Monday, September 30, 2019

Pakistan vs Sri Lanka: Babar Azam's century, Usman Shinwari's five-fer help hosts win historic Karachi ODI by 67 runs

Karachi: Pakistan rode on a brilliant century from Babar Azam and fast bowler Usman Shinwari's five wickets to beat Sri Lanka by 67 runs in the second day-night international on Monday as Karachi staged its first ODI in a decade.

Pakistan's Babar Azam celebrates his century against Sri Lanka in Karachi. AP

Pakistan's Babar Azam celebrates his century against Sri Lanka in Karachi. AP

Azam, currently one of the best batsmen in limited overs cricket, smashed a solid 105-ball 115 to lift Pakistan to 305-7 after the home team won the toss and batted.

Shinwari then knocked off the top-order in figures of 5-51 as the visitors – depleted by the withdrawal of 10 top players who refused to tour over security fears – were bowled out for 238 in 46.5 overs.

The win gives Pakistan a 1-0 lead in the three-match series with the first ODI rained off in Karachi on Friday. The third and final match is also set for the same venue on Wednesday.

Sri Lanka were down and out at 28-5 before youngsters Shehan Jayasuriya and Dasun Shanaka staged a fightback during their record 177-run stand – an ODI record for this wicket for Sri Lanka.

Jayasuriya missed his maiden hundred by four runs while Shanaka notched his highest ODI score of 68, but both fell in the space of three balls to surrender the fight.

Jayasuriya hit seven boundaries and a six in his 107-ball knock while Shanaka had six fours and two sixes in his 80 balls.

Pakistan captain Sarfaraz Ahmed praised Sri Lanka's fightback.

"Sri Lanka fought back hard and we did not get wickets through our spinners in the middle overs," said Sarfaraz. "We batted well with Babar and Fakhar doing well."

Sri Lankan skipper Lahiru Thirimanne praised Jayasuriya and Shanaka.

"It was a great effort by Shehan and Shanaka," said Thirimanne. "Disappointing the way we batted in the first 10 overs but the two youngsters showed us how to bat and led our fight."

The match marked the first ODI cricket to be played in Karachi since the same two teams played here in January 2009, on the tour when the visitors' bus was attacked by terrorists in Lahore.

International cricket remained suspended in Pakistan for six years before Zimbabwe became the first team to play here in 2015.

Pakistan also hosted a World XI (three Twenty20s), Sri Lanka (one T20 international) and the West Indies (three T20) in the last three years.

Stringent security

Like in the recent series, Pakistan have put in place stringent security arrangements for the Sri Lankan team, with 2,000 security personnel in and around teams' hotels and stadium.

A crowd of 12,000 came to watch the return of ODI cricket to their city, weathering heat and various security check-posts, using special shuttles to reach the National stadium.

Shinwari dismissed Sadeera Samarawickrama (six), Avishka Fernando (nought) and skipper (Lahiru Thirimanne (nought) to rattle Sri Lanka to 22-4 by the eighth over.

Jayasuriya and Shanaka bettered the previous best sixth wicket stand of 159 between Chamara Kapugedera and Chamara Silva against the West Indies at Port of Spain in 2008.

It was Azam who treated the fans in the afternoon.

Azam, when on 54, became the fifth batsman to complete 1,000 ODI runs in 2019 – behind India's duo Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma, and Australian couple Aaron Finch and Usman Khawaja.

He added an innings-building 111 for the third wicket with Haris Sohail (40), as Sri Lankan bowlers toiled to break the stand.

It was only through an unfortunate run out that Sohail fell, leaving Azam to anchor the innings. He square cut pacer Lahiru Kumara for a boundary to complete his 11th ODI hundred off 97 balls.

Azam was finally out at deep mid-on off Kumara, cracking eight boundaries and four sixes.

Iftikhar Ahmed batted aggressively for his 20-ball 32 not out – two sixes and as many boundaries – as Pakistan made 89 in the last 10 overs.

Openers Fakhar Zaman (54) and Imam-ul-Haq gave Pakistan a solid start of 73 before Sri Lanka's best bowler, leg-spinner Wanindu Hasaranga, trapped Imam for 31.

Hasaranga also had Fakhar for a 65-ball 54 that was studded with six boundaries and a six. Hasaranga finished with 2-63.



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Sunday, September 29, 2019

The Irishman review: Martin Scorsese is the king of gangster films and this masterpiece adds to his legacy

(The Irishman has its world premiere at The New York Film Festival on 27 September. This review may contain minor spoilers.)

Martin Scorsese is king of the gangster picture, but heavy lies the crown.

His latest, the Netflix-produced, de-aging-technology-heavy The Irishman enters a world all too familiar with Scorsesean clichés — his own, as well as those of his imitators. It strings together a quintessentially American gangster movie cast: Robert De Niro, Joe Pesci, Harvey Keitel, and first-time collaborator Al Pacino, who returns to his days of scenery-chewing. It has a quintessentially American gangster movie soundtrack, and it tells a quintessentially American gangster story, one that begins during World War II and concludes somewhere in the early 2000s (while crossing through the 1970s “New Hollywood” period, which the aforementioned names all helped solidify). And while it trades on these familiar flourishes and genre tropes, it does so not as cheap nostalgia, but as a means of exploring legacy, mortality and lifelong regret.

This is digital Scorsese at his dingiest and most macabre, though in order for the gloominess to land, the director indulges his most familiar, most enjoyable impulses, nestling moments of charm, warmth and hilarity amidst what might be the most despondent stretch of cinema in his entire repertoire. The Irishman clocks in at nearly three and a half hours, but it earns each and every minute, acting as reflective post-script to a career’s worth of brutal iconography for all involved. The result is a masterwork on par with anything in their respective oeuvres.

A still from The Irishman. Image from The Associated Press

A still from The Irishman. Image from The Associated Press

The story, told through flashbacks-within-flashbacks, centers on Frank “The Irishman” Sheeran (De Niro), the real-life criminal and labour union official connected to both mobster Russel Bufalino (Pesci) and political figurehead Jimmy Hoffa (Pacino). Sheeran was long suspected in Hoffa’s 1975 disappearance, to which he eventually confessed in the 2004 memoir I Heard You Paint Houses: Frank “The Irishman” Sheeran and Closing the Case on Jimmy Hoffa, on which the film is based (the screenplay was adapted by Steven Zaillian). Despite official title The Irishman, title cards a few minutes in refer to the film as I Heard You Paint Houses, a euphemism to make blowing someone’s brains all over their walls seem routine. 

Like his 2016 film Silence (based on the 1966 book by Shūsaku Endō), The Irishman was one of Scorsese’s long-gestating passion projects. The director’s involvement dates as far back as 2007, and while the film bears passing resemblance to the current political moment, it’s certainly not a direct metaphor for the current zeitgeist. It is, however, a chronicle of the profound moral decay that led us here. The Sheeran of the early 2000s, shoved away in an old age home, narrates events from the ’70s, which in turn take him further back to the ’50s and ’60s; editor Thelma Schoonmaker snaps the story back and forth in time, unwrapping it like a memory half-recalled. The voiceover here is more erratic than in previous Scorsese films — more flustered, more discombobulated — and as events progress, they’re framed against the larger political backdrop of each era, though not without hinting at criminality’s hand in shaping American history. Sheeran, for instance, engages in arms deals implied to impact the Bay of Pigs invasion in Cuba; the film skips over the book’s theorizing about the mob assassinating JFK, but its echoes remain through innuendo. 

The Irishman is a crime epic in size and scope, but it takes an intimate approach to history. The Kennedys, Nixon and so forth are necessary context, but the function of the film’s political backdrop is its impact on the characters. De Niro’s Sheeran works his way up as a trucker and a hitman for Pesci’s Bufalino; the two eventually become friends, and even grow friendly with Pacino’s erratic, dry-witted, wildly entertaining Jimmy Hoffa. The lead trio is joined by Bufalino’s slimy lawyer cousin Bill (Ray Romano), his enigmatic boss Angelo Bruno (Harvey Keitel) and a whole host of lively criminals played by Bobby Cannavale, Stephen Graham and other great performers. Over the decades, they find themselves thrust into a slow-burn Thunderdome of political ambitions, rife with moral codes and expectations that pull and push and knead them into their worst possible selves. 

In two of his greatest works, Goodfellas (1990) and The Wolf of Wall Street (2013), Scorsese paints each protagonist’s world with a sense of allure; for Henry Hill (Ray Liotta), the life of a mobster is one of comfort and respect; for Jordan Belfort (Leonardo DiCaprio), the excess of money and power is the American Dream. In both films, Scorsese steps outside each character’s perspective on occasion, usually amidst outbursts of anger and violence. Both films feature a moment, however brief, of the protagonist’s daughter witnessing her father’s moral descent; the horrified look on her face is what forces us to question the intoxicating nature of the rest of the film.

In The Irishman, this moment appears and re-appears over three and a half hours. Sheeran’s daughter Peggy (played by Lucy Gallina as a child and Anna Paquin as an adult) has only a handful of spoken lines in the film, but her face is its moral center. Any time we get sucked in by criminal goings on, Peggy’s eyes meet Sheeran’s — her fear and disappointment meet his regretful resignation — and the film replaces the ecstasy of Goodfellas and The Wolf of Wall Street with the nauseating weight of guilt. 

Guilt, specifically Catholic guilt, has been a hallmark of Scorsese’s explorations as far back as I Call First (1967). With The Irishman, he seems to finally open the door between faith and morality, the one he’s been cautiously knocking at with his crime dramas.

In The Departed (2006), a film steeped in Catholic funeral traditions, the idea of Confession takes on the form of occasional conversations with a psychiatrist. In The Irishman however, Sheeran’s burdened conscience underscores the entire film in the form of troubled voiceover. He might talk like Henry Hill in Goodfellas, cheekily explaining mobster doublespeak for our information, but he’s far closer in spirit to Silence’s Father Rodrigues (Andrew Garfield), who speaks out into the nothingness in the hopes of hearing back from God. You can tell from De Niro’s face, and his voice, that even though Sheeran loves this life, he remains in moral anguish. 

However, to call The Irishman a stylistic follow-up to anything Scorsese has done — Goodfellas meets Silence? — is also reductive. He certainly borrows from his long career, but he repackages it in a unique way. I’m not talking about the digital de-aging effects (not yet, anyway), but rather, the way in which Scorsese and cinematographer Rodrigo Prieto capture familiar objects. 

In a moment of coordinated mob violence — one that feels intentionally reminiscent of The Godfather’s baptism climax — Sheeran narrates the events leading up to an assassination. But as the actual killing takes place, the camera refuses to witness it, focusing instead on a nearby bouquet in a flower shop window (Whatever the bouquet’s original purpose, it now becomes a funeral arrangement). Until the guns go off, Scorsese’s snaking long-take is all too happy to float through space, as it always has, capturing the details of his world. However, in The Irishman, it turns away at a moment violence that might have felt exciting in any of his other films; it’s as if his camera has gained sentience, and with it, gained a sense of remorse. Like Sheeran, the camera wonders of all the carnage it has seen over the years: “What was it all for?” 

In Gangs of New York, a Bible tossed over a bridge hits the shining water below in slow-motion. A similar shot re-appears in the 1950s segments of The Irishman, just as Sheeran is starting out as a hitman. However here, the Holy Book is replaced by a gun — itself an artifact of faith in the long American story, a relic tied to the country’s creation myth. Sheeran’s firearm, recently used in a mob hit, sinks to the bottom of the river and lands amongst dozens of other guns discarded in the wake of similar crimes. Several of these guns are Sheeran’s. As he revisits the site of this ritual over and over, often sneaking out in the middle of the night as his daughter watches him leave, the discarded firearms begin to feel like an emotional weight, hidden out of sight. Similarly, as Sheeran and Bufalino embark on a road trip in 1975, they make frequent stops to collect payments they’re owed (en route to a wedding, no less). The envelopes of cash begin to pile up in the glove compartment until there’s no more room to hold them. Guns and money, once mere tools and objects in Scorsese’s films, take on a greater significance now that we follow their journeys more closely. Where did they come from? Where do they go afterwards? What mark do they leave on a human being? 

A still from the trailer | Twitter

A still from the trailer of The Irishman | Twitter

Sheeran’s unwavering dedication to his faith — that is, his criminal allegiance to Bufalino — is so central a tenet of his identity that he feels irredeemable, especially in the eyes of his daughter. Peggy fears both Sheeran and Bufalino. She’s right to. However, we as viewers have a personal insight into both characters, and into their friendship, that she does not. And so her justified revulsion begins to feel both cognitively dissonant. Pesci, finally a mob boss at the top of the pyramid, plays Bufalino with dignified, centered gravitas. He commands the respect and adoration of those who know him, but he reads as stone-hearted to outsiders like Peggy. On the other hand, Peggy adores Sheeran’s livelier, more personable friend Jimmy Hoffa — which makes Sheeran’s eventual violence against Hoffa all the more tragic. Killing Hoffa would mean Sheeran losing what’s left of his soul.   

After years of trying to solve Bufalino and Hoffa’s disagreements, Sheeran is conscripted to solve the problem once and for all. Though while his acceptance feels like the end of a traditional story — the decision that pushes him over the edge of humanity — it comes a full hour before The Irishman actually ends. In this final hour, the torturous burden of Sheerin having to kill his confidant comes into focus. The film pivots away from its zippy, fast-talking gangster persona and transforms into contemplative piece where Sheeran, and the audience, are forced to sit with this burden for lengthy car rides leading up to the act, and then for years afterward. The foreknowledge of what’s about to happen ought to be thrilling, even if perversely so, but we’ve spent so much time getting to know Sheeran and Hoffa that it becomes a sorrowful affair. 

In the wake of Hoffa’s “disappearance,” Sheeran is forced to maintain an equilibrium, but its cracks constantly show. The stench of his sin seeps out like a deadly gas. One scene in particular, of Sheeran having to console Hoffa’s wife as guilt rankles his face, is amongst the most difficult to watch of De Niro’s career. He can barely keep his eyes open, even over the phone; it feels like he’s praying for a forgiveness that may never come. 

Each performance is as impeccable as the last.

De Niro is appropriately stoic around his family, but his face lights up when he’s around his mobster pals. His specific laugh — the way his mouth and eyes tend to crease, so often imitated without its signature warmth and humanity — shines through even the imperfect digital de-aging. The de-aged portions of the film see him anywhere from twenty-two years old to maybe fifty-five (De Niro is seventy-six). Pacino and Pesci receive similar digital facelifts, though theirs are easier to settle into (they look damn near perfect). De Niro’s always feel uncanny since his brown eyes are digitally painted blue, but this also has the effect of drawing our attention straight to his eyes and what he’s saying with them, even when his mouth is doing the talking. His eye colour may be different, even otherworldly, but the nuances of his performance — the weary bags beneath his eyes, or moments when he wells up — remain intact. 

The facial de-aging is appropriate for setting the time period, but Scorsese is hardly pretending to use men in their forties. Rather, he uses them as older actors in digital stage makeup. All three men are in their seventies, and even when their faces are young, their postures remain those of aged, more world-weary men hunched over by guilt; they lumber around like they’re on their way to their graves. The film features Scorsese’s signature freeze-frames and lively character introductions, though each time a new supporting player enters the fray, the film not only tells us their name via title text, but also the way in which they died. As much as The Irishman is a story of power, it’s also a series of obituaries. 

Death looms large over all the characters, and as the film enters its final act, it has no qualms about the physical and emotional effects of aging. We see bodies twisted by years of regret. We see men who cannot unburden themselves. We see them face the reality of their own deaths, after causing the deaths of so many. The film pokes and prods at the outer limits of human morality — not the actions and decisions themselves, but their ripple effects across time and relationships.

Scorsese closes his film with a recreation of The Godfather’s final shot — only this time, the door remains open, welcoming inside a haunting, unrelenting loneliness amidst questions of faith and depravity. An emotionally brutal piece from one of our finest filmmakers, as he captures the corrosion of the human soul. 



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Mardaani 2 teaser: Rani Mukerji's Shivani Shivaji Roy tackles crimes against women in upcoming drama

A teaser trailer of Mardaani 2, the sequel to the 2014 film, was released by Yash Raj Films on 30 September. The teaser will be attached to Hrithik Roshan and Tiger Shroff's action film, War, out on 2 October. Rani Mukerji returns as the feisty, no-nonsense cop named Shivani Shivaji Roy, who aims to fight crimes against women. Her character busted a child trafficking racket in the first instalment.

She can be heard saying, "Ab tu kisi ladki ko haath bhi laga ke toh dikha. Tujhe itna maarungi, ki teri twacha se teri umar ka pataa nahi chalega (Try touching even a single girl now. I'll give you such a thrashing, you won't be able to tell your own age)."

Rani Mukerji in a still from Mardaani 2 teaser trailer. YouTube

Rani Mukerji in a still from Mardaani 2 teaser trailer. YouTube

Here is the teaser.

The film marks the directorial debut of Gopi Puthran (writer for Mardaani and Lafangey Parindey). The makers also released a new poster of the actress in her cop avatar.

"Shivani will face a cold, merciless villain who has no empathy, no fear of God and is pure evil. The character has been written superbly," Rani had previously told Indo-Asian News Service.

Rani's last feature film was the Yash Raj production titled Hichki. The film depicted her as a school teacher suffering from Tourette Syndrome, a nervous system disorder. Although it received mixed reviews, it went on to become the sixth Indian film to mint Rs 100 crore at the Chinese box office after Aamir Khan's PK, Dangal and Secret Superstar, Salman Khan's Bajrangi Bhaijaan and Irrfan Khan-starrer Hindi Medium.

Mardaani 2 releases in cinemas on 13 December.



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Serie A: Frank Ribery scores in Fiorentina's 3-1 victory over AC Milan; Napoli get back to winning ways with 2-1 triumph over Brescia

Milan: Franck Ribery sealed a 3-1 win for Fiorentina against ten-man AC Milan that pushed the northerners down to 16th in the Serie A table with a third consecutive defeat, whereas Napoli got back to winning ways with a 2-1 victory against Brescia at the San Paolo stadium on Sunday.

File image of Fiorentina's Franck Ribery. Reuters

File image of Fiorentina's Franck Ribery. AP

All the Italian teams in European action this week warmed up with wins with Napoli seeing off promoted Brescia despite Mario Balotelli scoring his first goal for the newcomers. First-half goals from Dries Mertens and Kostas Manolas ensured Napoli took all three points after their mid-week loss to Cagliari, to boost their confidence ahead of a Champions League trip to Belgian club Genk.

Carlo Ancelotti's Napoli stay fourth with 12 points from six games, six behind league leaders Inter Milan who beat Sampdoria 3-1 on Saturday, before they play FC Barcelona in Europe.

"Suffering is natural in these games if you don't kill it off with 3-0 and then concede a goal, it all opens up again," Ancelotti told DAZN. "But all in all I'm satisfied. We played an excellent first half, the second was less impressive, but it was very hot and the players were tired", he added.

Inter Milan have a maximum 18 points from six games — two ahead of Juventus — after winning their first six league matches for the first time since the 1966-67 season.

Champions Juventus beat SPAL 2-0 to stay second with Atalanta third — a point ahead of Napoli—after thrashing Sassuolo 4-1 on Saturday. Juventus play Bayer Leverkusen on Tuesday with Atalanta's first-ever Champions League home game against Shakhtar Donetsk.

However, AC Milan are in crisis with new coach Marco Giampaolo's days now looking numbered with 1-3 loss to Fiorentina, who secured back-to-back wins for the first time this season.  Former Bayern Munich star Ribery scored the third goal after 77 minutes to add to Gaetano Castrovilli's 66th-minute effort with Erick Pulgar slotting in a penalty on 14 minutes.

Milan played most of the second half a man down after Mateo Musacchio was sent off for a foul on Ribery on 55 minutes. Milan goalkeeper Gianluigi Donnarumma did well to deny Federico Chiesa's penalty kick with Rafael Leao pulling a goal back for the hosts ten minutes from time.

Balotelli's divided loyalties 

Balotelli carried his daughter Pia, who lives in Naples with her mother and was decked out in the Napoli colours, onto the pitch. Ancelotti's side went ahead after 13 minutes.

Mertens connected with a Jose Callejon cross to blast in his 114th goal in a Napoli jersey — one shy of Argentine legend Diego Maradona's total from 1984 to 1991. Slovak Marek Hamsik leads both with 121.

Manolas thought he had scored six minutes later but the goal was ruled out after a VAR review. The Greek defender did head in just before the break off a Mertens corner. Then, in a nervy final half-hour, Balotelli got his head to a Sandro Tonali corner to serve notice to Italy coach Roberto Mancini of his ambitions to play at Euro 2020.

It was his first goal in Italy in four years but Balotelli's losing streak to Napoli stretched to eight games — having never won while playing for both Milan clubs, Manchester City, Nice and now Brescia. Brescia slip to 15th in the table.

Elsewhere, both Roman clubs also warmed up for their Europa League games with wins after Serie A losses during the week. Edin Dzeko's header, his fourth goal in six games, made the difference for Roma against promoted Lecce, whose goalkeeper saved an Aleksandar Kolarov penalty.

Lazio eased past Genoa 4-0 largely thanks to Ciro Immobile, who scored the final goal and set up another, with Sergej Milinkovic-Savic, Stefan Radu and Felipe Caicedo also on target. Roma is fifth, a point behind Napoli, with Lazio a further point back in sixth.



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Serie A: New Juventus recruit Aaron Ramsey making most of his position in star-studded midfield

Milan: Welsh international Aaron Ramsey scored on his first start for Juventus as the former Arsenal man's Turin gamble looks to be paying off as he flourishes in the Italian league.

Ramsey moved to the Serie A champions this season on a lucrative free transfer reported to be worth 503,000 euros per week ($515,000).

The 28-year-old has impressed in his first three league games for the eight-time reigning Serie A champions having recovered from a hamstring injury picked up with Arsenal.

He found the net on his debut against Verona on 21 September, and impressed in the following two league wins over Brescia and SPAL.

"Three wins out of three in Serie A this week. Onto the Champions League Tuesday," Ramsey wrote on social media. Juventus will host Bayer Leverkusen in their Group D clash in Turin, having been held 2-2 at Atletico Madrid in their opener.

Ramsey had come on as a late substitute against Atletico with the Italians conceding a goal just two minutes later.

"I've waited a long time for this moment, I'm really happy, both for the victory and for the goal," said Ramsey of scoring. "It was important after the Madrid game."

Juventus are second in Serie A — two points behind Inter Milan — with their only slip-up being a goalless draw with Fiorentina.

After a bout of pneumonia, new coach Maurizio Sarri has been implementing his changes from predecessor Massimiliano Allegri.

And Sarri has been giving more space to the Welshman, who the former Chelsea boss has been easing into the team.

Ramsey has played an average of just over an hour in each of his league games so far.

"We're trying to preserve him from the point of view of playing time," explained Sarri. "There's a big difference between playing 60 and 90 minutes."

How Ramsey could fit into Sarri's already talent-packed side needed to be worked out.

The star-studded midfield boasts World Cup winner Blaise Matuidi, experienced internationals Sami Khedira, Miralem Pjanic, Emre Can and Rodrigo Bentacur, as well as Adrien Rabiot who arrived from Paris Saint-Germain (PSG) during the summer.

But winger Douglas Costa's injury has allowed Sarri to make more use of Ramsey with the Welsh playmaker's driving runs forward impressing. Ramsey's creative position behind strikers Ronaldo and Gonzalo Higuain or Paulo Dybala now seems to be confirmed, until at least Costa's return from injury.

Ramsey won three FA Cups in his 11 years at Arsenal and played a key role in Wales reaching the semi-finals of Euro 2016. Despite the uncertainties, the former Cardiff City academy member jumped at the move to Italy.

"When I knew that Juventus were interested, I couldn't refuse," said Ramsey. "It's a great club, one of the biggest in the world, and to have the opportunity to come here and play for them is a dream."

The player from Caerphilly in South Wales has also become a fan favourite since speaking a few words of Italian at his unveiling.

He will now be aiming to follow in the footsteps of compatriot and Juventus icon John Charles, who died in 2004 at the age of 72. The former Leeds United and Wales hero is a bona fide legend in Turin thanks to a hugely successful five-year spell in the late 1950s and early 60s.

Charles scored more than 100 goals for Juve as they bagged three league Scudettos and two Coppa Italia titles, and became part of the 'Magic Trio' alongside Omar Sivori and Giampiero Boniperti.



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Pankaj Advani Interview: Unmasking the man behind the champion you don't know about

Pankaj Advani is an Indian sporting giant. And it's difficult to fathom the gigantic nature of his sporting success. The ace cueist, who is only 34 years old, has 23 world titles under his belt — the most recent of which came this month in Myanmar where he won the fourth straight final in 150-up format at IBSF World Billiards Championship and then went on to capture the team event title in World Snooker with Aditya Mehta.

Advani's trophy-laden journey began quite early, starting with the IBSF World Snooker Championship in China, at the age of 18. Since then he has ruled the IBSF circuit with trophies in both billiards and snooker — an extremely rare occurrence. Snooker and billiards require different techniques and styles but Advani has managed to stamp an authority on them at a same time while his contemporaries prefer playing in one format.

Pankaj Advani with the World Billiards (150-Up) Championship trophy. @ibsf

Pankaj Advani with the World Billiards (150-Up) Championship trophy. Image courtesy: Twitter @ibsf

And yet despite his mammoth sporting success how much do we know about the man behind the champion? All the literature that is available on Advani over the internet is littered with questions about the secret to his success, reasons behind the lack of popularity of cue sport in India, his future plans and so on. But what really makes Advani the person that he is? Who resides under the layers of skin?

 When we met the Khel Ratna awardee, the first question was about what is that he has never been able to convey to the people who follow him. It may come as a surprise but the cueist dropped his guard almost instantly in the sit-down interview.

"If there's anything that has not been properly communicated to the people who have followed me is sort of my life story," Advani told Firstpost. "The struggle that I went through, how it all started. There have been people who have asked me about how I got introduced to the sport but the struggle that I had to go through during the initial phase of my career, all that has not really been told much."

Cue sports invariably have a sense of elitism attached to them. This is not a sports that resonates with street fighters. And while Advani may not be your typical rags to riches story, his family and him had to endure stiff challenges before the trudging on the path of success.

"It's a general thing that when you are a nobody, it's extremely difficult to garner support, especially in India. Not only in case of funding but moral support as well. I remember the first time I went to represent India in World Billiards Championship in England, obviously I wasn't funded by the government as I was not amongst the top eight in rankings and that was fine with me but there was absolutely no support from any quarter and my mother had to break an FD (fixed deposit) to take care of my expenses," recalled Advani.

"My father passed away in 1992 and my first international event was in 1999, those 7-8 years were very tough. We shifted from Kuwait in 1990 and after my dad's passing, my mom took the conscious decision to raise both her children and giving up her job. So financially it was a very difficult time and I started playing the game and wanted to pursue my passion. The best part is that mom supported me and I felt that those were the times when you don't get support you could go the other way. But my family stood by me and gave me the push. And then everything changed for me when I won the world championships in 2003."

Pankaj Advani with mother in a cinema theater. @PankajAdvani247

Pankaj Advani with mother in a cinema theater. Twitter: Image courtesy: @PankajAdvani247

How much has his life changed? We know about the world titles but it's the recognition that has touched Advani.

"I use to be scared of travelling in my young days. Maybe it was just because I had a very negative outlook. Maybe because I was hassled whether it was at the immigration or elsewhere, they will ask 'where you going, what sport is this'. Today when I go to the immigration, they almost want to take a picture and they are like 'happy to see you'. So, life's great that way. It's great to have recognition for your hard work and achievements."

Every professional athlete gets defined by their sporting success. They get so engrossed in the work they do that sport also shapes up their personality. Especially in the case of elite athletes. Often elite athletes are branded 'selfish' as they put their sporting goals above everything, in many cases even family. It's not surprising that they even put the social animal within them on a pause and so did Advani when he got out of touch with other realities of life, but time and age have showed him that there's more to life.

"The sport has given me identity and has shaped my personality but there's more of life than sport and now I have realised that."

Advani says his training sessions are now more about quality rather than quantity. But what has also changed with his progress as a professional athlete is his outlook towards life.

"I am typical Leo (sun sign) having born in July. Probably that has helped me professionally as well. I always wanted to be the best. As a person, I was very stubborn but over the years I have understood that it's important to compromise, it's important to listen to other person's view. It's difficult but it's also exciting as I am constantly evolving as a person. Learning has always been there for me with all that travelling, competing but it was all one dimensional. Over the last few years, I have grown as person and I enjoy that."

However, he has not lost the hunger for victory. And exhibition of that came early this year when Advani clinched the 15-red Asian Snooker title. It was a silverware that was missing from his cabinet despite all the world titles and helped him complete a career grand slam in cue sports. His motivation behind the win gives us an idea of what makes him the beast that he is.

"I had lost four finals earlier. This time when I was going for the tournament, I decided I will just give it my best. I started the tournament slowly and just about qualified. In the knockout stage, I was the 24th seed, the last seed. I wasn't playing well in matches, but I kept in mind that it was not over and continued fighting. There were comeback wins in quarters and semis. On the day of final, I had high fever and I was advised to not play but I was not going to give up. I went ahead and won the championship. Sometimes, it is about how badly you want something and how much you are ready to sacrifice for it.

"So, people often ask me how you keep winning titles. Sometimes it's not about technique and skill, it's about how much you are ready to give mentally and physically."

It's two decades that Advani has been active in the international circuit and the majority of this time has been uber successful which also led to him being conferred with Arjuna Award and Padma Bhusan including two Asian Games gold medals. But every athlete faces a dark phase that breaks them to some extent. For Advani, that time came in 2006 when he wanted to give up on the game. But then there's family.

"At a couple of times I have felt that I actually wanted to give up the game. Once in 2006, when I was going through a rough patch and again support wasn't coming in consistently. My elder brother, Shree, who is a sports psychologist came down from Australia and he did a program with me. A couple of sessions on how to program my mind and how to perceive things differently and then I went to Asian Games in December and won gold in English Billiards singles and again, life changed for me."

Life has changed a bit more for Advani now. He now also has Cue School by Pankaj Advani to take care of. An initiative to make cue sports accessible to school students and find the next world champion. But don't think we are anywhere close to the end of life story of Advani's playing career. He has more titles in his sights and we won't mind it.



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Jagran Film Festival 2019: AIB's Chintu ka Birthday named best film; Gully Boy wins for music, writing

The awards ceremony for Jagran Film Festival 2019 took place on 29 September in Mumbai. This year, the festival screened over 50 Indian and foreign films till 21 July before moving to other cities like Kanpur, Lucknow, Allahabad, Varanasi, Agra, Meerut, Dehradun, Hisar, Ludhiana, Patna, Ranchi, Jamshedpur, Gorakhpur, Raipur, Indore and Bhopal. Union Information and Broadcasting Minister Prakash Javadekar had inaugurated the 10th instalment of the event at the Siri Fort Auditorium in New Delhi.

This edition also paid homage to Indian cinema legends Kader Khan, Mrinal Sen, Girish Karnad and Veeru Devgan. The festival screened their films in remembrance of their outstanding contribution to cinema.

Here is the list of winners.

OTT Best Comedy Series - Little Things 2

OTT Best Drama Series - Made in Heaven

OTT Best Actor (Female) - Shefali Shah (Delhi Crime)

OTT Best Actor (Male) - Pankaj Tripathi (Mirzapur)

Best Music - Gully Boy

Best Debut Director - Aditya Dhar (Uri: The Surgical Strike)

Best Writing - Gully Boy

Best Short Film (Indian) - Binnu Ka Sapna

Best Short Film (International) - Dante vs Mohammed Ali (Dutch)

Best Documentary - Widows of Vrindavan

Best Actor Female - Tillotama Shome (Sir)

Best Actor Male - Nagavishal (KD)

Best Director - Aparna Sen (Ghawre Bairey Aaj)

Best Foreign Feature Film - Holy Boom

Best Film (Viewer's Choice) - Chintu Ka Birthday

Best Indian Feature Film - VIRUS

Best Director - Rima Das (Bulbul Can Sing)

Icon of Indian Cinema - Jeetendra

Jagran Achiever Award - Bhumi Pednekar

Special Contribution to the Cinematic Art - Kasim Beig

The festival also held discussions led by Rajeev Masand and Atika Farooqui with different film personalities like Karan Johar, Gurinder Chadha, Kartik Aaryan, Vicky Kaushal, Arjun Kapoor, Shahid Kapoor and Mukesh Chhabra. According to Mid-Day, the discussions focused on the future of filmmaking, casting, promotion, new channels such as OTT, and the evolving idea of the Bollywood star.



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