04.07.09
Is Ishant Sharma tiring ?
Despite all the hype surrounding Ishant in our cricket media he hasn’t picked up too many wickets in the recent New Zealand series. In fact he was cluttered around the park for many spells in the last 2 test matches. This surely wasn’t the case in the last 2 series in India which were played in far more batsman friendly conditions and against better opposition(Australia & England). Ishant to me looks just tired with all the workload he has had to bear in the last 12 months with little or no rest in between – 13 test matches, 17 ODI’s 3 T20’s. He has already suffered 1-2 niggles and his pace seems to be not holding up in long spells.
Ishant is of course not an isolated case our team management’s recent handling of fast bowlers in general has been spotty to say the least. Young bowlers who start their careers bowling at 140 kmph either become medium pacers or are riddled with career delibiting injuries – Munaf, RP Singh, Sreeshanth, Balaji all have struggled with injuries in recent seasons. Irfan Pathan of course seems to have now almost become a part time bowler/T20 specialist after Greg Chappel’s experiments with his bowling action. The primary reason seems to be our busy schedule of one day matches every year. Fast bowlers have not been rotated and people like Ishant and Zaheer are expected to play in most matches in every format of the game. Clearly in batsman frienly formats like one dayers and T20 games it’s not required to play our best bowlers all the time. If we do have serious aspirations of being the best test team it’s highly imperative that ‘fast bowlers‘ - probably our most precious asset for winning matches abroad are handled with care.
04.02.09
My first bear…
I’m still struggling to learn the intricacies of the ferocious bear that we seemed to be trapped in with pretty much the whole globe. Bad habits that I picked up (despite all my caution) during the past 4 years of the greatest bull market our stock markets had seen are not easy to discard. Now in hindsight I find myself quite some way from becoming a proper value investor. The mental discipline required to focus solely on intrinsic value was relaxed and lesser investments considered as the bull run matured. This bear run is already 14 months long and the price destruction is already the worst in our stock market history. Economic revival does seem at least 6-9 months away but maybe some sectors have already bottomed. The way Auto, cement and commodity stocks have rebounded in the last 5 months would suggest that the worst may be over for them. But any sustainable strong earnings growth is at least 2-3 quarters away for most good companies I track. So now lies ahead the tricky part of buying into them at the right levels in these volatile times.
Things are quite interesting as far as reactions to the bear goes amongst people I know. Some newcomers are now discovering the art of shorting markets at these low levels. Others who have built up images of being experienced hands pretend that they have been short all along. Just like they pretended to have bought early into multibaggers in the bull run. Typically experienced hands reveal little about what they are doing, though they always seem to be the ones asking your opinion about individual stocks. I’ve learnt very little from these so called old hands in the bull run and as expected have not learnt much in the downturn either. Maybe that is the way to keep one’s edge in the markets – leech off others and pretend to have not made any mistakes. In any case too much input is probably one of the reasons I chased all those not so resilient smallcaps in the first place. I should simply focus on improving my investment process and cut out all the remaining clutter.