Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Nawab of Najafgarh wants his crowning glory back

 

The Nawab of Najafgarh wants his crowning glory back. Fed up of his bald pate, dashing opening batsman Virender Sehwag heads to Dubai to get a hair transplant done after the Test series against England, which concludes on December 23.

Sehwag will undergo a
hair transplant procedure at the very clinic where Bollywood actor Salman Khan underwent a similar treatment in 2007. Like Salman, Sehwag too will be treated by an American surgeon.

Sehwag has perhaps realised that 30 is too young an age to lose one's youth. When he travels to Dubai to treat his baldness, the Delhi batsman will be listed alongside cricketers like former England skipper Graham Gooch, Australians Shane Warne, Greg Matthews and Ricky Ponting, and Pakistan's Indian Cricket League rebel Naved ul-Hasan Rana... all of whom have undergone
hair weaving treatment.

Sehwag has perhaps realised that 30 is too young an age to lose one's youth. When he travels to Dubai to treat his baldness, the Delhi batsman will be listed alongside cricketers like former England skipper Graham Gooch, Australians Shane Warne, Greg Matthews and Ricky Ponting, and Pakistan's Indian Cricket League rebel Naved ul-Hasan Rana... all of whom have undergone hair weaving treatment.

A source in the Delhi District Cricket Association (DDCA) confirmed Sehwag's travel plans. "After the
England series, Sehwag has confirmed he won't be available for Delhi to play a few first class matches as he would be travelling out of country," said the source. Sehwag leads Delhi in domestic cricket.

On Sunday, Sehwag himself refused to take calls in his hotel room in Indore, where India take on England in the second ODI on Monday.

In the initial phase of his career, Sehwag often drew comparison with little master Sachin Tendulkar, not just because of his strokeplay, but also due to a similarity in build. Like Tendulkar, Sehwag, short and stocky, sported a thick crop of curly
hair.

However, as runs in his kitty started swelling, the
Delhi batsman's hair began thinning. For the last year-and-a-half, Sehwag sported a completely bald look.

On Sunday, Sehwag himself refused to take calls in his hotel room in
Indore, where India take on England in the second ODI on Monday.

In the initial phase of his career, Sehwag often drew comparison with little master Sachin Tendulkar, not just because of his strokeplay, but also due to a similarity in build. Like Tendulkar, Sehwag, short and stocky, sported a thick crop of curly
hair.

However, as runs in his kitty started swelling, the
Delhi batsman's hair began thinning. For the last year-and-a-half, Sehwag sported a completely bald look.

After Sehwag's
Dubai sojourn in December end, the bald days will soon be history, though.

SEHWAG'S PREDECESSORS
Hair loss is just another occupational hazard for professional cricketers. Long hours under the sun, sweat accumulation due to caps and helmets and non-stop travelling result in quite a few players losing their hair.

Like Sehwag, leg-spinner Warne had gone completely bald, but now sports long
hair after being treated by Advanced Hair Studio, a clinic specialising in hair loss treatment.

Former Australian off-spinner Matthews too was a beneficiary of Advanced
Hair Studio and together with Warne, launched a campaign with the clinic titled "Yeah, Yeah."
Former Australian off-spinner Matthews too was a beneficiary of Advanced
Hair Studio and together with Warne, launched a campaign with the clinic titled "Yeah, Yeah."

Ponting never openly admitted he underwent a
hair transplant but after years of thinning, he shocked everyone at an International Cricket Council awards last year sporting a thick crop of hair.

Hard-hitting
England opener for three decades between 1970s and 1990s, Gooch was perhaps the first star cricketer who openly admitted getting a hair transplant done.

WHAT IS HAIR TRANSPLANT?
During
hair transplant, hair-bearing portions of the scalp are removed surgically and they are transplanted on an area of thinning hair. After a fortnight following the surgery, the entire portion of transplanted hair fall off. New hair begin to grow only after three months.

The entire procedure costs around Rs 3 lakh and those who undergo the treatment must continue to take the medication for a long time. Also, they need to undergo hair weaving every year or so.

With batsmen like Sehwag, it's always all or nothing

Harsha Bhogle


      

: Exhibit One is shortish, tubbyish, balding and very very Delhi. Exhibit Two is tall, lean, muscular, a rebellious South African in English colours. Intriguingly, they have a very similar approach to the game. Few other cricketers can pull in as many people to watch a cricket match and then have them on the edge of their seat all day. Sehwag seems to hit the cover off every ball and yet his last eleven Test hundreds have each been in excess of 150. Pietersen seeks to impose himself on the game every ball and isn't too far away from the odd daft shot but no one, apart from the Don, got to 4000 Test runs faster. For people who carry a self-destruct button as closely as a terrorist would a cyanide capsule, they have crafted extraordinary careers.

Sehwag has embraced risk the way a seeker does his faith. Or maybe we have been looking at risk differently over the years. That is what the pioneers do; they question established thought. It is an approach that has worked exceptionally well with him and indeed, now defines him as a person. And yet, every few innings we moan over his choice of shots, we exhort him to be more judicious; we tear our hair out in frustration. We want bits of Sehwag, not the whole person, almost as if he were a roast chicken and we could choose the parts we wanted. We can't. With Sehwag, as with everyone else really, we buy into the whole person, into the package. If it isn't acceptable, we discard the package but we cannot pick and choose.

And so we want him to play that incredible fourth innings 83 against England at Chennai, in a very small shortlist of his best performances, but can't fathom his shot when India have to bat two days and a bit to save a Test match. We want it both ways; some days we want him to cut loose and gape at him and at others we want him to bat two days and scream at him if he doesn't. We cannot accept that fact that he is different, that if he is told not to get out he won't score a run.

It would be an easy, if slightly boring, world if everyone could be the way we wanted them to be. "Sehwag, bat 2 days to save this Test, Manmohan Singh, erect statues of yourself in every city, Fardeen Khan, act!" Life would be a beautiful buffet but it isn't. If you are chasing a target Sehwag is your man, if you want someone to bat for your life, get Rahul Dravid. You need both. If we ask them to be different, we get a different person!

So too it is with Kevin Pietersen who is all aggression, all ego, all "Pietersen-centric" as the English media now refers to his view of the world. Why can't he be a bit different at times, they ask. A little more discreet maybe? A little more correct, a little more, what shall we say, acceptable? Appropriate? Effectively, we are asking, why can't he be a bit more like a Strauss sometimes? Doesn't Strauss come from South Africa as well? So then...?

The ego, the aggression, the latent lack of belonging and the consequent larger-than-life portrayal define Pietersen. That is how he is. He will play a breathtaking innings one moment and shoot his mouth off the next but that is the package we buy into.

As journalists, commentators, or just observers, we are often called upon to comment on people's performances. And very often, in our minds, we create this perfect entity; the dash of Sehwag, the composure of Tendulkar, the patience of Dravid, the dignity of Laxman, the elegance of Ganguly. Indeed we create God himself and arrayed against this epitome of perfection we search for shortcomings. Sehwag shouldn't have played that ball, Dravid should have stepped on it earlier, Laxman should have moved his feet more....

Maybe we should accept people for who they are, indeed for what they are; for the basket of skills they bring to the table and therefore, for the deficiencies that are a part of them. Like us, but on a wider screen maybe, they will succeed and they will fail. Because that is who they are

 

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