kid, I wanted to grow
up and be Sachin Tendulkar.
I wasn’t good at
cricket, but I played it a lot because everyone I knew played cricket. From the
grassy fields of my school to the concrete gullie
behind my house, we made everything our little pitch. Cricket was the sport, everything else was the
alternative.
I had Sachin
posters gracing the walls of my bedroom and Sachin’s face on my pencil-box for
school. Like most casual fans of the sport in India, I only paid attention to
cricket scores when Sachin was playing and turned off the moment he got out.
Even as I grew older and lost interest in cricket, I could never switch off my
fandom for the man we call ‘God’. I screamed with my friends when Sachin scored
200 against South Africa. I celebrated when his teammates hoisted him on their
shoulders when they won the World Cup. I shed a tear watching his farewell speech.
It’s no secret
that kids look up to athletes, and most of us – if we were sports fan growing
up – were inspired by an athlete as a role model, whether it was Jordan or
Ronaldo, Federer or Kobe. But if you were Indian, with a few exceptions it’s
more than likely that the athlete was a cricketer. If not Sachin, it was Dhoni,
or Ganguly, or Dravid, or one of the countless others.
Ever since
cricket went from being a pastime to a religion in the early-to-mid-80s, India
has rarely been able to produce idols in any other sport. Blame it on the lack
of media attention, on the dysfunction of sporting bodies behind other
athletes, or simply, a lack of success at the international level.
Although
overshadowed by cricket, there have definitely been success stories to motivate
and inspire across most other Indian sports. Over the last three decades, the
likes of Leander Paes, Viswanathan Anand, Abhinav Bindra, Sushil Kumar,
Yogeshwar Dutt, Mahesh Bhupati, Dhanraj Pillai, Bhaichung Bhutia, PT Usha, Mary
Kom, Anju Bobby George, Saina Nehwal, and many more have garnered national and
international success and fame. While their respective sports might not make
the Times of India front pages or spike TRPs on Indian sports channels as much
as cricket, these sportsmen and women have at least charted a path to follow
for aspiring young ‘alternative’ sportsmen and women.
Unfortunately,
we haven’t been able to find the same type of role model in basketball. The
mainstream public in the country won’t be paying attention until an Indian
player makes a mark at the international stage, to stand among the best in the
world and hold their own. Outside of the niche basketball circles, the names of
most of India’s finest basketball talents are unknown. The closest a truly
famous person came to dribbling a basketball in India was back when Shahrukh Khan was playing trap-defense on a sari-clad
Kajol in ‘Kuch Kuch
Hota Hai’.
But if you ask
among those niche basketball circles in India, you will hear several names. You
will hear of past greats like Ajmer Singh or Ram Kumar. You will be schooled on
dominant players like Jayasankar Menon or Sozhasingarayer Robinson. You will
catch up with those headlining the scenes in the present day, like Vishesh
Bhriguvanshi, the explosive TJ
Sahi,
the Singh Sisters from Varanasi, or Anitha
Paul Durai.
But the name you’re likely to hear more than any
other is of the great Geethu
Anna Jose. Jose has been the most dominant player in India
for the last decade and is perhaps one of the greatest players we’ve ever had.
She was the first Indian to play professionally in Australia, enjoyed a
professional stint in Thailand, and was even given a trial by three
WNBA teams in 2011. Domestically, the Kerala-born superstar
has dominated nearly every tournament she took part in. She has been the
lynchpin of India’s national women’s team and the only Indian player to match
the talent and output of Asia’s finest.
Jose’s successes over the past decades brought her
and her sport some much-needed attention, but her popularity never reached out
to the masses like it deserved to. Jose has been a role model to serious
basketball players in India, but to the common man or woman, she’s just another
woman who could pass by any Indian airport or shopping mall without anyone
raising an eyebrow in recognition, unless the eyebrow is being raised to remark
on her height.
Indian basketball needs celebrities. We need our
best players to be recognized on the street. We need fans to request photos
with them. We need their accomplishments to be celebrated nationwide.
But for that to happen, our best players need to
have some accomplishments first. The never-ending cycle of bad results leading
to less exposure leading to loss of interest from young players and lack of
funding and then to more bad results has continued for decades. The only way
out of this ruthless cycle is an anomaly, a tangent of talent that can ignite
national interest in the sport.
Luckily, when a country has over 1.2 billion people,
that tangent might not be too far away. The challenge is to find it and nurture
it so it can blossom into its full potential.
Four years ago, India discovered one such ‘needle in
a haystack’ in the form of a 7-footed 14-year-old phenom straight out of a
non-descript village in Punjab. Satnam Singh Bhamara was discovered while
dominating the Youth and Junior national tournaments for Punjab and immediately
picked out by IMG Reliance to be sent for expert training at the IMG Academy in
Florida. Bhamara has been there since, honing his skills, and occasionally
returning to India to take part in the bigger national tournaments or represent
the Senior National team. While he has developed into a solid big man with
flashes of brilliance, many fear that even for him, the discovery of talent
might’ve been too little too late.
There has also been a rising number of non-resident
Indians from the US, Canada, or elsewhere who
have started to rise within American college or High School
ranks and have offered a ray of hope to Indians back home. While these players
may not have Indian nationality, and thus, can’t contribute to the national
teams in India, they have been able to instil the belief that basketball
excellence has little to do with ones DNA or race and more to do with one’s
opportunities, training regimes, and of course, dedication.
At the top of the totem pole of these Indian-origin
talents right now is Canadian-Indian Sim Bhullar. A 21-year-old, 7-5 giant,
Bhullar currently NCAA Division 1 college ball for New Mexico State, and even
made some waves with his performances leading up to the NCAA
national tournament last year. If Bhullar can continue to develop in the next
few years, he could have an outside shot at the NBA.
In last month’s column, I spoke about how a
professional basketball league in India – whenever it does get launched – could
revolutionize the sport and propel its popularity into a
much higher gear. The league would also be a platform to create basketball
heroes and heroines, idols who fans can look up to and relate to at the same
time. Of course, the dream of every hoop fan in the country is to see an Indian
name don an NBA jersey or the captain of the Indian national team hoist up a
FIBA international trophy. That day isn’t here yet, but we are indeed getting
closer. And when that day becomes today, the vicious cycle of ineptitude might
finally be broken, and Indian basketball players might enjoy the star status
that they deserve.
Now here’s a story. Three years ago, Mumbai’s famous
Mastan YMCA courts in the Nagpada area began to play host to what then became
an annual tradition, the Indian
Basketball All Star Weekend. In 2011, the event’s organizers
first brought together the best men and women players in India to the outdoor
court for the two-day event, which included a dunk contest, three-point
shootouts, and All Star games.
If you don’t know, Nagpada is a mostly-Muslim
minority neighbourhood in India’s financial capital, an overcrowded bustling
area of slumdogs in the city of millionaires. This iconic basketball court is
where some of the nation’s finest have honed their craft and where poor young
children mingle with international-level players. Nagpada is known for its
kebabs, its crowds, its chawls, and
its basketball. The All Star Weekend events were free for anyone to attend, and
hundreds of local fans – mostly kids – sat on the floor courtside cheering
through the exciting two days.
I was there covering the event in its first year,
and TJ Sahi, one of India’s most popular basketball players, was participating
in the dunk contest and the All Star game. Sahi is an explosive point guard who
earned
the nickname ‘Air India’ for his incredible athleticism and
successes for India and Punjab.
Some of the Indian stars were at the court early on
the first night, and while they waited for the competitions to begin, Sahi sat
in a far corner separated from the rest of the players but surrounded by a
dozen local kids. He was signing autographs and giving dribbling tips to the
kids, who looked up in awe with admiration and respect. About an hour later,
Sahi’s celebrity status was etched in the kids’ memories forever: he channelled
his inner Blake Griffin for a spectacular
dunk over a kali-peeli Mumbai taxi
to win the Dunk Contest.
What happened in Mumbai that night – like what
happens in Indian basketball events around the country on most nights – was
barely noticed by those who didn’t attend and barely reported to the outside
world. But it made a mark on those who were there and convinced at least a few
of those youngsters to grow up and become the next TJ Sahi.
It was just another small example of a basketball
role model being born in India. The moment was an untamed and totally desi glimpse of the future. Hopefully we
can have many more moments like it in the road ahead, and those Sachin and
Dhoni posters are eventually replaced by Indian faces motivating the next
generation on the basketball court.
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