No this is not a poem about the sea.
Sunday, November 8, 2009
WAVE........... WAVE.............
Posted by Unknown at 5:17 AM 0 comments
Thursday, November 5, 2009
THE HERMIT
And the wise hermit has returned !
Posted by Unknown at 5:14 AM 0 comments
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
I am Looking Through You
You don't look different, but you have changed
I'm looking through you, you're not the same
Your lips are moving, I cannot hear
Your voice is soothing, but the words aren't clear
You don't sound different, I've learned the game.
I'm looking through you, you're not the same
Why, tell me why, did you not treat me right?
Love has a nasty habit of disappearing overnight
You're thinking of me, the same old way
You were above me, but not today
The only difference is you're down there
I'm looking through you, and you're nowhere
Why, tell me why, did you not treat me right?
Love has a nasty habit of disappearing overnight
I'm looking through you, where did you go
I thought I knew you, what did I know
You don't look different, but you have changed
I'm looking through you, you're not the same
Yeah! Oh baby you changed!
Aah! I'm looking through you!
Yeah! I'm looking through you!
You changed, you changed, you changed!
Posted by Unknown at 3:36 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, October 27, 2009
TEARS OF A CLOWN......
Posted by Unknown at 6:44 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
ONE FINE DAY......
One fine day i broke my heart....
Posted by Unknown at 11:04 AM 0 comments
Saturday, July 4, 2009
Is Roger Federer the greatest ever? -By Kevin Garside
This is an article i liked from THE TELEGRAPH (UK)
An early impression of these championships sees a long-haired Romanian with improbable flair and a refined sense of showmanship flinging himself hither and thither, flicking the ball between his legs and handing his racket to old ladies and ball boys imploring them to have a go. His defeat to the upright, utilitarian Stan Smith in the Wimbledon final 27 years ago was the death of magic in the eyes of one young boy.
The match, Gone With The Wind set out across five epic sets, was regarded as one of, if not the best the Championships had seen; how that accolade moves around. Nastase was irresistible, not least because he didn’t have a moustache and he wasn’t Australian, a nation whose champions dominated at the dawn of the Open era; Rod Laver, John Newcombe, Tony Roche and Ken Rosewall. They spoke our language. They drank our beer. Nastase did none of these things. He brought mystery to the court.
What kind of player might be regarded greater than all the hall-of-famers above? Who is the man to head a roll-call spreading across a game that has been global 100 years? Is it fair to ask it of anyone to prove himself superior in all facets of the game? Yet this is what a player must do if he is to be regarded the best of all time. This is the claim made by many on behalf of the Swiss maestro in Sunday’s final. We are on the point of witnessing a landmark in the sport. None has 15 grand slam titles against his name. Statistically at least Roger Federer fills out the greatest criteria.
Though Federer won the Wimbledon junior championship 11 years ago, few saw in that victory the future that was to come. In the past 30 years only Pat Cash and Edberg have converted junior success into senior glory. Then three years later, while still in his teens, Federer buried the legend of Pete Sampras on Centre Court ending an unbeaten run of 31 matches. It was Federer’s maiden appearance in the house to which he would himself claim squatters rights. He lost to Tim Henman in the next round. It was 2001, the year that Henman ran into 'good’ Goran and bad weather. It was the year that Federer marked our cards.
Twenty-one consecutive grand slam semi-finals and 14 major titles are the numbers that speak for Federer today. But statistics are only part of Federer’s story. The elements that elevate him still further are aesthetic and ethical. He thrills on three fronts by winning, by doing so gracefully and with elegance and style. And the clincher; he has won on all decks.
In this the age of the two-handed backhand, the baseline slog, of biceps, of grunt and sleeveless shirts, Federer says no to all that. He eschews the dark side. He is every mother’s son, head boy in the tennis academy, a stainless charmer, modestly turned out, fair in manner and deed. And when he lets that backhand go we swoon.
His command of the tennis canon, his technical mastery, provides him with the material tools to win. The brain of a surgeon married to a gladiator’s spirit complete the kit. As 'nice’ as he appears, there is no sentiment attached to the kill. The dispatch is often brutally quick.
Afterwards he rarely speaks a bad word where a good one will do. There was little to compliment in the performance of Ivo Karlovic in the quarter-final. The lumbering Croat is serve dependent. Beyond that withering bullet there is little to his game. So Federer heaped praise on the pretty motion that aced him 23 times.
When he loses he does so without exception to the better man. To come second in a Wimbledon final classified as the best of all time, losing a title he had held for five years and his No 1 ranking with it to his greatest rival must have wrung his soul dry. Yet Federer stepped aside without fuss, extending his hand to Nadal while dying inside. Both had given every fibre. Neither deserved to lose.
Nadal took the greatest prize in tennis, but Federer gained in defeat. He showed us that losing, though painful, is not necessarily failure. How can it be if you have given all you have, left nothing in the locker. None can point the finger. Federer had met his match. He could not have done more. In circumstances such as there is, nothing for it but to acknowledge the better man and come back another day. Federer did this, and in doing so he acquired immortality.
On Sunday there is history to write. He has spent the fortnight in the shadow of Andy Murray, a willing warm-up act on Centre Court before the BBC went prime time. Murray is a great British story. Federer’s tale is greater than that. It transcends national interest. He is a global phenomenon the like of which we might never see again in tennis.
Poor Tommy Haas has spent a career with his nose against the window pain of high achievement looking on at the likes of Federer, wondering what he had to do to join him on the other side. This being his 32nd year he had considered leaving the racket at home and trying something else, modelling perhaps, or playing exotic aristos from a distant land in low level American soaps. One more go he said.
In Paris he drew Federer in the year he would break his grand-slam duck at Roland Garros. Despite a two-set lead, Haas’s fate was to become a footnote in Federer’s run to a 14th slam. Here, where Federer has won five times, where all his superhero efforts are trained on setting a unique benchmark in the game, Haas met him again.
Now it is Roddick’s get rid of this line for online turn, poor lad. There is only one who can look Federer in the eye and he is holed up beneath the Majorcan sun nursing a broken family and crumbling knees. The separation of Nadal’s parents coincided with the kind of career-threatening injury Federer has managed to avoid. Who knows when Nadal will return and for how long?
Federer’s run at the top of the game is as much an act of will as physical perseverance. His reliance on timing rather than power puts marginally less stress on his bones, but there is no let up between the ears. It takes a singular soul to dog it out on the circuit year after year, living out of suitcases, hitting balls day after day, hour after hour.
And to pull it off without a hint of controversy, never once missing a bus, or kicking the car door of a teenage girl, or abusing a police officer outside a nightclub in the small hours. Federer’s idea of rebellion is to marry the girl next door and start a family.
It would have been quite a day had Murray made it to the final. Perhaps it is better he didn’t. Let Roddick be grand slam victim No 15. Murray was that man nine months ago in New York. The experience made him a better player, but not yet good enough. For anyone born beyond Britain’s shores, this year’s tournament has always been about Federer, about the first to shoot for 15 grand slam titles, about the best there has been. Sorry Ilie.
Posted by Unknown at 7:15 AM 0 comments
Tuesday, June 23, 2009
IBA 2.0 Part-1
My so-called 3 month long summer internship came to an end on 18th of June 09' as i boarded the train back to Bangalore. It was a remarkable period in my unremarkable life. I started my SIP, with a lot of hopes and dreams for the coming period. But how it eventually turned out is unreal. My initial burst of energy slowly faded away and i switched back to my old ways of lying in front of the PC all day long and trying to entertain myself with orkut, facebook, movies and games, which was very UN-ENTERTAINING to say the least. The only spark was the end of the day talk with a special someone (from my side atleast) and day-dreaming about the future, ignoring the reality. But that chapter came to an end when i opened my stupid mouth and blurted out my feelings. The aftermath was quite obvious. The happy days were over and reality was staring at my face. I retreated back to my cave. But I couldnt hide away forever. So i turned up the volume of the outside world, hoping that the noise outside would drown the pain inside. It worked well when i was around with friends and family, but nobody can reach inside and make the pain go away. More about THAT some other time.
I found my coach and settled down. Some of my college friends were on the train too, had to say HII and all, just to be nice. Honestly i couldnt care less, but the NICE GUY SYNDROME takes over. They gave me a lot of shitty news, more classes, more assignments and a lot of other scary speculations. I had a sinking feeling inside and a part of me wanted to run away. But i carried on, (AS IF I HAD A CHOICE). I excused myself after an hour of fake laughing and college dissing. I slept off the rest of the journey, a better use of my time than wasting on people. But i was restless; due to obvious reasons. I had to figure out what to do with the TIME(not LIFE) thats ahead of me. So I Chalked out some plans, wrote it in my pocket diary, never to be opened again for sure, but had to do it to make myself feel better. Uncertainty clouds my reasoning, which breeds chaos.
Thats all for now.
Posted by Unknown at 7:06 AM 0 comments
Monday, June 8, 2009
THE G.O.A.T. - Roger Federer!
On Sunday, june 7th 09 Roger Federer defeated Robert Soderling to win a record equalling 14th career grand slam and his first at the french open, after reaching the finals on three previous occassions. This time though there was no Rafa to stop him ( Thank you soderling for that !) So the argument is once again back on the table - Is he the G.O.A.T.? ( greatest of all time- for the ignorant). In terms of pure skill, record against opponents( except rafa), his dominance over the period and ofcourse his impeccable grand slam record he is the greatest of all time. But to be regarded as THE GOAT, a champion has to have more than ability and skill. Lets look at a few OTHER crucial factors that maketh a LEGEND.
1. Consistency - I believe consistency is the true hallmark of a champion, to reach the top is not that difficult, but to remain at the top for a major part of your career, even if you are not in the best of the shapes or form, that requires a lot of courage and determination. To keep yourself motivated is the biggest challenge of them all. Roger definitely has displayed this quality in ample. So full marks to him.
2. Performance Under Pressure - This is the one aspect that separates the men from the boys. And Roger federer is definitely a MAN OF STEEL. He has risen to the occassion more often than not. But recently his aura of invincibility has taken a beating at the hands of Nadal, reducing him into tears at the Australian open final. But we cant count him out on the basis of one or two occassions. So a thumbs up to him on this aspect.
3. Respect For opponents - despite losing to Nadal so many times, Federer never lost his cool. He gets emotional when he loses yes, but never plays down his opponents. he always acknowledges and respects his opponents skill. the Nadal-federer rivalry has hooked the entire tennis world but they still have enormous respect for each other, which is a desirable trait in a true champion.
There are many other aspects but to me these three are essentially essential. Federer stands tall in all the three. So to me atleast he is the GOAT. And even the legends agree :
Federer's versatility was epitomised by Jimmy Connors' statement: "In an era of specialists - you're either a clay court specialist, a grass court specialist or a hard court specialist... or you're Roger Federer". David Foster Wallace described Federer's exceptional speed, fluidity and brute force of this forehand motion as "a great liquid whip", while John McEnroe has referred to Federer's forehand as "the greatest shot in our sport".
So we are indeed lucky and privileged to see in action THE GOAT - ROGER FEDERER. His shots are poetry in motion, the subtle angles, the aweinspiring forehand and the merciless serves. My only wish- To see this man play for real.
For more information on Roger- try this link - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_federer
Posted by Unknown at 12:36 AM 0 comments
Sunday, June 7, 2009
So it begins !
Well lets start blogging .... again !
But this time a little bit more seriously and consistently.
In this blog I will explore the matters that matter to me, straight from my head and ofcourse my heart too !!
- Shady
Posted by Unknown at 3:30 AM 1 comments
