Show notes
In the latest episode we discuss popular terms used to describe a cricketing contest - and why these are often lazy alternatives with no standard definition.
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Talking Points:
- The category error in sports - when stories are used to describe contests
- The narrative around 'big moments' and how some phases are assumed to 'decide' contests
- The rampant discourse around 'pressure situations'
- The belief that some players are superior at the finish than at the start
- Jordan and Robert Horry - and the spread of the clutch narrative
- Australia v South Africa, Edgbaston, 1999: a narrative gold
- The future of cricket discourse - and ways to describe the entire contest
Participants:
Siddhartha Vaidyanathan (@sidvee); Kartikeya Date (@cricketingview); Mahesh Sethuraman (@cornerd); Ashoka (@ABVan)
Related:
- The episode that really matters - 81allout podcast with Sidharth Monga
- What's the story, Morning Glory - 81allout podcast with Karthik Krishnaswamy
- What we talk about when we talk about cricket - 81allout podcast with Daniel Norcross
- Anatomy of a classic - Virender Sehwag on his 155 in Chennai - Interview by Chandrahas Choudhury and Nishant Arora - ESPNcricinfo
- Bias Case - Steve Tignor - Tennis World
- James Anderson and reverse-swing - Sachin Tendulkar and Brian Lara discuss - YouTube
- Against narratives - Kartikeya Date - Cricketingview
- Why there is no such thing as a finisher in ODI cricket - Kartikeya Date - ESPNcricinfo
- Roger Federer opens up - Interview by David Remnick - New Yorker
- Paddy Upton's interview of Allan Donald - Apple podcasts
- 'I wanted to be there at the end. That was my drug' - Lance Klusener interview - The Cricket Monthly
- Rudi Webster - Think Like a Champion - Amazon.com