I recently came across Wabi-Sabi, which is a quintessential Japanese
aesthetic or frame of thought. It is based on accepting and embracing transience
and imperfection. Among many other things, it is the beauty of things
imperfect, impermanent and incomplete. I couldn’t help but relating this to a
couple of recent sporting stories. One that had The perfect ending, and the
other which left people wanting.
November, 2013.
The West Indies cricket team visited the Indian shores for a concocted test
series that originated out of the blue, cutting short a mouthwatering showdown
between India and South Africa. The reason being that Sachin was on 198 tests,
had announced his retirement, and it was supposedly fitting that he get his
farewell in his home ground, Mumbai. And quite conveniently, 2 test matches
were scheduled enabling the Little Master to finish on exactly 200 tests.
So, when it was all said and done (which didn’t take much
time, thanks to West Indies’ abysmal capitulation), we had the customary lap of
honour, trophies and mementoes from all possible organizations, a truly emotional farewell speech, and a “why
was this series played” trophy presentation ceremony. Sachin Tendulkar had
called it a day with 200 tests and 100 international centuries to his name. Perfect
numbers. The chase for which had a billion of us on the edge of the seat for a
year or 2. The ending was perfect and beautiful, but not quite.
July, 2014.
Wimbledon Finals. Novak Djokovic vs Roger Federer. It wasn’t quite the dream
Fed-Nadal finals, as unknown Aussie teenager, Nick Kyrgios, played the game of
his life to knockout Nadal in the Round of 16. But it was a dream that Federer
and millions of his fans had chased together since the magical Wimbledon win of
2012. An 18th Grand Slam and 8th Wimbledon. It was just
the Djoker lying in between the elusive landmark.
This Wimbledon, Federer was at his vintage best. The artist
was painting the greens of the center court with the most delicate of strokes
and elegance, as his foes felt the privilege of losing to him, one after the
other. Federer had reached the finals with effeminate ease. But, that was to be
it. In spite of a valiant effort, the artist couldn’t quite give the finishing
touches to his canvas. The Djoker was at his gritty best, RFed was at his
beautiful best. But that day, Endurance overcame skills; Doggedness overcame
artistry; Djokovic overcame Federer. The number stays at 17 and 7. The picture
of Roger Federer looking on as the events of the day unfolded with a solitary
tear rolling down his cheek has to be among the most sadly beautiful moments in
sporting history.
Now, both these sporting icons are legends of the game. Arguably
the best ever to have graced their respective sports. One, whose story has come
to an end, the other, who is probably past his best days in the sun. The
twilights of both their careers have been a story of a chase. One chased the
perfect numbers of 100 and 200, while the other is chasing one more Wimbledon,
One more Grand Slam, after having reached close more times than one can count.
It wouldn’t be a surprise if he never reaches that elusive, make-believe brass
ring.
Yes, I say make-believe because Federer winning that 18th
Grand Slam, or rather not winning it will not make him any lesser a player than
he already is. The chase for it and falling short is indeed sad, but if we look
back, those are moments that will live with us forever.
Similarly, Sachin not scoring that 100th ton, or
not finishing on 200 tests wouldn’t have made him any less a player than he
already was. His 100th ton was an abominable innings in a match
against Bangladesh which we lost, and the 200th test was against a weak
team in a series that no one will remember with any fondness. The numbers are a
testimony to his greatness, legacy and longevity. But the moments, not quite
so. Personally, I would’ve preferred for him to finish on 99 international
centuries or 198 tests, than be a part of a meaningless chase along with a billion of us.
A sport is about moments, not chasing milestones and numbers.
Don Bradman immortalized 99.94. Federer might end up immortalizing 17 (or 18,
one more Grand Slam, please?), Michael Schumacher immortalized 7. None of these
numbers are perfect. But they’re beautiful because they are flawed, imperfect
and inadequate. The Japanese have got it right. Wabi Sabi should be the essence
of life.
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