A Sporting Chance
âThe Great Tamasha,â by James Astill
Kuni Takahashi for The New York TimesFor two months in spring, the Indian Premier League is watched more than anything else on Indian television. Test cricket is played between nations over five days, without guarantee of a winner. I.P.L. matches last three hours and are played between Indian teams owned by businessmen and movie stars. Results are guaranteed.
THE GREAT TAMASHA
Cricket, Corruption, and the Spectacular Rise of Modern India
By James Astill
Illustrated. 290 pp. Bloomsbury. $27.
There have been unforgettable moments. Five years ago, one player slapped another as they left the field. The slapped player was arrested in May and accused of fixing I.P.L. matches. Also arrested was the son-in-law of the cricket board president, who owns a team, on suspicion of gambling on matches. His accomplice was thought to be a C-list actor, who once won the Indian version of âBig Brother.â Tamasha, the Hindi word for âspectacle,â begins to describe it.
âThe Great Tamasha: Cricket, Corruption, and the Spectacular Rise of Modern Indiaâ ends before the I.P.Lâs latest depredations came to light. Would the book have examined them? You cannot say to what extent. James Astill touches only on the finest overlap of cricket and corruption that modern India had to offer him â" its Black Sox moment â" when, in 2000, a former captain and several players were charged with match-fixing and barred from the sport. The leagueâs previous brushes with corruption are not explored so much as summarily presented. When you consider the subtitle, corruption is not really Astillâs muse. His interests are wider.
âThe Great Tamashaâ is a series of excursions into a cricket-fixated society. For four years Astill, a descendant of a cricketer who played for England in the 1920s, was stationed in New Delhi as the South Asia bureau chief of The Economist. He devotes much of the book to recounting how Indian cricket went from colonial recreation to national addiction, and while treading this familiar ground, the narrative lacks the propulsion of discovery. The sportâs interactions with race, nationalism, religion and caste, for example, have been treated with greater depth and nuance in Ramachandra Guhaâs extraordinary social history âA Corner of a Foreign Field.â
Astill attempts to make the big themes contemporary, not always with conviction. His grasp of caste does not inspire confidence: Brahmins, he writes, make up less than a fifth of the population, when the figure is more approximate to 5 percent; he uses the word veda (properly applied to ancient Hindu texts) in place of varna (the Hindu caste classification). Cricket obsessives will notice other errors, like the number of runs India trailed by in its greatest test victory. Readers might be surprised to note that the book claims Indira Gandhi declared a state of emergency rule, censoring the press and suspending elections, in 1977, which was when it was lifted.
Astillâs excursions, however, give the book its spice, its masala. âThe Great Tamashaâ is a book of breadth rather than depth. It buzzes with field trips and brisk interviews that sometimes bring insight, and more often momentum and freshness. At a film shoot in Kashmir, a Bollywood leading lady originally from Queens, with a name like a Bond girl, Nargis Fakhri, is literally spoon-fed by an assistant to protect the wet henna on her hands. âDude, itâs gross,â she says, not about the mutton curry placed in her mouth as she is being interviewed, but of her first impressions of Mumbai. âI was, like, standing looking out my hotel window thinking: âYou know what? This is gross.â â
Astill has an ear pricked for self-Âincriminations and tactless evasions. In a chapter on administration, he attempts to penetrate the opacity of the Board of Control for Cricket in India. The group is described as a âsecretive volunteer organizationâ that âdid not appear to consider itself bound by the most basic rules of corporate governance.â A longtime chief of a provincial association concedes that no new member has been admitted for two decades. His son captains the state team. In Delhi, another administrator shows the author the âbrick-sized wadsâ of stadium tickets he is compelled to give away to policemen and politicians to grease the system. Asked about membership at his association, he says: âThat is a very great question, and I will give you enormous respect and many great parties if you can find out and explain to me how it works.â
The mysteries of this secretive volunteer force could be a matter of trivial amusement, but Indian cricket is an enormous industry. It is also the financial heart of the global game, accounting for some 80 percent of revenues. The I.P.L. alone is valued (however it is these things are valued) at over $3 billion in annual revenues.
The league was created in 2008 by an audacious, wayward businessman named Lalit Modi, who sneaked his way onto the cricket board explicitly to push through an N.B.A.-style city-based league. It was Modi who persuaded movie stars, tycoons (and his own brother-in-law) to put in millions of dollars to buy franchises, and then, for sums unheard of, cricketers from around the world in a televised auction. He hired Western cheerleaders â" âwhite girls in hot pantsâ â" for the sidelines and institutionalized the after-match party, which was often a fashion show. He sold title rights to parts of the sport, like a catch and a six (the equivalent of a home run), in a way few respectable sports administrators would consider doing.
Astill calls the I.P.L. the leitmotif of his book for its shiny and hollow symbolism, perhaps also because it allows Indians to reveal how they see modern cricket and modern India. His depiction is close-up and entertaining, peppered with priceless quotations. He introduces Modi to us at an expensive London restaurant, in the process of disdaining a French waiter. It is 2010. The I.P.L.âs third season is over. Modi is in exile, living in a âvast Mayfair flat, serviced by half a dozen servants that he flew out from India on rotation.â His Indian passport is about to be revoked after the government begins investigating the I.P.L.âs financial irregularities. Modi claims to have fled for fear of the Mumbai underworld, whose orders to fix matches he rejected. âControversy was always something I wanted in the I.P.L.,â he tells Astill. âYou look at England and football â" players having girlfriends all over the place, having affairs. People are interested, some people find it aspirational.â /p>
âThere is a lot wrong with how Indian cricket is run,â Astill writes. âYet India is run even worse.â In the bookâs final scene, set in the Mumbai slum of Dharavi during an I.P.L. match, he wanders alleys âso narrow and overbuilt they were almost tunnels,â which âflickered with fluorescent television light and resounded with television noise,â to find a sweatshop of child embroiderers, cricket fans, for whom watching it on TV is a Sunday treat.
Rahul Bhattacharyaâs novel âThe Sly Company of People Who Careâ won the 2012 Ondaatje Prize.
A version of this review appeared in print on August 18, 2013, on page BR10 of the Sunday Book Review with the headline: A Sporting Chance.
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