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Umpire Murali

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The International Umpire from Srirangam  
Murali attained VIP status over the last decade after becoming India's most renowned logistics Manager of the 2000s
It was Murali who roped in Gavaskar to meet with ‘Ek Duje Ke Liye’ Kamal in the early 80s for a 'Star meet Star' show in Madras

Well over two decades after its occurrence, Umpire K Murali (referred to in the cricketing circles as ‘Dhaadi Murali’) is still famously remembered for his brave decision not to call for the third umpire and judging West Indian legend Brian Lara stumped on a close call in October 1994 in the one day match against New Zealand in Goa. Lara’s gesture to Murali to call for the third umpire earned him a one match ban and a big fine. Murali was lauded by Match Referee Raman Subba Row for his brave call (He also came to be called 'Lara Murali' for a while after that incident!!!).  

Murali had to his credit playing three different and successful roles in cricket – an international umpire from Srirangam, a man who has been running a league club in the TNCA for over three decades (TSR MSC) and a logistics / administrative manager for the Indian team and the ICC match officials in India.

Over the past decade, one could rarely miss a shot of him around the dressing room/ sight screen during the international matches played in India, for he was the go to man for any requirement, initially for the players and later on for the ICC match officials.
       Murali seen along with Venkataraghavan

Humble beginnings
With Venkatesa Perumal at Gunaseelam being his Kula Deivam, Murali and his family moved to Srirangam from Coimbatore where he had done his schooling in the 1960s. His initial interest was to become a NCC member and he had secured B and C certificates in that field.  While playing league and inter districts cricket matches in Tiruchirapalli the then TDCA secretary VKS Mani came up to him and suggested that he take up umpiring.

It was something Murali had not thought of earlier, though even in his school days in Coimbatore he would umpire some of the local matches that his elder brother played. He followed Mani’s advice and took to umpiring very seriously. 

He soon moved to Madras and settled down in Triplicane, one that has been home to him for the last four decades. Just prior to his move to Madras, he had been the local logistics manager for his team when a match took place at the Kallukuzhi stadium in Trichy involving greats such as Ajit Wadekar, GR Viswanath and Syed Kirmani. This opportunity was once again provided to him by Mani and it was this early initiation that later enabled him to expand his association in cricket by taking up logistics management for players and officials.

Once he came to Madras, it was Sriraman who spotted the talent in Murali and appointed him as a logistics manager for the Indian team when the team came here for a camp before an international tour or for an international match here in Madras. It was during that period that he came into close contact with the legendary Sunil Gavaskar.  It was Murali who would take the Indian stars around the city on his Vespa Chetak to show them around the historical places. Gavaskar was so impressed with the role played by him that he made a mention in his book ( Runs n Ruins) and later in a newspaper article.

Being in Triplicane and walking distance from Chepauk, he was the go to man for TNCA in the 1970s for any last many umpiring postings that Murali would happily accept and cycle his way to the ground. 

Umpiring
By 1980, Murali had qualified for the Ranji Panel and within the next five years into the national panel.

Once in a Ranji match when Atul Wassan bowled successive bouncers at Tendulkar, Murali warned the fast bowler for intimidatory bowling. Each of the four short pitched balls was hit to/over the boundary as Tendulkar reached his century. ‘When a batsman is hitting him out of the park every time, you do not warn that bowler for intimidatory bowling. I will anyway be removed from the bowling’ remarked Wassan to Murali!!!

In the 1980s, postings for Ranji matches were few and far between and Murali took whatever chances that came his way.

In 1989, he was set to make his test debut in a high profile match involving the Imran Khan led Pakistan team but unfortunately the tour was called off  and he had to wait another 4 years for his international umpiring debut. 
                     
Sets up a Gavaskar meet Kamal star show
One of Murali’s memorable moments in his career came when he roped in Sunil Gavaskar all the way from Bombay for a ‘star meets star’ show with Kamal Hassan.

The Tamil Cine hero had just become a star in Bollywood after his runaway hit ‘Ek Duje Ke Liya’. Murali went all the way to Bombay to convince the cricketing legend of the idea to meet with Kamal in Madras. Gavaskar who normally had a solid defence was easily bowled over by Murali and came down to Madras soon after to meet with Kamal at the AVM studio.

Murali also introduced Gavaskar to the then TN CM MG Ramachandran here in Madras. When Murali introduced Gavaskar to the CM as ‘Ivan thaan our great cricketer Gavaskar’, MGR who believed in treating everyone with respect corrected him and asked him to refer to the cricket legend as ‘Ivar Gavaskar’ leaving Murali completely stumped!! 

Logistics Manager
For a decade from 2003, he was the logistics manager of the Indian team and for a period of 5 years from 2009, the logistics manager of the ICC match officials in India.  Managing the logistics for the Indian team is a huge challenge but Murali enjoyed it thoroughly and attained a VIP status where ever he went over the last decade and a half. 

When John Wright landed for the first time in India for his interview for the coach’s post, it was Murali who stood as guarantee for Wright ( who had come without his Visa) at the airport and bailed him out of the tricky situation. When the leading international stars landed in Hyderabad, it was Murali who secured them a great ‘Golden' Jewellery deal.

Even the usually stiff looking and rigid Chris Broad (Match Referee) was so impressed with Murali’s role in managing the overseas umpires that he once surprisingly tied a luxurious watch around his wrists right in front of the international umpires leaving Murali stunned and speechless.

While managing the TNCA league team and even his two decades of top level umpiring have been 'quiet' roles, his stint as the man in charge of logistics made him a star where ever he went. He spent a major part of the last decade going around  with the who's who of Indian cricket.

And later in the first half of this decade with the who's who of the cricket match officials. 

Very rarely has any logistics manager received such glowing tributes. His role was even spoken about at ICC meetings such was his efficiency in taking care of the players and the officials. Where ever he went he was given a VIP treatment.

It takes a lot to gain the acceptance of the players and officials. Murali was a player's favourite for he took care of their needs with utmost precision. 

His unique distinction of being the only Indian to play the role of the logistics manager for ICC match officials for such a long period without a break is a tribute to the way he took care of the players and officials.

With Venkataraghavan making his foray into umpiring and with competition hotting up in the 1990s , Murali did not get to do as many international matches as he may have hoped for. Yet, for someone who had no inkling of getting into umpiring and who had spent his entire school and college life in the districts, it was a significant achievement to even get on the international stage. He used the limited First class and international exposure in umpiring to build a strong relationship with the leading players and converted that into an opportunity later on as he became one of the successful logistics managers in Indian cricket. 

Bhoo Varaha Swamy Sri Mushnam Consecration

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Kora Kezhangu is a special sweet presented to Bhoo Varaha Swamy every day

Yagna Varaha Swamy goes on a 15 day trip to Kille Village every year in Maasi
Chariot Festival will take place on Wed April 20 and Theppotsavam on Friday April 22
The Ancient Bhoo Varaha Swamy Temple in Sri Mushnam is one of the 8 Swayam Vyuktha Sthalams in India, a list that includes Srirangam, Tirupathi and Nanguneri.

Renovation activities at HR & CE administered temples are facing a lot of challenges, though a lot of noise has been made in the last year or so about the quantity of consecrated temples.

The previous two consecrations following renovation activities had taken place in 2000 and 1975 at the Bhoo Varaha Swamy temple. In 2013, following a huge collection of funds from the devotees, there had been a hurried plan to perform the consecration in early 2014 even though the works had been only partially completed with the inner structure inside the Raja Gopuram falling off into pieces of wood. When this was brought to the notice of the CM through a story, steps were taken by the authorities and the consecration plans were postponed pending the completion of the entire renovation.

Two years later, the temple is in much better shape now. The Raja Gopuram is now sporting a grand colourful look. Teak Wood has been affixed to parts of the inner structure of the Gopuram to arrest the previously sliding stones.  The Lord can now happily enjoy the Kora Kezhangu sweet that is presented to him every day. This is made using a mix of Rice powder, Ghee and Kora Kezhangu.

However, long time local residents and those who have watched the renovation activities from close quarters over the last few years are still not satisfied and feel that there has only been a temporary solution and that the problems relating to fully strengthening the inner structures of the Raja Gopuram need more permanent solutions. 

A new addition is the Gold Kalasam for the Perumal, Thayar, Andal and Senai Muthaliyar Vimanas. The Moolavar deity of Ambujavalli Thayar looks strong and secure in a new Silver Kavacham.

Repairs to the traditional Vahanas have been done and all of them have been painted new. This is likely to add grandeur to the Utsava deity Lord Yagna Varaha when he comes out once again on a street procession during the Brahmotsavam this week after a gap of a few years (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2012/05/srimushnam-yagya-varaha-swamy-chariot.html).

The Madapalli (Sacred Kitchen) that had been in a poor state earlier has now been completely rebuilt and is looking bright and clean.

A noteworthy addition, as part of the renovation, has been the installation of a new electrical system with new LED lamps brightening the temple complex including the prakaras.

The mandapa at the temple tank has been painted new as has been the Lakshmi Narayana Sannidhi on the Eastern side of the tank. Theppotsavam will be held next Friday night ( April 22) after a long break.  Legend has it that Lord Varaha created the Pushkarani with the sweat emanating from his body after his battle with Hiranyaksha.  

Lord’s Unique Posture
On his death bed and as his final wish, Hiranyaksha requested the Lord to turn in his direction. Hence Bhoo Varaha’s face is seen turned towards South in the direction of the asura, while the body bearing a human shape is facing West in the direction of the devotees. The Lord here is in the form of a small idol signifying the Varaha Avatar.

Prarthana Sthalam
This is a Prarthana Sthalam for unmarried and childless couples. Women, who bathe in the sacred temple tank and recite the Varaha Kavacham are said to be blessed with children.  The unmarried on offering their prayers at the Saptha Kannigal Sannidhi find their spouse soon. Also, belief is that Lord Bhoo Varaha helps devotees in the finalisation of house properties and vehicles.
  
Annual 60 km Procession
In Maasi every year, utsava deity Yagna Varaha goes on a 60km 15 day trip to Kille village near Chidambaram to celebrate the Theerthavari Utsavam
(http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2009/11/srimushnam-bhoo-varahaswamy.html


A VERSION OF THIS STORY FEATURED IN THE HINDU FRIDAY REVIEW DATED APRIL 15.




Thiruvenkatam Kulasekara Azhvaar

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'Will let go opportunities to rule a Big Kingdom or be with Celestial Beauties to be born as a Crane or a Fish or be a small piece of stone in the huge Thiru Venkatam Hills'

After three decads of experiencing Lord Rangantha at Srirangam, a temple that is believed to provide Moksham to true devotees, Kulasekara Azhvaar moves to Thiru Venkatam and showers a very different kind of praise, not seen elsewhere in the Nalayira Divya Prabhandham.  He seems to indicate that he can even forego Moksham in this birth if he has the opportunity to be born again in Thiru Venkatam. And not just as a human being!!! He says he would even be born as a tiny little insect or a small piece of stone if an opportunity to have everlasting darshan of the handsome Lord at Thiru Venkatam were offered to him.

Kulasekara Azhvaar says that he is ready to forego the best of opportunities in this world to be next to the Lord in Thiru Venkatam.  Even the temptation of being alongside celestial beauties nor ruling the entire world will equal an offer to being near the Lord of Thiru Venkatam.  

Kulasekara Azhvaar says that he is ready to forego the possibility of a birth with all the fortunes possible in a life if he were to be blessed to be born even as a crane in Thiru Venkatam hills.
ஊனேறுசெல்வத்துஉடற்பிறவியான்வேண்டேன்
ஆனேறேழ்வென்றான்அடிமைத்திறமல்லால்
கூனேறுசங்கமிடத்தான்தன்வேங்கடத்து
கோனேரிவாழும்குருகாய்ப்பிறப்பேனே

He has no desire to rule even if offered the entire heavens or the best of kingdom where he could be surrounded by celestial beauties such as Ramba. Instead if ever he is to be granted another life, he would prefer to be born in Thiru Venkatam hills even as a fish.
ஆனாதசெல்வத்துஅரம்பையர்கள்தற்சூழ
வானாளும்செல்வமும்மண்ணரசும்யான்வேண்டேன்
தேனார்பூஞ்சோலைத்திருவேங்கடச்சுனையில்
மீனாய்ப்பிறக்கும்விதியுடை யெனாவேனே

While Shiva, Brahmma, Indra and all the celestial beings are seeking an entry into Thiru Venkatam, Kulasekara Azhvaar hopes that he will be the blessed one to secure that opportunity to hold in a golden cup the spit from the Lord’s mouth. He says he is offering his sincere prayers to be allowed an entry into the Lord’s sanctum to offer service to him.
பின்னிட்டசடையானும்பிரமனும்இந்திரனும்
துன்னிட்டுப்புகலரியவைகுந்தநீள்வாசல்

மின்வட்டச்சுடராழிவேங்கடக்கோன்தானுமிழும்
பொன்வட்டில்பிடித்துஉடனேபுகபெறுவெனாவேனே

There are many beautiful things that one can aspire to be in this life and next. And one is normally lured towards only desirous opportunities. But Kulasekara Azhvaar says that he would feel blessed if he would be present again in Thiru Venkatam, where bees seem to be singing praise of the Lord, even as a Shenbagam tree. 
பண்பகரும்வண்டினங்கள்பண்பாடும்வேங்கடத்து
செண்பகமாய்நிற்கும்திருவுடை யெனாவேனே

I will be a Pillar at Thiru Venkatam
There are those who will seek a vast kingdom and to sit in a majestic posture atop the huge elephant. That kind of a stature would be everyone’s envy. But Kulasekara Azhvaar says he has no such desires. Instead he says that he would be delighted to be born just as a pillar inside the Thiru Venkatam temple that will allow him to be able to see the Lord every day.
கம்பமதயானைக்கழுத்தகத்தின்மேலிருந்து
 இன்பமரும்செல்வமும்இவ்வரசும்யான்வேண்டேன்

எம்பெருமான்ஈசன்எழில்வேங்கடமலைமேல்
தம்பகமாய்நிற்கும்தவமுடை யெனாவேனே

No Menaka or Urvasi for me, I want to be a small stone at Thiru Venkatam
Would anyone ever refuse an opportunity to be alongside beautiful dancers such as Urvasi and Menaka, who have the best of lean and slim waists, but he says he has no such desires to be around them. He does not want to be in their company. His only prayer is to be a very small piece in the huge Thiru Venkatam hills and to listen to the bees humming special tunes on the Lord.
மின்னனையநுண்ணிடையார்  உருப்பசியும் மேனகையும்
அன்னவர்தம்பாடலொடும்ஆடலவைஆதரியேன்
தென்னலென  வண்டினங்கள்பண்பாடும்வேங்கடத்துள்
அன்னனையபொற்குவடாம்அருந்தவத் தெனாவேனே

If one were to be given an opportunity to sit majestically on a throne with all the luxuries of life as huge as the full moon, how delighted would he be!! But Kulasekara Azhvaar says that the does not seek such princely powers.  He says that he would consider truly blessed if he were to be born as a stream in the jungle of  Thiru Venkatam flowing through the huge groves down the hill.
வானாளும்மாமதிபோல்வெண்குடைக்கீழ்மன்னவர்தம்
கோனாகிவீற்றிருந்துகொண்டாடும்செல்வறியேன்
தேனார்பூஞ்சோலைத்திருவேங்கடமலைமேல்
கானாறாய்ப்பாயும்கருத்துடை யெனாவேனே

Kulasekara Azhvaar says he wants to just be a staircase that devotees would use to have darshan of the Lord at Thiru Venkatam.
நெறியாய்க்கிடக்கும்நிலையுடையெனாவேனே

And then he goes a step further. Devotees throng the temple to offer their service to the Lord. Celestials like Rambha too are standing by the side. Kulasekara Azhvaar says he is only seeking to be a door step from where he can look at his sweet lips every day.
அடியாரும்வானவரும்அரம்பையரும்கிடந்தியங்கும்
 படியாய்க்கிடந்துஉன்பவளவாய்காண்பேனே

Kulasekara Azhvaar says he would refuse the opportunities even if he was offered the entire celestial world and the beautiful Uravasi for company for what he is seeking is a place in Thiru Venkatam hills even as a non living object. Nothing else would satisfy  him.

L Sivaramakrishnan

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The story of how the Summer of 1985 drastically reversed the fortunes of Gavaskar’s ‘Little Darling Leggie’ who kind of never recovered from that dent to his confidence
It was a decade of rapid rise from playing tennis ball cricket at the White House on Luz Church Road to helping India win the WCC at the MCG. But just as things seemed rosy, the teenager fell just as fast as he rose and never recovered from the fall, leaving the cricket fan hugely disappointed for he was the wonder boy of TN cricket in the 1980s

This story looks at the rise and fall of L Sivaramakrishnan (LS/Siva), the magical Leg Spinner who captured the imagination of every fan here in Madras in the late 1970s and early 80s with his looping leg breaks and googlies.

MCTM School – The place where he started
A tiny little 10 year old boy had just moved into a house off Luz Church Road (opposite the Anjaneya temple in Alwarpet) in the mid 1970s from his childhood days in Gopalapuram.

Right opposite his street was the ‘WHITE HOUSE’ (now MCTM School), a huge open space where teenagers played tennis ball cricket. As it so happened with his Ranji and Test debut, LS was the youngest of the lot. As was the case in those days (and may be still is) in city cricket, the youngest had to slog with the ball while the elders took ‘Gaaji’ (batting all the time).

Having to don the bowler’s role through a major part of the session, as it was with local cricket in those days, he started bowling leg spin with the tennis ball so he could carry out the bowler’s duties for hours without becoming tired. And to everyone’s surprise, this kid of just about 10 years beat the much older boys time and again with his flight and turn leaving them amazed at this natural talent.

Soon enough, he was off to the ‘Grove’ nets at the CPR Arts Center on Eldams Road (walking distance from his home) where Mukund and Dharmalingam groomed him. In the very 2nd match of his life, he showcased what a special talent he was as he spun the strong Don Bosco (that included Akbar Ibrahim) team with figures of 7 wickets for 2 runs for Vidya Mandir.

Thus began Sivaramakrishnan’s destiny with cricket, one that went sky high in a very short period of time but unfortunately met with a drastic fall from which he never recovered.

TNCA League Debut
He was outstanding with both bat and ball for Vidya Mandir. And with Dharmalingam around at Grove, he was brilliant on the field as well. His first ever league match for Grove was a quirk of fate as was to be his debut match in Ranji Trophy a little later. The bowler who starred in the first match of the season came late for the 2nd match and as was the case in those good old days, that match winner was summarily sent to the bench!!! His replacement LS shone with the ball and there was no looking back. His team got promoted to 4th division where he was joined by WV Raman. And the two spun out many teams bowling in tandem through the season.

Impresses Venkat
LS jumped from 4th to 1st division and to Globe Trotters before he had turned 15. In a match against YMA, he impressed Venkataraghavan with his all round performance. Through this period, he would bowl for hours together at the BS Nets just next to the net that the spin greats Venkat and VV Kumar were bowling so as to impress them. He also created a lasting impression in Venkat when the legend visited the U 15 camp (in Bangalore) headed by the disciplinarian Colonel Hemu Adikari leaving Venkat favourably inclined towards this young boy. Venkataraghavan was fully supportive of the young kid and believed that he would go far if he worked on his skills and stayed DISCIPLINED. He went to the UK and Sri Lanka as a school boy cricketer and impressed everyone there.

Ranji Debut - How the 7 wicket haul was planned
On the morning of Feb 25, 1982, just minutes before the toss, TN Captain Venkataraghavan walked up to the diminutive 16 year old Vidya Mandir school boy in front of the pavilion at Chepauk and gave him the biggest news yet of his life. ‘YOU ARE PLAYING TODAY’. 

Soon after reaching the ground, Sunil Valson informed his captain that he may not be fully fit. Venkat had decided to go with just 4 bowlers for that knock out QF game and was keen that all the bowlers were 100% fit. He gave Valson 30 minutes to come back with a decision. When Valson indicated that he was not likely to be 100% fit through the four days, Venkat (after a quick discussion with Bharat Reddy) took the big call of playing the leggie in this big clash against a formidable Delhi side comprising of international players.

Delighted though he was, it left him completely unprepared as he was not hoping to play given that TN had two star spinners in Venkat and Vasudevan. He hoped that TN would bat first as that would give him time to mentally prepare himself but as luck would have it, TN bowled first and LS was brought on before lunch on the first day.  He took two wickets in the first innings as Delhi posted an imposing 400+ score. TN was then bowled out for less than 300.

What happened in the last session on day 3 remains one of Siva’s most memorable moments in cricket.  After Vasudevan’s three early wickets, Delhi had moved on to almost 100 with Mohinder Amarnath and Kirti Azad building on to the big lead.

As the players came back after tea, Venkat called on LS with a stern message. ‘Can you see those foot marks outside the leg stump. Do not think of the big opposition names. Just look at those spots and pitch the ball there.’ Quietly following his captain’s directions, LS spun a web around the Delhi batsmen as one after another came and departed. LS took 7 for 17 in that post tea spell as Delhi lost its last 7 wickets, all to LS, for just 27 runs.

HERO at Vidya Mandir
The Vidya Mandir lad had shot into limelight. All his classmates had come to see him bowl that evening and everyone was talking about his magic spell against the best in the country and what the future held for him. He had become a HERO in a matter of that one evening (TN lost in a close chase and thus LS played just the one match in his debut season).

Stars in Duleep and Irani Debut
In October that year, he picked up 5 wickets in a Duleep Trophy game against West Zone including trapping Sunil Gavaskar with a googly that left the Master glaring at the leggie with a sense of disbelief. From that moment, Gavaskar seemed to have taken a special liking for LS and used him better than most others in his career.

A fortnight later, in the Irani Trophy game against Delhi, Gavaskar captained LS for the first time. This time he got four wickets in the 2nd innings. At the end of that match, LS was selected for the long tour to Pakistan based on his three 2nd innings first class performances that year - 7 wickets on Ranji debut, 5 wickets on Duleep Trophy debut and 4 wickets in his first Irani Trophy match.

India debut at 17
For the next 5 months he was with Indian legends first on the trip to Pakistan and then to the West Indies. Though he did not play a single test in Pakistan, he played in the tour games and came up against some of the Pakistani greats of that decade. He also experienced as a 17 year old the unplayable reverse swing of Imran and Sarfraz that destroyed India on that tour ( it was also the tour where TA Sekar was called in mid tour - http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2013/08/ta-sekar-fastest-indian-bowler-of-1980s.html) as a replacement for Madan Lal.

After a wait of 10 tests, he made his Test debut on a batting belter at St. Johns Antigua at the end of April 1983.  Just like his Ranji debut, it was Venkataraghavan once again who informed LS that he was going to make his Test debut waking him up early in the morning and giving out in his typical stern style ‘WAKE UP AND GET READY. YOU ARE IN TODAY.’

He had to then wait another 18 months for his next test match during which time he played in a number of U 19 and U 25 matches.

It was once again his 2nd innings performance for Board President’s XI (under Shastri’s Captaincy) against England at Ahmedabad that won him a place for the home tests. Gavaskar called in Ravi to check as to how the leggie bowled and if he could be played at the Wankhade. Ravi was all praise for LS and it was his words that actually got the nod for LS in the 1st test of that series in 1984-85. For a brief while that season, the two formed a formidable bowling pair spinning out one opposition after another in the one day format.
                                                                                                                     
Golden Phase- On top of the World for 6 months
It was a memorable test series for LS – 12 wickets in the first test (he won the MOM award in his first test in India) and a third consecutive six wicket haul in the 1st innings of the 2nd test. He was the Man of the Series with 23 wickets even though India lost the series. Within a month, he was on an unexpected flight to Australia as part of the one day squad for the WCC.

It was Vasu Paranjpe who initiated the thought into Gavaskar that Sivaramakrishnan would be a good bet in Australia (he had never previously been thought of as a one day bowler). What a brilliant decision it turned out to be, for in the next 45days he made significant contributions in two tournament victories.

A day ahead of the WCC opener, Gavaskar came up to Shastri and LS and invited them for lunch. As they got talking, Gavaskar threw in a stunner to LS ‘Tell me your field.’ LS replied with a ‘What’
(Field for What). Gavaskar told him that he was going to play the next day against Pakistan and the likes of Javed and Imran.  Gavaskar wanted him to take wickets and did not mind him giving away runs. Throughout the tournament that was the ploy that helped India bowl out every opposition except in the final.

Newspaper into the bin
On the morning of the match against England (India’s 2nd), Ravi Shastri came up to LS and asked him to read a newspaper article that hit out at the Indian spinners. David Gower had suggested that his spinners (Marks and Edmonds) were far better than the two young Indian spinners. And that he was not unduly worried about the Sydney pitch being a turner. Shastri was fuming at these comments and was keen to prove Gower wrong. He parked the newspaper at the corner of the room with a message that they will come back that night.

Defending just over 220 and with England off to a solid start (a scoreboard shot that LS remembers very well – India 99/2 after 25, Eng 99/2 after 25), Gavaskar threw the ball to LS with the message: I WANT WICKETS FROM YOU. Answering his captain’s call, LS got Gower and Moxon immediately. Soon after Gatting joined Lamb, LS went up to his captain and told him that he wanted to bowl an over of googlies to Lamb from over the wicket (he had till then been bowling round the wicket and the two had been ticking away to leg). Reluctantly Gavaskar agreed. LS bowled successive googlies one of which shot through the defences of Lamb. From that moment, Gavaskar gave LS the freedom to set his own field such was the confidence in his leggie’s thought process.

After Shastri and LS ran through the Englishmen, the two came back to the room that night and tore the newspaper and Gower’s article to pieces.

His Best Wicket in cricket
It just seemed that he could do nothing wrong under Gavaskar. As soon as he came on to bowl, very late in the WCC final, Gavaskar’s direct hit (in LS’s 1st over) found Imran short of the crease. Imran and Javed had been re-building the innings and getting Pak back into the match.

LS then got the wicket of the Pakistani legend that the whole of India still remembers 30 years on. After having Malik caught at long off and with the batsmen having crossed over, LS bowled a perfect leg break that lured Javed Miandad out of his crease and left the ‘Pakistani Legend’ stranded yards down the pitch. It would have been a memorable moment for LS the next ball had Mohinder held on to the catch after Tahir Naqqash lofted the googly to long on. It would have given him a hat-trick and that may have won him the Player of the Final award but that went to his TN team mate Srikkanth.

There was big celebrations at Vidya Mandir with two of their boys returning as stars of the tournament (Srikkanth was the highest run getter and LS the highest wicket taker). He moved from one venue to another as one institution after another felicitated him. 
Hemant Srivatsa, a few years junior to LS at Vidya Mandir, remembers those days in the early / mid 80s. ‘During that phase, when ever LS entered the school premises, Vidya Mandir would literally come to a standstill. He was a big celebrity at school even while he was in his teens. Every one would rush to him.’

Hemant jokes that even a guy like him had a girl friend (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2015/04/hemant-srivatsa-cricketer-of-1980s.html). Would a school celebrity like LS not be surrounded by friends.

Beating PAK in Sharjah
A month later, he played the best match of his life. After India was bowled out for just 125 in a 50 over match against Pakistan at Sharjah, the dejected players slept through an extended Friday lunch break. It was only 15 minutes before the scheduled start that Ramakant Desai (the manager) woke the players up for a tea!!! Once again LS and Shastri bowled in tandem and grabbed the crucial wickets in the middle order including of Javed and Imran. In a fortnight’s time, LS had got two cricketing legends stumped by Viswanath. This time Imran jumped down the wicket and missed the turning leg break.

Bowling out Pak for 87 was the ‘the greatest feeling I have ever had’ says Sivaramakrishnan. Unfortunately, the highs for LS ended with that Sharjah tourney.

1985 – The big high and the low point of his LIFE
In 1984-85, LS was on top of the world and just seemed unstoppable. Big contributions in the Test Series and the two big one day tournament victories meant that he was now the cynosure of all eyes. Expectations soured sky high.  Maruti 800 was a prized possession. And he was just 19.

Just when he was on a high his Thiruvathirai star turned negative!!! He made a huge error in judgement in the summer of 1985 soon after his star performances between Dec 84 and March 85. Lured by the glamour of the county scene (and the money that went along with it) and hoping to gain experience, he went to the UK for a few months of minor county cricket ( it was the beginning of the phase in Madras cricket that marked the fascination for many local cricketers to make a trip to the UK to play in the local leagues there).

While Venkat had played County cricket for a long period from the 1960s and had had a successful stint there, England was not a place for leg spinners both with the chilly and wet weather and the (leg) spinner ‘unfriendly’ pitches. That quarter, his bowling changed drastically for the worse. From the attacking bowler that one had seen him just a few months ago, he turned a flattish bowler trying to contain on those pitches. His flighted deliveries were sent out of the park and he began to bowl faster and flatter in an effort to ‘keep it tight’. And with that, the bowling suddenly lost its sting. And he never quite recovered from that.

Is it as simple as that. YES. Sometimes, in life, things for the good or bad can turn from seemingly as simple and innocuous a decision as that. Could he never have recovered from that for did he not have great potential.

The fact is that one added to another and the misery just piled on for the next year or so (flattish /fastish arc- lack of confidence - a terrible SL tour - no Sunny Bhai for support). Just like his success that came from no where in 84-85 ( including being picked for the One dayers), his failure too happened all too dramatically. And before he realised, he had fallen back (a lot) in time.

Captaincy Change and its impact
Gavaskar giving up captaincy at the end of WCC had a big impact on LS and his confidence as a bowler. He was Gavaskar’s ‘little darling leggie’. A Leg Spinner needs the captain’s backing and Gavaskar seemed to be the perfect captain with whom he could have ‘intellectual’ discussions. Gavaskar had used ‘Siva’ as a wicket-taking bowler and this worked wonders for the leggie.

Under Kapil’s captaincy, the confidence of the captain shifted to Maninder and Chetan Sharma and LS fell off the radar in a matter of a year. If 1984-85 was the golden year for LS, the year that followed spelt doom. The fastish- flattish arc that he developed in the UK came to haunt him during the Sri Lanka tour in Sept’85 where he also picked up a thumb injury. He was off colour there in what was generally a bad tour for India. He also picked up a shoulder injury during the Australian tour (Dec 85) after long throws from the deep and was advised rest by Dr. Umapathy there.

But soon after coming back to Madras, he played in a knock out Ranji match here against Bombay bowling 38 overs that further worsened the condition of his shoulder. By the summer of 1986, there was already a big dent in LS’ confidence as a bowler and he experienced a new low in life. He never played test cricket again. He was selected for the World Cup in 1987 but played just one match.

His contribution to the 1987-88 TN Ranji winning team
When S. Vasudevan took over the captaincy for TN, he was keen for LS to continue with his leg spin. ‘I wanted him to make a comeback into the Indian team and was keen that he bowled. But with the shoulder injury, LS could only bowl in short spells and played mainly as a batsman in our Ranji trophy winning team (LS scored a lot of runs that year), though he did provide crucial breakthroughs in those short spells. I also saw in LS a future captaincy material ( not just for the state but for India as well) for he was a shrewd tactician and good thinker of the game. It is unfortunate that he did not go on to realise his true match winning potential.’

The decade after WCC
An international career that had begun when he was just 17 years ended by the time he was 20.  Extra-ordinary success brought in fame and a glamorous life but when the sting in his bowling went amiss all of a sudden in 1985-86, LS sorely missed a mentor and a coach to guide him through that high-low wave of life and to manage the fame and its aftermath and to correct his technical faults. There were no video analysts in those days. He fell as fast as he rose.

When he lost some of the sting in his bowling, his confidence dropped. In that phase, he would bowl for hours at the nets but made newer and newer mistakes. He would correct one but added a new one. Never did everything sync again - from the start of his run up to the release point. He had many legendary stars coming to him and providing their own solutions but nothing worked. Sivaramakrishnan never got back his confidence howsoever hard he tried ( credit should be given to him that even in that phase of dramatic slowdown, he never stopped trying though it was his batting  abilities that helped him keep his place even in the TN squad).

A former U15 South Zone player recalls an incident at Chepauk. The State Juniors were to have a nets session and LS, who was already an India bowler was to bowl to the boys ( he generally had been that kind of a boy, one who would bowl where ever there was an opportunity to sharpen his skills). As he was walking through the ground to the nets, one of the former India players and a prominent personality with contacts with the leading Indian players, called on LS to the MCC (the club on the other side of the BS nets) with the message - 'Don't waste your time with these state boys'. And LS never returned to the nets that evening. In fact, he was still sitting there when the boys passed through after their nets session. 

( It is the story of how bigger cricket stars in the city spoilt the youngster(s) with tempting offers. There are even similar examples in the current TN team) 

Also, old friends in the Mylapore area point to the change in attitude in that short little golden phase. While in the past, he would stop by and chat for a few minutes, he gave them a ‘go-by’ in that fame period.

Even the cycle rickshaw guys of Mylapore had a tale to tell. Their typical response was ‘Periya aalu aayitaam pa namma paiyan. Engala kandukaruthu illa, ippo’ (our little boy has become world famous now. He does not look at us now) - he was still in his teens then.

A recovery stint with Venkat
Venkataraghavan, one who LS looked up to with great respect in those years and who was one of the players that LS went to, to try and recover from his downturn, said he knew a ‘lot’ from those days but it was likely to leave ‘people’ embarrassed and refrained from any further insights into what happened in the decade following the WCC.

There were just a couple of symbolic episodes of how life went for LS in that phase.

A boy, who drove cars as a teenager, was on a Kinetic Honda in the mid 1990s riding his way (15kms every morning) at 630am to the India Pistons factory on the outskirts of the city to earn his living. He would then ride back to the nets in the evening. It was a strenuous life for someone who just a few years ago had earned highest words of praise from legendary Aussie greats such as Richie Benaud and Ian Chappell.

In the late 1990s, Sachin Tendulkar called on LS to bowl to him from round the wicket to prepare for his encounter against Shane Warne. He was so impressed that he suggested that LS play Ranji Trophy again. LS played for Baroda but that did not work out for him. And that’s the last one saw of him.

The magical talent who had become the glamour boy of Madras’s cricket even before he was out of his teens went through hell for over a decade. Stories were spread of his off field activities and such infamous stories ruined his private life.  He was completely traumatised with the way things turned out for him in the 2nd half of the 1980s. It was literally ‘hell of a life’. He was all alone at home with very few friends to turn to. Lord Ayyappan was his sole solace in life. 
VB Chandrasekar, who captained Jolly Rovers (for whom LS played for many years) in the late 80s is lot more sympathetic for LS and the negative reactions he had to face during that period “As human beings, we all feel the need for a person to walk into our lives at a phase when everything looks lost. For an extraordinary young achiever, the period that he went through after reaching the pinnacle of cricketing glory must have been a most difficult time. Much gets spoken unkindly when the expectations are not met. For many, it is a case of ‘I know the reason for his fall from grace.’ The question is whether the symptoms ever need treatment!! It indeed is remarkable as to how even airport security still fondly remember this teenage magician.”

In the period between the late 70s to the mid 80s, there were very few who could not have loved LS as a bowler. He had progressed from the ‘White House’ to the MCG in a rapid phase of success.

He had a smooth run up and a neat action and challenged the batsmen to hit him. Most times he would have them stumped. In the years of his success, he was an attacking option and that’s when he was at his best.

Last month, when he threw the ball from one hand to another while showcasing the basics of leg spin to a few young boys, one could hear the fizz and the amount of spin he imparted on the ball that showed what a genuine leggie he was, this 30 years after his big success on the international arena.

If only he had held back from the minor county stint and focused solely on the upcoming SL and Australia tours in 1985, things may have turned out different for LS. And this story may never have seen the light of the day.  However, once again for a cricket fan in Madras, it was a case of ‘what could have been’. And all one was left with were memories of that short but glorious magical phase and those famous dismissals of Javed and Imran. 

(Incidentally, LS married VBC’s cousin in the mid 1990s, an event that was instrumental in LS gaining a lot of confidence back in life and one that helped him become a successful commentator - more on that in a separate story)

Vaduvur Rama Navami Utsavam

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Divine Couple's 37 Street – 15 hour  on a hot Chitrai day
It was a one of its kind procession on the 6th day of the Rama Navami Utsavam at the Kothandaramar temple in Vaduvur. After having provided darshan all alone on the 1st five days, Rama was joined by Sita on the morning of the 6th day for the day- long 15 hour trip on a palanquin to each of the 37 streets of Vaduvur stopping by at every single house in the town to provide a special joint darshan to the devotees at their door step.
This trip is seen as also an invitation to the residents of Vaduvur to attend the Thiru Kalyana Vaibhavam that was slated for the next day as well as a reminder to participate in the Chariot festival later in the week.
What was even more unique about this procession was that the Divine Couple made two trips to each street – first providing darshan to devotees on the left side of the street and then coming back to provide darshan to devotees on the right side, such was the personalized attention presented to each devotee.
By the time they made their way back to the temple, it was well past 9.30pm in the evening. After such a long and tiring trip through the hot and sweltering day it was only appropriate to cool the divine couple with a sacred bath and they were showered with coconut water, honey, sandal paste and mixed fruits.
Mohana Alankaram at Mid Night
After having witnessed the Thirumanjanam, the devotees waited eagerly for the 2nd Alankaram of the day. Sharp at mid night, Lord Rama provided darshan in a Mohana Alankaram in a beautiful sitting posture at the Vahana Mandapa.

An hour later, the screen closed as the Lord and Thayar got ready for another Alankaram. It took over 2 hours of tireless effort on the part of two young Bhattars to drape the Lord in a Raja Alankaram atop the Elephant Vahana. A more senior priest – Uppili Deekshithar - took to the task of getting Sita Devi ready and mounted on the Hamsa Vahana.
The 6th day utsavam saw Lord Rama in three different Alankarams. Dressing up the Lord is a special art and requires a lot of expertise, in addition to enormous amount of patience. Two young priests, both 24 years old, Hari Sundar Bhattar from Therezhendur Divya Desam and Bharathwaj Deekshithar from Mannargudi stayed awake really late on two successive nights to deck up the Lord.
Hari Sundar Bhattar showcased his emerging talent in a one hour solo effort getting the Lord draped in a Mohana Alankaram. As the screen opened just after mid night, tears rolled down the eyes of the devotees as they were awe struck by the Lord’s beauty in a shining white vastram dotted with a blue silk border, a special Kondai and glittering jewelry, presenting himself as a ‘Mohana’. Hari Sundar Bhattar also explained the Purana and the significance of this special Alankaram much to the delight of the devotees taking them back to the legendary episode of the Lord luring the asuras away from the nectar with his beauty.


The clock had just ticked past 1am and it was time for the devotees to take a quick nap ahead of the next procession. But not so for the two youngsters for, they were bestowed with the responsibility of working on the third Alankaram of the day - Raja Alankaram of Lord Rama atop the Elephant.

For over 2 hours, the two of them combined as a team to present Lord Rama in majestic princely attire.  It was 3.15am and they had not slept for the last 36hours. But as they came out, they seemed to be truly energized for one could find a great sense of satisfaction and happiness in their face having just completed a very important alankaram of the Rama Navami Utsavam and mounted Lord Rama in the Raja Kolam atop the Elephant in his third and last attire of the day.
It takes true devotion and artistic skills to drape the Lord. This attains even more significance when there are multiple alankarams on a single day. Hari Sundar Bhattar and Bharathwaj Deekshithar, both of whom are proficient in Agamas and Divya Prabhandham, exhibited these in plenty leaving the devotees totally spell bound. So pleased were the devotees that a few of them even wanted the Bhattar to repeat the Mohana Alankara purana. But it was far too late for that and he promised to keep it for another time and bid them good night.

In decades gone by, the procession of Rama on Elephant Vahana and Sita on Hamsa Vahana used to take place very late in the evening. But with the expansion and overall development of the town and with the morning street procession now taking 15 hours, the vahana procession took place only at 8 am on the 7th day bringing to end a really long day for the divine couple.

Vedic School
It is 4.30am in the morning and the 15 year old Vedic Patashala, 100 yards north of the Kothandaramar temple, is already buzzing with activity. Students from as far as Vizag, Tada, Nellore, Coimbatore and Chennai are undergoing a 12 year Vedic Education programme. Under the tutelage of their Acharya Govindan, who has been involved in Vedic teaching for the last four decades, these students, the youngest being just 7 years old, follow a strict daily regime through the year with only one annual vacation of 15days during Deepavali.
Around 50 students have been initiated with Krishna Yajur Veda during this period and a majority of them have already graduated from the school. During the Rama Navami Utsavam, it was pleasing to see these students in a group accompanying the Lord on his processions chanting the Vedas with devotion.
Vaduvur has a rich heritage and has been traditionally known for its strong Vedic Education. There is a family called ‘Puranatharargal’ who have been rendering ‘Bhagavatha Parayanam’ for generations here at the temple. there is also street called PURANA Street.
How to reach
Vaduvur is 25kms from Thanjavur on the Mannargudi Highway. Buses ply every 15minutes between Thanjavur and Mannargudi.

A VERSION OF THIS STORY FEATURED IN THE HINDU FRIDAY REVIEW ON APRIL 29

VB Chandrasekar to foray into One on One Coaching

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EXCLUSIVE 

To make significant investment in technology
Nearly two decades after the launch of his cricket academy in Chennai, one that is restricted to students aged below 17years, VB Chandrasekar (VBC) -http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2016/01/vb-chandrasekar.html - who has been widely acknowledged as one of the best captains the city has seen, is making a foray into one on one personalised coaching for cricketers.

It was VBC who identified and picked the core team at CSK in the initial years. It speaks of his astute cricketing acumen and ability to spot talent that CSK has been the only team in the 8 years to have held on to the core group of players and this was instrumental in CSK having the best track record for any team in the IPL, despite him not being part of the set up after the initial phase.  

It is one of those flood light sessions in April at his academy ( His is the only one of its kind flood lit private outdoor cricket coaching academies in the city). His phone is ringing non-stop and it’s from home. It is already quite late, well past 930pm. But VBC is passionately involved with a couple of his young leg spinners. He is frustrated that a leggie with good potential is too fast in his final two paces to the bowling crease. 

Another leg spinner is bowling too fast for his liking. The speed gauge measures 75kmph and VBC is not happy. He asks all the bowlers to stop. And he wants the leggie to slow down his pace. A minute later, he is delighted at the result. The ball is lot slower- 64 kmph – the ball stays in the air, dips and turns past the batsman. He gives the young boy a big shout ‘Did you see that. You are not working hard enough on your skills’. The boy nods in acknowledgement and says he will follow!!!
                             
An hour earlier, at the farther end of the nets, he was taking a close look at the defensive technique of boys aged 10 years. And as the kid played a dead bat to a ball pitching on the leg stump, VBC picked up the bat from the young boy and showed him the technique of locking the wrist at the last moment to get the ball to square leg for a single instead of playing a dead ball on the pitch.

He made a big positive impact to many youngsters in the late 80s and through the 90s in league cricket here, a number of whom progressed into Ranji cricket. He was known to get the best in the players who ‘followed’ his instructions and directions.  

His academy now runs in three different locations in the city, prompting Dr. Natarajan to call it last week as the Saravana Bhavan of cricket academies. 

The one on one coaching will be extended to players of all age groups including first division and Ranji cricketers. This exclusive programme is expected to include video analysis, monitoring and analysing strengths and weaknesses and personalised mentoring. VBC is making significant investment on this front including on modern technology. This is set to kick in June –July this year.

On Monday this week, Muttiah Muralidharan who launched the flood light facility at his academy at Guru Nanak College was all praise for VB Chandrasekar repeatedly addressing him as VB Sir and referring to him as an outstanding talent spotter.


Last August, VBC’s Ranji Trophy winning captain S Vasudevan had told prtraveller of his plans to launch a TIP (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2015/08/former-ranji-trophy-captain-to-launch.html). There have also been a few former Ranji/India cricketers who have over the last couple of years launched such one on one offerings but the general feedback is that they have not been physically present on most days leaving the wards frustrated.

While VBC has all the credentials of being an excellent mentor for both upcoming players and those going through challenges in their careers at the higher levels of the game with his superior technical skills and the inherant ability to spot strengths and weakness, one has to wait and watch over the next couple of years as to how he fares on this front having had mixed fortunes in his many different avatars over the long 3 decades old cricket career.

Ramanuja Avathara Utsavam Sriperambudur

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Ekantha Sevai at 430am, Ramanuja's Special Varisai Walk in front of Lord Rama and presenting milk in a conch shell to child Ramanuja marked this Tuesday's Avathara Utsavam Celebrations at Sriperambudur

One of the biggest contributions Saint Philosopher Ramanuja made was his all inclusive approach to apportion activities in temples including at the Lord Ranganathaswamy temple in Srirangam. It was the 999th birthday at the Aadhi Kesava (Basyakarar) Perumal temple in Sriperambur this Tuesday
(10 May). 

And I watched in shock the turn of events at the start of the morning street procession. As the ghosti was about to commence, a 50+ Vadakalai devotee came and stood on the road (North Mada Street) just behind the Ghosti Group.

No sooner had he stood, a member of the Ghosti who stood between the Jeer and Sri Parthasarathy (former Dharma Kartha of the temple) gave a big shout asking this Vadakalai man to go further behind and not to come anywhere near the group. It left me stunned. 

Ramanuja advocated an all inclusive approach and here on his birthday, they were asking one of the devotees to get out. The tone and the manner of the message gave a feeling that this man was an outcast. If this was bad, what followed was worse. 

A school boy from Triplicane (who also carries Lord Parthasaray on processions) came up to this elderly person and in a tone that was completely unsavoury hit out at this man to send him rocking back on the road. The elderly man was almost in tears but bore the shouts and left the place shortly. 

The same boy later that afternoon during the 'conch milk feeling event' shouted out in an unruly manner at another devotee for taking photo with his phone. Just a couple of months, his father was talking non stop over the phone while performing pradakshanam around the Thayar Sannidhi at the Parthasarathy temple in Triplicane. During the Voyyali in front of the Ramar Sannidhi, his mother remarked that the phones should fall of the devotees' hands when they are thus taking photo during the special walk. Indeed that was a fair comment. But I hope and wish that she would also talk to her husband and ask him not to do pradakshanam inside the Parthasarathy temple while talking on the phone. 

While the Vadakalai v Thenkalai fights are in the public domain with any number of instances at Thiruvahindrapuram, Srirangam and Triplicane, one would have hoped that such an ugly incident would not have taken place on the birthday of the great Saint Philosopher.

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The clock had just ticked past 3am this Tuesday (10 May) morning when Ramanuja made his way back to the Aadhi Kesava Perumal Temple in Sriperambudur after a three hour procession on a pushpa pallakku. The entire temple reverberated in bhakti with the recital, by around 50 Prabhandham experts, of devotional hymns from the final verses of Thiru Mangai Azhwar’s Thiru Nedunthandagam leaving Ramanuja visibly happy.
He was even more delighted when these experts, many of whom had come from Thiruvallikeni (Chennai), in a sweet rendering presented the 9thCanto of Nam Azhwar’s Tiruvoimozhi, one that went up to almost 430am.
Ekantha Sevai – 16 days in a Year
It was now time for the Ekantha Sevai to conclude the 9th day of Ramanuja’s avathara utsavam. In pin drop silence, Ramanuja made his way to each of the inner Sannidhis of the temple first providing his blessings to NamPillai and Vedanta Desikar and then receiving blessings from Nam Azhwar, Andal, Aadhi Kesava Perumal, Thiru Kachi Nambi and Alavanthar. In front of each of these deities, the relevant praise highlighting their greatness and achievements was presented.

Several centuries ago Sriperambudur Embar Jeer created 16 days of a special Ekantha Sevai at the Aadhi Kesava Perumal temple to be presented on select occasions annually. These comprise of 9 days during the Ramanuja Avathara Utsavam, 3days in Thai, 1 day on Koorath Azhwan, Pillai Lokacharya and Manavala Munigal Avathara Utsavam, with the final one on the last Thiruvathirai of the year in Panguni.


Birthday Celebrations
The 10th day Utsavam and his birthday - the Thiruvathirai star in Chitrai - celebrations began after 8am with Ramanuja presenting a special walk in front of Lord Rama. The story goes that Lakshmana (Ramanuja is seen as his incarnation) had a beautiful grace in his walk but the Lord had never been able to experience this as his younger brother had always walked behind him. As his special birthday treat, Ramanuja presented a special ‘Voyyali- Varisai’ walk providing the Lord with a full long view of his ‘brother’s’ walking grace  and one could visualise the joy and happiness on Lord Rama’s face that seemed to lend a smile in appreciation of this exclusive presentation before him.
Presenting Milk to Child Ramanuja in a Conch Shell
It seemed even the Rain God wanted to wish the Acharya on his birthday for soon after the three hour morning procession, he presented the town with light showers.

And then the big moment of his birthday arrived. Ramanuja was brought to the location of his birth opposite the temple that has been converted to an ‘Avathara Mandapa’. Here, taking the devotees back in time to the day of his birth, he was placed in a cradle (Oonjal) and presented with milk in a conch shell. He was also presented with butter as tears of joy rolled down the eyes of hundreds of devotees present inside the mandapa. 
As part of the birthday celebrations,Garland and Parivattam that had come in from various Divya Desams were presented to Ramanuja. The birthday was also marked by recital of Ramanuja’s Gadya Trayam, a Thirumanjana and street procession in the night.

THIRUVARANGATH AMUDHANAR'S RAMANUJA NOOTRANTHATHI
Ramanuja Nootranthathi is the only composition in the Nalayira Divya Prabhandham that has the unique distinction of being written by one who was a contemporary and one who watched the daily activities of his Acharya from close quarters. Ramanuja was not keen on a work that just had his praise alone. Hence he directed his disciple Thiruvarangath Amudhanar to compose a work that included praise of the Azhwars and the Divya Desams.
In 108 verses of praise, Amudhanar brings out the great noble qualities of his acharya and his concern for the weak and the masses. Referring to Ramanuja as the king of ascetics and as one who took birth to counter the destructive powers in this Kali Yugam, Amudhanar assures the devotees that just chanting the name of Ramanuja will create a Bhakthi path in one’s mind. Each verses of this composition thus has the name of Ramanuja.

It was Ramanuja who helped ordinary people understand the philosophical aspects of life for he had the ability to transform even wicked people. Citing his own example, Amudhanar provides insights into the contribution of his acharya in transforming him towards the noble path. Ramanuja considered devotees performing service with true devotion to the Lord as very close to him and instilled the need to use every part of the body to do some service related to God. 
‘Compassion is one of your greatest qualities. Is it not a great example of your compassion that you made a true human being out of me? My body that was previously enjoying the pleasure of life has now come to perform noble activities after having come under your influence’ thus praises Amudhanar in the Nootranthathi.

Ramanuja dedicated his knowledge and learning to the cause of uplifting the devotees. Just like Rama followed every direction of his father, Amudhanar too followed Ramanuja to the full with the confidence that his acharya would not ask him to do anything that was not for the good of the world. Those who do not change themselves for the better by following his teachings are likely to come under the negative influence of Kali. But to all those people who believe in Ramanuja’s teachings, Amudhanar commits his self to serving them at all points of time without displaying any tiredness.

Amudhanar says that even if Ramanuja were to show him the Lord himself he would not see anything but his acharya’s compassionate heart and places one final request to Ramanuja that if he were to be born again, he should be born as one with utmost bhakti with a mind on serving the devotees and says that such selfless service is better than a service performed even to the Lord at Vaikuntam.

NP Madhavan

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The TN Ranji cricketer of the 1980s who did the unthinkable reverse – moved from City to a Village - at the prime of his cricketing career 

'Madhavan was a terrific team man and I enjoyed having him in the team'- Venkataraghavan

'Madhavan was a thorough Gentleman and Supremely Talented Cricketer’ - Brijesh Patel 

Right from his school days, Madhavan was as straightforward a human being as you could get and always believed that runs should do the talking - (Kumar) P Ramaswamy - his Mentor and best friend
It was just over 6 months after he had got his maiden Ranji Trophy Century. He was making his debut for his new employer, SVPB (Sri Venkateswara Paper Boards, Udumalpet), at the Forest College ground in Coimbatore and he was out there in what was to become his trademark Red Cap in the years to come. Gathering courage, I(as a young school boy) walked up to him during the drinks break to ask him a bold question.

He had at the peak of his prowess quit a secure job at IOB (he was to be made an officer shortly for he had played an entire year of Ranji Trophy the previous season that included a century as well) in Madras and moved (full time) to the then under developed village of Udumalpet (about 70 kms from Coimbatore) to take up an accounts (sports quota) job at SVPB. It had seemed a very odd decision to me and I asked him as to why he quit IOB to come to a place like Udumalpet. He just smiled it away, in his typical style.

During the first two years of his move to SVPB, I was blessed to be his pre ‘start of innings’ bowler (like a ball boy/ marker in tennis) bowling 10-15 balls to him before he went out to bat every single time.

Here’s the story of Nadathur Padmanabhan Madhavan (NP Madhavan), who hailed from Sankarampadi village in Kanchipuram District, the only Ranji cricketer in TN who went away from Madras to settle down in a village at the peak of his cricketing career, never to return, this after having been grown up in the heart of Madras, in T. Nagar.

Schooling days at Somasundaram Ground
With his parents away from Tamil Nadu, Madhavan spent his entire schooling days in Kodambakkam/T Nagar (RKM North) with his grandparents. That was the time his long and engaging association with Coach Adi Chetty began, one that extended to SVPB, Globe Trotters and Kunal Engineering in the coming decades. It was during his T Nagar days that he came into contact with two other promising cricketers, S Madhavan (later RBI Leg spinner) and TA Sekar. They used to practice regularly at the Somasundaram Ground.

His Mentor and Best Friend
It was also the time that he forged a strong bonding with Kumar ( P Ramaswamy – who recently retired as VP Personnel from Sundaram Clayton) who was to become his mentor and best friend in life. Kumar was not a cricketer of great repute but would nevertheless bowl to Madhavan for hours at the Somasundaram ground.

In those early days, it was Kumar who pooled money together to even get a proper cricket bat for Madhavan (it had been a bit of a financial struggle for Madhavan in those early days). When Madhavan went to play a University match, his thin pad was in such poor shape that it was Kumar who went to an auto parts shop on General Patters Road to get a cushion that was then fixed into the inside of the left pad to give that extra protection. Kumar then ran all the way to Central Station to give it just in time before the train departed for Hyderabad.

Talking over the phone from Rishikesh, Kumar says that he was happy to do these because Madhavan was one of a kind of a guy in cricket. ‘He would be ready to wake up at 5am for a cricket session. He would bat passionately for hours until the bowlers had no more energy left From a very young age, he was so straightforward as a human being that he believed that it was the runs that counted. Hence he never went behind the powers that be. And that continued right till the end of his career. He solely focused on being committed to the game and doing the role assigned to him by his team. He is a standing example of one who came up in life from a financial struggle to the Ranji level through sheer hard work and performance.'

From MCC to Guru Nanak – His First Big Honour - 1975
Madhavan was one of the very few students to get a first class in PU at Guru Nanak College. By then, he had already started playing and performing for the college but was surprisingly refused a B.Com seat, despite achieving good grades as well as performing creditably in cricket. It was one of the very few occasions in his life that Madhavan showed signs of anger and disappointment. He went and joined MCC (Madras Christian College) and paid the joining fee. He was to submit his certificate on Monday. But as luck would have it, he played a match that Sunday at Guru Nanak College ground, one that was watched by Professor Ramana, the great cricket supporter of the 70s and 80s.

Stunned by Madhavan’s thrilling exhibition of stroke play, Prof Ramana came up to Madhavan and enquired about him only to be told that his college had rejected him and that he was joining MCC the next day. Immediately Prof Ramana offered a three year scholarship to him for his B.Com, waiving off his entire fee- a rare privilege in those days. It was the first big honour for Madhavan in cricket, something that he cherishes to this day.

Best Moment in Cricket – Winning Vizzy Trophy
During his period at College, Madhavan played for Jolly Rovers as a professional alongside some star players of that era. Such was his performance that he was a paid a princely fee for a ‘professional’ player of a couple of hundred rupees (per month/match).

In the Universities match against Bangalore, Madhavan scored a brilliant century in the very first match of the tournament and was chosen for the South Zone Universities where he came up against Kapil Dev and North Zone in the final. Madhavan considers securing victory for SZ in a low run chase in that Vizzy Trophy final in 1977-78 with a personal contribution of 31 on a damp rain affected pitch against a rampant Kapil (he got 8 wickets) as his best moment in cricket.

He was also a capable leader for he understood the game well and was always a team man. Madhavan went on to lead the State and South Zone U22 and State U25 teams in the late 1970s and early 80s. During this period, he scored an unforgettable 170 for the districts against City. His consistent performances earned him the Districts Cricket of the Year (R Madhavan followed him with the award in the succeeding years). He amassed runs with such consistency that he had job offers from multiple banks (including SBI) and institutions even before he had finished his graduation. He was keen to do CA, but his passion for cricket took him to a clerical job at IOB where V Krishnaswamy and H Sundaram were inspirational in those early days with the bank in the late 1970s.
With Sukumar his opener for many years at SVPB 

Beating Jolly Rovers in a big run chase
Playing for IOB against a strong Jolly Rovers attack led by K Bharat Kumar and co, Madhavan helped chase down a big target of 320+ in the final innings with an unbeaten 120, a match that he considers one of his best.

I have not seen anyone like NP Madhavan – PK Dharmalingam
His coach from his college days PK Dharmalingam had coached many players (a list that included Srikkanth, Venkatramana and LS) to greatness in the 1970s. Out of all of those starts, Dharmalingam says that Madhavan stood out like a shining star, especially as a human being. PKD took a special liking for Madhavan both for his stylish batting and his conduct on and off the field. 

'Madhavan’s on-drive was the best I had seen of anyone in the 1970s and 80s. Playing an on-drive on the ground is one of the most difficult strokes in cricket and Madhavan played it with great elegance and ease, time and again. Despite his early success, he was humble, simple, God fearing and soft spoken. He worked very hard on his game to make the best use of his talent. He was disciplined and always well behaved. He was simply a lovable character. When he played, it always seemed that he was playing purely for the love of the game and I enjoyed coaching him. There is no doubt that he should have played many more matches for TN. He was an outstanding human being. In the decades since, I have not seen a humble cricketer and a human being like him.’
NS Ramesh, who played for LMW in the late 1970s before joining RBI in Madras also remembers the softer side of Madhavan ‘He was non controversial and simply focused on his game. He was always calm and a fine gentleman. I used to particularly like his aggressive style of batting.’

Becomes a back foot Player
Till 1980, Madhavan had been an excellent player through the covers and pre-dominantly played off the front foot. That season, he went to Bombay for a camp under Col. Hemu Adhikari, who changed Madhavan’s game to a strong back foot player. Shastri, Pandit and Rajput were also part of that camp.

Hits out at Asantha De Mel
At his peak, Madhavan faced the fastest of bowlers without a helmet. Ranji Trophy winning captain S Vasudevan remembers the way Madhavan took on Asantha De Mel, the fastest bowler from Sri Lanka, and repeatedly hooked and pulled him out of the ground in a fearless batting display in Colombo. Vasudevan also remembers the way Madhavan jumped out to quality spinners and consistently hit them over the top.
An upset De Mel abused Madhavan in typical fast bowler’s language. And as was his style, Madhavan answered with the bat and hit him out of the ground once again soon after the abuse. That’s how he played his cricket. Very rarely did he speak. Most of the times he allowed his bat to do the talking and kept any emotional feelings to his own self.

NP Madhu was a MISFIT for TN Cricket 
After years of consistent performances in all forms of cricket – age group tournaments, league, inter districts and University, Madhavan finally broke through into the playing XI for Tamil Nadu in November 1980. His former teammate from Chengalpet Districts and Friends XI Tambaram V Ramesh (now Vice President with the TNCA) looks back with sympathy for Madhavan.
‘NP Madhu was such a nice fellow. Everyone loved him. And he scored so many runs for the districts and in the league that he should have walked into the Ranji team much earlier. But the seniors in those days would just not retire and Madhu was caught in an era of some very big names in the top order for Tamil Nadu. Hence despite being in prolific form, his entry into Ranji was delayed. He was probably a misfit in the cricketing circles as he did not talk much and would not go behind anyone. He would not question any unfairness to him and just focused on scoring runs. Hence he may have easily been taken for a ride.’

(Ramesh adds that the other Madhavan (R Madhavan) also from Chengalpet District was aided with a little more luck. A few years junior, R Madhavan entered the scene when some of the stars of the 70s had retired and thus enjoyed lot more opportunities than NP Madhavan)

In December 1980, a month after his debut, Madhavan scored the first of his three Ranji centuries, against Andhra at Chepauk.

1981 – Kalli’s rejection and a Life Changing Decision
Later that season, in the summer of 1981, Madhavan (along with a few other cricketers) took a train to Coimbatore to meet with former TN fast bowling great and the then captain of LMW B Kalyanasundaram (Kalli) following a recruitment ad in the newspaper that called for state cricketers.  Kalli thought highly of Madhavan and regarded him as a brilliant opening bat with a wide array of strokes. His excellent fielding especially in the Gully region would have been a big plus for LMW. While Kalli (and LMW) was keen to have his services, the financial part of the deal did not work out for Madhavan and he returned to Madras to continue at IOB. 
If Kalli had worked on a better deal, Madhavan’s life may have taken a different turn and he may have returned in a few years back to Madras. In a way it was Kalli’s rejection of a fair increase from what he was already getting at IOB and a bigger financial package that paved the way for Madhavan’s settling down in Udumalpet.

May be Madhavan had a tinge of disappointment that LMW did not give him a better deal for in the years that followed, after he joined SVPB, Madhavan was specially aggressive against LMW and many of his top knocks came against them in the Coimbatore Premier league that led Kalli to declare ‘he never spared me in Coimbatore!!’

Much to his surprise and in a life changing event, soon after the LMW deal failed to go through, Soundararajan, the MD of GVG group called on for Madhavan who went to Udumalpet along with his father for a discussion.

Soundararajan had great regard for Madhavan from what he had heard of him both as a player and as a personality and offered him an irresistible deal, much more than what Kalli and LMW had offered and well over double of what his current employers were paying him.  But he had one request of Madhavan – to not leave the company for the next three years (for he was keen to build a strong team that decade). In a gesture of loyalty, Madhavan never looked away from the group and resisted all the luring offers that came his way from Madras, especially following his centuries in Ranji Trophy in 1983 and 85. 
Exemplary Conduct
His conduct both on and off the field that first year at SVPB was a huge influence on me and my life. Three events stand out etched in my memory. At the matting wicket at GCT ground in a crucial match against LMW, on a day when he was once again batting beautifully, he was given out caught behind when the ball had missed by a long mile. Without the slightest hint of disapproval, he walked back to the pavilion and asked the next set of batsmen to make up. He always played the game that way. Never did he dispute an umpire’s decision. 

In another match, once again against arch rivals LMW, he showcased the ‘soft spoken’ side to his character. It was a rainy day in Coimbatore and there were shades of wetness in the pitch (turf wicket). The aggressive Kalyanasundaram was itching to have a go at the SVPB batsmen and was keen that the umpires resume play. Madhavan did not even enter the field of play and had no words to say that evening. He simply hung back and waited for the umpires’ decision almost following the philosophy ‘Silence is always better unless additional words can add value to the scenario.’ Also throughout his career, he never stayed back for gossip at the end of the match, irrespective of the result. He would change into ‘colours’ and leave to the Gandhipuram bus stand to catch the bus back to Udumalpet.

The next year, when he returned to the Forest College ground for another match against LMW soon after a match winning century in Ranji following a recall to the state team for the knock out match against UP, Kalli, who had played for a decade under Venkat, asked him if there were any particular message that his captain gave him. Madhavan’s reply was remarkably simple “He asked me where I wanted to bat and I said ‘Captain’s orders’”. 

Though an opener all his life, he batted at No. 5 (his first innings for TN that season) and scored 125 after having coming  when the team was struggling at 115/3 to help chase down 350+. He rates helping TN win that knock out as one of his best innings in cricket.

Father Figure in the team
Former TN Ranji player AP Suresh Kumar who joined SVPB in the 1980s played a lot of cricket with Madhavan both in the Coimbatore and Madras leagues. He refers to Madhavan as the ‘Steve Waugh of SVPB’. When he went in, there was certain composure in the team. Everyone knew that he would give his life for the team under the most difficult of situations. He was a brilliant batsman with classical stroke play. His hooking and cover driving was a treat to watch. He showed a lot of grit when he batted. In the 80s, he played so many brilliant innings and the entire team used to just sit and enjoy him bat for hours together. He faced the fastest of bowlers without a helmet and sometimes reminded us of the way Viv Richards played with just a cap on and taking on the fast bowlers with unflinching aggression.

‘It is still a mystery to most of the players of that era as to why he did not play much more for the state.’ ‘He spoke very little but when he did, he made a lot of sense. He was a father figure and made me understand my responsibilities in cricket.’

Months after scoring his 2nd century in Ranji, he was operated upon below the eye after a severe blow while batting in the nets against Prakash (Bangalore) at Udumalpet. The injury put him out of action for a while in 1983.

First SVPB, then Life Mate at Udumalpet
It was also around this time that another significant event happened in his life. All the players from SVPB would stay at a lodge in Udumalpet. Out of the huge squad of two teams (Venkateswara Paper Boards and Venkatesa Paper Mills) Madhavan was an odd man out – a teetotaler who would most of the times be sitting in a corner away from the rest who were indulging themselves in fun. He was also handsome!!! The owner of the lodge took to a special liking for Madhavan and he and his family pursued him relentlessly to fix an alliance for his sister in law. Not only did he take the unlikely call of moving away from the city to work in a village environment, he had also now got knotted on to a young lady from Udumalpet (in Feb 1984) when he had not yet turned 26.

Unbeaten Century against Bombay
 Madhavan gained his third recall to the Ranji team in the 1984-85 Season. And he scored another century in a knock out game, this time against Bombay at the Wankhade in the last week of March 1985 (unfortunately this century turned out to be his last for TN). A fortnight earlier, at the same ground and against the same opposition, Madhavan had starred in his only one day match in the Wills Trophy tournament both as a batsman and a bowler (he bowled deceptive off spin).

In the mid 1980s, SVPB took over the sponsorship of Globe Trotters in Madras in addition to having two teams in Coimbatore (Venkateswara Paper Boards and Venkatesa Paper Mills) and roped in stars from Karnataka including the well respected Brijesh Patel. 

His Best Knock in League Cricket
In 1987, in an early season clash on a matting wicket at the Union ground, playing for Globe Trotters under Brijesh Patel, he took on Venkat and co (India Pistons) and slammed 185 in thunderous style with the ball lodging repeatedly in the Basketball court.

It is one of the best innings I have watched in league cricket as he hooked and drove the fast bowlers with ease and played Venkataraghavan as well as anyone would have in local cricket when every one else was struggling. Venkat tried everything that day (including his typical abusive approach at the opposition batsman) but just could not dislodge Madhavan. Frustrated and unable to even irritate Madhavan, let alone his wicket, Venkat quietly walked away with his curd rice box to the Northern corner of the ground for his lunch that day, far away from Madhavan!!!

In the first 4 matches of that season, Madhavan had two fifties (including an unbeaten 55 when his team had been bowled out for 120) in addition to this knock of 185. And he had had one of the best starts to a league season. He had also bagged the best batman award at the annual YSCA Trophy with rousing display at the RKM ground in every single match.

And yet, the selectors left him out of the Buchi Babu squad citing ‘old age’. At 29, this decision of the selectors literally ended Madhavan’s hopes of extending his Ranji career. But typical of Madhavan, he took it in his stride and continued on with life leaving no signs of any bitterness.
Venkataraghavan says that Madhavan was a highly talented cricketer with wonderful stroke making ability. He was also a big asset to the team as a fielder. He was an attractive batsman to watch and should have definitely played many more matches for Tamil Nadu, given his talent and the potential that he held. In the limited opportunities he got, he did score a couple of quality centuries under my captaincy. In cricket, the number of matches one plays really depends on circumstances, team composition and such factors and those may have come into in Madahvan's case. But he was a terrific team man and I enjoyed having him in my team in the 1980s, even though he may have played only a few matches, much below what his talent warranted.'

Impeccable Conduct
Brijesh Patel, who captained SVPB and also had a special liking for Madhavan feels that it was very unfortunate that he did not play many more matches for Tamil Nadu at a time when he was plundering runs. ‘How could you not even consider someone who had scored 185 in that aggressive and confident style on that matting wicket against Venkat’. 
In a telephonic conversation from Bangalore, Brijesh Patel said that Madhavan was a supremely talented batsman and an excellent fielder. He was strong both against fast and spin bowling and played many brilliant match winning knocks for SVPB and Globe Trotters. He seemed always composed and gave the team a sense of confidence when he went into bat. Something even more special about him was that he was a thorough gentleman. His conduct was impeccable both on and off the field. The only thing I would hold against him was that he did not display a killer instinct.’ 

Madhavan got a raw deal- VB
VB Chandrasekar, himself an upcoming opener at that time, had moved to Coimbatore for his Engineering and played cricket there in the mid 80s. In a rare moment of praise, VB reserves his best ever compliment in my decade of interaction with him for Madhavan. ‘He was a talented and skillful opener. Scoring a century against Bombay was rated ultimate in those days but he got a raw deal from the State. He never looked back bitterly at his career which clearly should have been handled better. He was a gentleman and many youngsters benefitted from his mentorship.’
Excellent Human Being -Sekar
TA Sekar knew NP Madhavan from the RKM school days as the two played lots of cricket together at Somasundaram ground in T Nagar in the 1970s and a few Ranji matches later in the 80s. Sekar too echoes VB’s sentiment and says that despite scoring tons of runs in the first division for Globe Trotters (a team that Sekar too played for many years in the 80s and 90s), it was unfortunate that for no fault of his he was dropped from the Ranji team. Yet, he remained an excellent human being, always soft spoken and ever a good student (of the game).

Ranji record
He finished his Ranji career with a special record. His last Ranji innings was an unbeaten century against Bombay. His first and last one day innings for TN was a 49 against Bombay at the Wankhade Stadium in a match where he also bowled his full quota of overs and took a wicket with his deceptive off spin. He scored 3 centuries in 9 matches, thus averaging 1 one century every 3 matches. Two of his three centuries came in knock out matches.
Ranji cricketer from the 1980s PC Prakash who also runs and manages Mambalam Mosquitos ( I umpired one of Madhavan's last matches in league cricket here) for whom Madhavan played in the 90s credits Madhavan with a quality that is so essential for cricketers and human being'He was so straight forward and honest about himself.'

Almost 30 years later, the wound remains of not being given a fair treatment but nothing has changed in him. He continues to be soft spoken, gentle to the core, displaying no signs of emotions and absolutely no gossip.  And the big red Kumkum that was a striking feature of him every morning when he entered the ground remains to this day. He can also take satisfaction of mentoring two players from Udumalpet - UR Radhakrishnan and M Senthilnathan - who went on to play higher levels of the game.

It reveals his passion and love for the game that for over 15 years, between 1981 and the mid – late 90s, Madhavan took the strenuous option of travelling multiple weekends in a month to Madras to play for first division teams, a number of times in unreserved compartment (even as a Ranji cricketer) in the Blue Mountain Express. He would return on Monday morning to Udumalpet and head straight to work. This continued even long after his Ranji career had ended and after he had settled down in Udumalpet on a corporate role.

Madhavan who counts S Balaji, Jillu Ramesh and R Madhavan among his best friends and K Bharat Kumar and S Vasudevan among the most difficult bowlers faced, has turned even more philosophical now and is a staunch Baba devotee. He allocates an hour every evening for devotional chanting and has recently started singing devotional songs and even become a lead singer in the Bhajans in Udumalpet. 

His loyalty remains one of his strongest qualities in life and he sacrificed the possibility of a more lucrative career in the city to settle down with the GVG Group. 

Last week, his firm presented him with the ultimate birthday gift endorsing his enormous contribution both as a cricketer and as an executive over the last 35 years. In a personal letter to him, the JMD wrote asking him to accept an extension of his service by another 5 years as a reward for his three decades long contribution. And that Madhavan sees as the ultimate recognition in life.

(NP Madhavan is currently a Vice President at the Rs. 400+ crore GVG group)

Ariyakudi Thiru Venkatamudayan Temple Renovation

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Renovation will begin next month at the 17th Century AD Thiru Venkatamudayan temple in Ariyakudi after a gap of 17 years at an estimate cost of around Rs. 3crores. This will be just the 2nd renovation in over 100 years at the temple that has connection with three Divya Desams.  The 7 Tier 120 feet high Rajagopuram is the tallest for a Vishnu Temple in the Chettinad Region.
With severe monkey menace, a number of beautifully crafted and sculpted idols atop the Rishi Gopuram, the 2ndGopuram just behind the Raja Gopuram, have come off. In some, the heads are missing, while in Brahmma’s idol, his hand has been knocked off.  The palm of the hand of the 10 headed Ravana too is missing. In most, the paintings have peeled off and are wearing a faded look.  Each of these will be restored to its original colour and beauty with Pancha Varna painting.
There are also leakages in both the Gopurams and the plan is to have complete civil works undertaken to fix the leakages with long term solutions.

Mooligai Paintings
On the side and upper walls of the huge Ekadasi Mandapa are exquisite and rare four centuries old mooligai paintings showcasing Lord Vishnu in his different incarnations as well as the different postures (standing, sitting and sleeping). This is a special feature and one of the big highlights at this temple. This mandapa is opened only once a year on the occasion of Vaikunta Ekadasi and thus the devotees have an opportunity to explore these paintings only on that day. The colour has come off a few of these paintings and the plan is to bring these back to its natural features.

Another challenge is the rain water flowing through the gaps into the Ekadasi Mandapa flooding the place putting the paintings at risk. The plan is to construct a shed at the entrance to prevent water entering the mandapa.
Multiple Stapathis will be used during the year long renovation activity with each being assigned a specific set of tasks. Chemical wash will be performed on the walls and pillars at the temple to restore it to its original form.

Vahanas – Repair work
Repair work will be carried out to the Golden Garuda Vahana on which the Lord goes out on a Procession on the opening day of Chitrai every year. The popular Chariot Festival and Theppotsavam take place in Vaikasi as part of the grand 15 day Brahmotsavam.

While 1000s of devotees visit the temple during the annual Vaikasi festival, as well as on each of the Saturdays in Puratasi, the temple complex lacks basic amenities such as bathroom and toilet facilities. It is hoped that HR & CE will immediately look into this and make available some of the basic facilities for the devotees including rooms to stay.

All the shops opposite the temple are being brought down and re-built. The staff quarters are being refurbished.

Connection with three Divya Desams
The story goes that Sevukan Chettiyar used to walk to Tirupathi with a group of devotees to have darshan of Srinivasa Perumal on the Thiruvonam day in Puratasi. On one such trip, when ill health disrupted his trip, he heard an invisible voice state that He, the Lord  himself would provide darshan at the devotee’s place rather than the devotee coming all the way here.

He was directed to Srirangam to collect the idol, one which was the Abhisheka Murthy of Ramanuja. He came back here to this dense forest area of Ariyakudi and installed the utsava idol of Srinivasa Perumal and built the first prakara. In memory of the construction by Sevukan Chettiyar, his idol is seen on one of the pillars in front of the sanctum.

Subsequently, the 7tiered Raja Gopuram was built along with a separate Sannidhi for Alarmel Mangai Thayar.

The speciality at this temple is that the utsava idol is from Srirangam, the Shatari from Tirupathi and Agni (the sacred fire) from Thiru Maiyam. In centuries gone by, during the Thiruvonam festival in Puratasi, devotees had the honour of being blessed by the Lords from three Divya Desams (the Abhisheka idol, the Shatari and the sacred fire that would be brought from Thirumayam – about 20 kms away - for the Karpoora Aradhana) at the Dasavathara mandapa.

Every month on the Swathi star day, a special Thirumanjana, with 108 sacred Kudams, is performed for Garuda. The belief is that this helps liberate one from doshams.


Ramanuja Iyengar and Ariyakudi Temple
The 20th century Carnatic Music Legend Ramanuja Iyengar lived here for many years in the Sannidhi Street, 100 yards away from the temple. An archival record dating back to 1937 features a kutcheri presentation by him here at Ariyakudi. Well over 70 years ago, Varadaraja Bhattar would seek Ramanuja Iyengar’s endorsement of the special alankarams each day during the 15 day Vaikasi Brahmotsavam. So devoted was Ramanuja Iyengar towards Lord Srinivasa that he would identify and point out even minor errors in the alankaram that would then be corrected by the Bhattar before the screen was opened for the devotees’ darshan.

On the 4th day of the Brahmotsavam, when the Lord came out on the Golden Garuda Vahana, led by an elephant (with a photo of Thyagaraja placed on its top), Ramanuja Iyengar used to present Pancha Ratna Keerthanais.

The temple is open between 730am-1230pm and 430pm-8pm. Those interested in supporting the renovation efforts may contact: 89397 91779 / 94866 34228

How to reach
Ariyakudi is 4kms from Karaikudi.  Daily express trains ply from Chennai to Karaikudi. Auto from Karaikudi Station will cost Rs. 75.



VB Chandrasekar TNPL

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 VBC becomes owner of TNPL team
2010- 'Do you call that cricket' (on IPL)
2016- 'It is a breeding ground for spotting and grooming talent' (on TNPL)
Many years ago, in the aftermath of quitting CSK, VB Chandrasekar ( what ever he does he will remain one of my favourite cricketers from the 80s) had remarked to me ‘Do you call that (IPL) cricket’? Yes, if it was not cricket ( that we had all come to live with), it was fine not to be part of it. 'It is not real cricket'.

How things and perspectives change in life. And how we, as human beings, grab luring opportunities letting go of our past comments and our philosophies on even things that are so close to our heart ( and real cricket is for VBC).

Over the last couple of months, VBC grabbed a high profile Tamizh commentary opportunity to take IPL  to the Tamizh households. He was away from his VBCA flood lit summer camp most of this summer instead engaging in an IPL commentary stint from the studios in Bombay.

And yesterday he has become a proud owner of a TN PL (PL) team.  Do you call this cricket in 2010 has now in 2016 become ‘this is a great talent spotting arena’. 

'TNPL is where you can spot talent and groom them for the future'!!!!

Michael Holding remains one of the very few prominent past cricketers to publicly make his displeasure known (about T20) and to stick to that and stay away from the financial lure.

The lure of Name and Fame and the possibility of huge bucks in the long term (and may be a return to IPL once CSK is back) has got VBC back into the Premier League much against his stated views on PL and this shorter form of cricket.

One hopes he will have a longer stint  in this shorter form than he has had with the Indian team (as a player), the IPL (as a mentor) and the TN team (as coach) now that he is the owner and has the ultimate decision making power.


Thiru Koshtiyur Renovation Issues

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Periyazhvaar's Praise of Thiru Koshtiyur and what it is today
Not Just Cricket, Even Temple is a business now
Velukkudi Krishnan markets for the Renovation with an Upanyasam in Coimbatore - Road Shows no more the exclusive domain of corporates

Periyazhvaar reserves the highest form of praise for the people of Thiru Koshtiyur. In the Periyazhvaar Thirumozhi, he brings out the greatness of their generosity with a beautiful example.‘During famine, grains sell at such a premium that even a handful of grains cost a gold coin. But even during these most testing of times, the people of Thiru Koshtiyur feed the guests with honour as if everything was normal. They do not use such tough times to hide their stocks and claim shortfall to their guests. Would you not sell yourselves as bonded slaves to such high quality people’ asks Periyazhvaar.

He praises them as those who always spoke the truth and who were blemish-less with almost no faults and without enemies. You could find no one with malice. From a young age, they cultivated good habits. He goes to the extent of saying that when their feet touched the ground, the earth got sanctified and became purer. Just seeing them seemed to fill one’s hearts with good thoughts. He says that such is the purity of the place that even the asuras aren’t likely to steal grains at Thiru Koshtiyur

That was over a 1000 years ago. The picture today bears no resemblance to the praise extolled by Periyazhvaar on the people of Thiru Koshtiyur. One wonders how he would have sung today if he visited the temple and met the residents of the town.

So what is the scenario now at Thiru Koshtiyur?

Temple Road Shows following the Corporate Model
It is that time of the season to make money at the cost of others. It is Renovation time. The previous renovation had taken place 17 years ago. There are road shows being organised for collection of money to fund the renovation ( yes road shows are no more the exclusive domain of companies looking to go in for IPOs or to raise funds through other routes). 

A recent one was anchored by the celebrated Velukkudi Krishnan in Coimbatore addressing a set of leading industrialists there - a beautiful model of an Upanyasam that was combined / followed with a funding pitch by the renovation team. This one though was particularly surprising, given the background of team, as Shri. Krishnan is careful with his brand promise but this may have been one occasion where he may have failed to keep up to that. 

(The renovation team shared this with me (when I was in Thiru Koshtiyur last week) with a lot of pride - the fact that they had roped in Velukkudi Krishnan for that road show)

Unauthorised collection of cash
As one is about to step foot into the temple, one is welcomed by a voice that seeks any money for the renovation - Rs. 10 to Rs. 10000!!!! No such collection of cash is allowed as per HR & CE rules (this is a Sivagangai Samasthanam temple but the audited accounts are to be presented to HR & CE). And the devotees with good intent keep feeding into the unsolicited pitching for money.

And as one stays on there at the entrance to the Raja Gopuram, one finds even more disturbing issues. Rs. 35 is being collected for car parking and Rs. 100 for mini bus parking but the receipt books don't indicate that amount (it is much lower). 

The car parking rights had in the past been tendered for a few lakhs annually but in the recent past that too has been withheld. Thus the entire collection is completely unaccounted for. And it is a financial loss to the temple with the parking fees going to a set of individuals.

Anna Dhanam
There is also collection of money for the Anna Dhanam scheme but it looks like this amount is not being deposited into the official account to which it is supposed to be. The donar gets prasadam on time just as a convincing methodology (and an acknowledgement to him of his donation) but the money may not be going to the Anna Dhanam, the purpose of the donation. A peep into the record books will tell the real story behind this. At a conservative estimate of about 100 donars every month, there is around Rs. 20000 going almost unaccounted.

That's the story outside the temple.

Pillayar Sannidhi brought down
Now to the inside. On the ground floor of the temple is the Shrine for Shiva that finds a mention in Thiru Mangai Azhvaar's Periya Thirumozhi verse on Thiru Koshtiyur. He praises the Lord of Thiru Koshtiyur as one who has accepted Goddess Lakshmi as well as Lord Shiva as being part of him ( his own self). In this case, it is meant as being 'part of the temple'.

Structural changes are being planned at the Shiva Sannidhi that includes the replacement of stones and a possible replacement of the Lingam ( though this may be said to be currently on hold).

It is the Pillayar Sannidhi that is first built on the South West corner of a Shiva Sannidhi. The Pillayar Sannidhi that possibly dates back to the time of the Shiva Sannidhi has been demolished and is being reconstructed.

As per the renovation rules of HR & CE, no ancient structure can be brought down without the express orders of HR & CE.

More demolition on the anvil
Also, on the plans are restructuring of Ramanuja and Thiru Koshtiyur Nambi Sannidhi, Narasimha Idol/Peedam and a replacement of the iconic Nambi idol on the third tier of the temple (just next to the stone sculpture of Ramanuja).

All of a sudden, yesterday, the Ashtanga Vimana work (that includes a Gold Rack installation) has been put on hold by the EO (who is an appointee of the Sivagangai Samasthanam). 

A Coat Hanger inside the Moolavar Sannidhi
As I entered the Moolavar Sannidhi on Tier 1, I found a coat hanger inside. And it was meant to be for the EO to place his Shirt while he was at the Sannidhi. Shirts are not allowed inside the Moolavar Sannidhi at this temple. But to have a coat hanger installed for a private individual  seems quite disrespectful to the Lord.
HR & CE has taken some initial steps towards an enquiry but it will have to probe deep and get to the base of the facts. 

I have also spoken to the ASI chief for an exploration to ensure that this ancient structure does not get diluted with structural changes to centuries old Sannidhis and idols.

The Moral: Temple has become a business (not just Cricket - the other topic that I write on)

A different version of this story featured in The Hindu Friday Review on June 17

Temple Darshan Photo Video Menace

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The issue of Photo and Video Menace flares up again for the third year in a row during the Oyyali at the Narasimha Brahmotsavam at Parthasarathy Temple 

Saint Poets Azhvaars in several Pasurams in the Nalayira Divya Prabhandham refer to festivals and Vedic recitals taking place in (Divya Desam) temples and devotees gaining positive energy from these festivals.

Thiru Mangai Azhvaar in his Periya Thirumozhi refers to rows of houses, lining up the streets of Therezhandur, in whose porticos beautiful traditional ladies queued up to watch the glittering procession of the Lord with devotion. Many verses in the Divya Prabhandham talk about the vibrancy around the temples during festivals and how people came out of their homes to have a glimpse of the Lord in different vahanas. And the Azhvaars describe the happy state of the people in such times.

One thought, likewise devotees would come out to the temples to capture a glimpse of the Lord and to seek his blessings. Alas, it does not seem so any more.

Crowds are thronging temples in big numbers these days. And it seems there is a ‘devotional’ wave sweeping across Tamil Nadu. But unfortunately the reality on the ground at the temples is very different. With phones becoming ‘smarter’,holding a phone high over the head and clicking photo and video shots of the Lord has become a new fad. The first activity of an utsavam as the screen opens during procession is not to worship the Lord with folded hands but to get the camera ready for the first click, mostly at the cost of darshan for many of the devotees at the back row. Narashimha Brahmotsavam 

For the third year in a row, this was a sour point at the Narasimha Brahmotsavam that concluded last night at the Parthasarathy temple in Thiruvallikeni. For a minority of devotees, it has become difficult to have a clear darshan of the Lord during the Oyyali, a special walk of the Lord leading to the NamAzhvaar Sannidhi, that has in recent times created much excitement among the devotees. Better access now to sleeker phones with good cameras has led to intense competition among the devotees who are now vying with each other to showcase their photography and videography skills than enjoying the Lord's beautiful evening presentation of the Oyyali, all this completely unmindful of the devotees behind them. This photo and video mania is turning out to be a serious distraction for some of the true devotees. 


And what is even more worrying is that it is the traditional people with Panchakajam and sporting broad Thiruman who are clicking such shots repeatedly of the Lord despite pleas from more sincere devotees. In fact, the pleas are silenced with a response that this is a public place and that the devotees have the right to click their shots in whatever way they want.

Frustrated at the group of residents not acceding to his repeated requests, Shri. K Parthasarathy, a long time resident of Thiruvallikani, last Sunday lodged an official complaint with the Deputy Commissioner of the temple on the use of Camera Phones during Oyyali.

Shri. Parthasarathy has been watching the Oyyali at the Parthasarathy temple from the time he was a young school boy in the mid 1960s. He says that he has not seen such unruly behaviour among residents in the last 50 years. ‘In the decades gone by, devotees including a number of children used to come from across the city to specially watch the Oyyali.’

‘No one has a right to obstruct the darshan of a devotee. For the last three years, I have placed continuous request to keep down the mobile phones during Oyyali but the scenario has only deteriorated. Clearly, the use of mobile phones has had a negative impact on the traditions of the temple. The latest fad is of devotees taking ‘selfies’ with the God and that surely is not in good taste.’ 

Reactions from Thiruvallikeni Residents
A surprise reaction awaited this writer when he sought the views of a person who retaliated in full public view to the protests of Shri Parthasarathy. This person who also carries the Lord on his shoulder during the procession ( it is another matter that he also talks on the phone during this process!!!) opined that there was nothing wrong in taking photos and videos during these events. He in fact goes to the extent of saying that photos and videos should be allowed at all places inside the temples. During the earlier two Brahmotsavams for Parthasarathy that took place this year ( Feb and April), this person was an active photographer taking photos including during Pathi Ulaathal.

Even more surprising was the support from the ladies of Thiruvallikeni who seemed to endorse the photo culture and condemned the act of Shri. Parthasarathy. The ladies' view was also endorsed by several other traditional male residents of Thiruvallikeni, such is the devotional trend towards photography and videography. 

Shri Parthasarathy also wonders at the decision to allow the Ghosti to have mobile phones in their possession during the Prabhandham recital when they are not allowed to wear a wrist watch.

In the letter to the Dy. Commissioner, Shri Parthasarathy says ‘Some of the devotees raise their mobile phones and large iPADS above their shoulder greatly hampering the darshan for old and short devotees (especially ladies) standing in the back during the Oyyali. When requested, the devotees gang up together and fight back. This is a very unfortunate situation and many devotees have to suffer silently through the Brahmotsavam.’

He has requested the temple officials to take corrective action so as to facilitate peaceful darshan for all. In his letter, he has also requested them to update him on the action taken by them in this regard. Almost a week later, he is still awaiting their response.


The scene is not very different in the ancient Varadaraja Perumal temple in Kanchipuram or the Ranganatha Perumal temple in Srirangam.

 Shri. Malai Mel Krishna, who has been in Kanchipuram for the last ten years performing kainkaryam, says that things have definitely changed for the worse in the last few years at the Varadaraja Perumal temple. ‘We try our best to educate the devotees on the need for self discipline but with the sleek phones, they manage to take continuous shots disturbing the darshan of many of the sincere devotees. The first thing a lady asked recently on entering was if she could take a photo. It has almost become an exhibition kind of event and it is no more devotional.’

At the Ranganathaswamy temple in Srirangam, Saathatha Vaishnavas have the responsibility to make the announcement relating to maintaining silence and disallowing photo and video shots of some of the sacred events.  Vaishnava Sridharan, whose family has been performing this sacred service for a 100 years at the temple, was shocked, recently, when he received a video recording on whatsapp of a sacred traditional event that he had strictly shouted out as a ‘No Photos No Videos’ prior to the event.

For the first time, these sacred and events exclusive to the Srirangam temple that had been protected for centuries together as an event to be only experienced at the venue and not meant for public distribution are being posted out in public forums now. And that is a very disturbing feature.

Where is temple worship going?
It just seems that temple worship is going the wrong way – Photo posts on social media and photo exchanges on Whatsapp seem to be the order of the day. In decades gone by, the typical comment from a mother was to get the child to pray with folded hands in front of the Lord. But now, even young children are being encouraged to take video shots. And at the end of one such event earlier this week, a kid was appreciated and given a pat on the back by the adoring mother for a great video shot of the Lord. The mothers even teach the young children with the best angles and positioning for the photo and video shots. 

The instant drive to showcasing their presence at the festival is taking people away from the essence of  devotion. There is a new found eagerness to show that they belong to this new modern world of hi-tech phones. As they head back home every evening, the question asked is 'if you took a good photo of the Lord' and not 'did you have a good peaceful darshan'. If the hands are always in possession of a camera phone, where is the possibility of the folded hands before the Lord? The non-stop chat on the phone even while performing a pradakshanam, typing of messages, taking photo shots at all times at all places leaves one wondering as to where we are headed with devotion.

Temples and the streets surrounding it are not mere public places. There is certain sanctity to it especially during procession. There is an unwritten devotional code of conduct that one needs to adhere to when one is near the Lord.

It is hoped that the official complaint lodged by the devotee at the Parthasarathy temple this week will trigger the HR & CE to seriously look into this issue and find a long term solution to this menace that will allow peaceful darshan of the Lord. 

A top corporate chief Shri. R Shiv Kumar has been a regular at the Kapaleeswarar temple for the last many decades and recites the sacred verses there all alone in a peaceful state every morning at 5am for an hour or so. He is completely frustrated at the changing scenario and probably sums best the feelings of the few remaining devotees. 

'Honestly, I feel like running away, ignoring the world and being one with HIM. We are nor reformers. At best we express frustration and take half-hearted moves that won't solve the problem and will only add to our frustration. This is the age of Kali and it is at its worst in Tamil Nadu.'


(a different version of this story featured yesterday in The Hindu Friday Review)

Vithuvakodu Pasuram Kulasekara Azhvaar

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When one melts down before the Lord and surrenders, even the pains seem to become softer
In his verses of praise on Thiru Vithuvakodu (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2009/11/thiru-vithuvakkodu-divya-desam.html), Kulasekara Azhvaar describes the town and the scenario that existed there during his time. Vithuvakodu was well guarded by huge walls that were so high that it seemed to touch the sky. The fields were long and were always brimming with water, where fishes mingled in large numbers for that seemed to be the only habitat for them. Similar to the fish, he says that he has no place to go other than the feet of the Lord, despite the fact that the Lord does not even seem to glance at him.

Kulasekara Azhvaar compares the surrender sought by him with the Lord of Vithuvakodu  to a child who despite being kept away by an angry mother as punishment for some wrong doing comes back to the mother for solace. Despite all the troubles inflicted upon him by the Lord, he says he has nowhere else to go but to surrender to him and to seek his blessings.

தறுதுயரம்தடாயேல்உன்சரணல்லால்சரணில்லை
விரைகுழுவும்மலர்பொழில்சூழ்வித்துவக்கோட்டம்மானே

அரிசினத்தால்ஈன்றதாய்அகற்றிடினும்மற்றவள்தன்
அருள்நினைந்தேயழும்குழவியதுவேபோன்றிருந்தேனே
  
Like a Virtuous Woman
Kulasekara Azhvaar compares the purity of his surrender to the Lord to a virtuous woman who never thinks of anyone other than her husband.

கண்டாரிகழ்வனவே  காதலன்தான்செய்திடுனும்
கொண்டானையல்லால்அறியாக்குலமகள்போல்

He cites the example of the subjects who live under a King’s rule even though the king has taken over by power, has ignored them and subjected them to tyranny.

Faith in a Doctor
Despite the fact that the Lord presents numerous difficulties to the devotees, there is no one else to seek other than the Lord himself. Kulasekara Azhvaar compares this to the state of a patient and his utmost faith in the doctor who even cuts open the body for surgery.

வாளால்அறுத்துச்சுடினும்மருத்துவன்பால்
மாளாதகாதல்நோயாளன்போல்மாயத்தால்

Kulasekara Azhvaar compares his current state to the birds that while in the middle of an ocean are running on all sides only to finally return back to the ship unable to locate the shore. Similar is the state of the human mind - finally the refuge lies in the Lord.

எங்கும்போய்க்கரைகாணாதுஎறிகடல்வாய்மீண்டேயும்
வங்கத்தின்கூம்பேறும்மாப்பறவைபோன்றேனே

Even when the flame nears the lotus, it does not blossom. Only when the sun shines does the lotus blossom even though the sun is far away in the sky. Kulasekara Azhvaar agrees that one has to go through the pains of one’s Karma. But when he melts down before the Lord and surrenders thus, even the pains seem to become softer.

For many years there may not be rains. But do the crops not look up expectantly at the clouds in the sky. Similarly while there is a clear understanding that one has to undergo pains because of past karmas, as a true devotee, one’s heart has to be in the Lord alone seeking redemption from our ill deeds.

இத்தனையும்வான்மறந்தகாலத்தும்பைங்கூழ்கள்
மைத்தெழுந்தமாமுகிலேபார்த்திருக்கும்மற்றவைபோல்

மேய்த்துயர்வீட்டாவிடினும்வித்துவக்கோட்டம்மா
என்சித்தம்மிகஉன்பாலேவைப்பன்அடியேனே

The rivers that spread in different directions finally join the sea. Similarly devotees wander in different directions but finally land up at his feet for surrender. Through the Lord’s blessings, huge wealth may be placed on one who may not even wish for it. But even in such devotees, the mind should only desire to attain the Lord’s feet.

Even though the Lord may seem to be not considering the devotee’s prayers, one has nothing else to do except surrender to the Lord.

Periyazhvaar Utsavam Srivilliputhur

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Evoking Memories of Vishnu Chittar's Victory in Madurai
Vishnu Chittar (later Periyazhvaar) had dedicated his entire life to selfless service at the feet of the Lord in his home town of Srivilliputhur. Once when Pandya King Vallabha Deva ruling from Madurai came across a unique query that he heard while on his (incognito) night rounds - ‘what you want after death should be accumulated in this life itself’, he summoned his head priest Selva Nambi to find him the answer.

Selva Nambi invited Vishnu Chittar to the debate in which there was a huge prize on offer to the one who provided real insights. Many scholars came forward but the bag with the gold coins hung in the balance. When it was time for Vishnu Chittar to come up with his presentation, he stunned the Pandya King with his description of the greatness of Lord Narayana citing various references from Vedic Scriptures.

Even as he was finishing his speech, the gold coins were showered on him, for Vallabha Deva was truly impressed and had got the solution to his query. It was then that he was conferred the title of ‘Bhattar Piran’ and led on a royal procession around the streets of Madurai in a grand event witnessed by a huge crowd. The melodies of musical instruments resonated everywhere and Bhattar Piran was surrounded by a royal retinue with the Pandya king requesting him with open arms to ascend and mount on to the majestic elephant. As he moved along in the procession, he suddenly had darshan of the Lord along with Goddess Lakshmi on Garuda mount against the back drop of the clear blue sky. Immediately he fell into a trance and watching the Lord in the high sky sung verses in praise of him at the same time expressing concern of his safety. Verses poured out instantly as he sung for the Lord’s long life.

Evoking memories of the elephant ride
As Periyazhvaar mounted the white elephant on the sixth day of avathara utsavam in Srivilliputhur earlier this month, tears of joy rolled down the eyes of several devotees for whom the procession evoked memories of the legendary event in Madurai.


Decked with jewels that glittered on his chest, the shining crown on his head that seemed as an indication of his victory in the debate and the huge colourful garland decorating his body befitting a winner and amidst the recital of Divya Prabhandham, Periyazhvaar rode out majestically on the elephant top around the big streets of his home town much to the delight of the devotees who gathered in the porticos of their homes to greet him on the occasion.

Father listens to daughter’s verses
Co- incidentally, that day also happened to be Aani Pooram, the monthly birth star of his daughter Andal. Just a few hours prior to the elephant ride, Periyazhvaar celebrated the evening with his daughter at the avathara mandapa of Andal in the sacred garden of the temple that he had specially created to present different varieties of flowers to the Lord every day.

Seated alongside his daughter in that mandapa for the only time in the year, and in the presence of a large devotee crowd that had gathered to watch this special occurrence, Periyazhvaar was treated, for over an hour, to the beautiful songs of Thiruppavai and Nachiyar Thirumozhi rendered by the prabhandham experts of Srivilliputhur.

Insightful lessons to the devotees
Periyazhvaar in his Thirumozhi says that his real hunger is not when he is starved of food but of the days when he has not worshipped the Lord with fresh flowers, singing praise of him and reciting vedic scriptures. He appeals to devotees to name their children after the Lord for at least then one will get an opportunity to utter the Lord’s name whenever the child’s name is called out. This even if it’s not in the true spirit of meditation will earn one the merit of calling his names every day. The devotees who were blessed to experience the utsavam of such a devoted saint poet went back with many useful lessons that could be implemented in the everyday lives.

Narrating the ‘Periyazhvaar Vaibhavam’
At 27, he is a graduate in Computer Applications and also holds a MBA degree. But he has let go of the temptations of a lucrative corporate career and stayed back in Srivilliputhur to perform Kainkaryam at the Andal and Vadabadra Sayee temple, similar to the selfless service performed by Periyazhwar.            
As part of the concluding event of the avathara utsavam, Veda Piran Bhattar Sudharsanan, the 225th descendant of Periyazhwar, narrated with utmost devotion in the presence of Lord Vadabadra Sayee and Periyazhvaar the ‘Periyazhvaar Vaibhavam’ for almost two hours at the Doddacharya Mandapa taking the devotees back in time to the legendary tale of Periyazhvaar. From an exclusive historical document, he told the story of the birth of Periyazhvaar, the creation of the nandavanam, the now famous trip to Madurai and his anointment as ‘Bhattar Piran’ after his great victory in the debate.

Of particular interest was the way he retold with great insights the story of the ‘Pallandu’ verses where Periyazhvaar sings praise for the security of Lord Vishnu. Sudharsanan remarked that when the Lord asked Periyazhvaar as to why security for the Lord himself, he says that he saw himself as the father and the Lord as his child and hence he cared for the security of his child.

Sudharsanan narrated as to how Periyazhvaar brought the victorious gold coins from Madurai and spent the entire money for his beloved Lord by building the then biggest Raja Gopuram at 196 feet, 11 gateways, 11 Kalasams, the big walls and the prakaras.

‘When the great Tamil poet Kamban came to Srivilliputhur, he was so stunned by the gigantic temple tower of Srivilliputhur that he compared it to the greatness of the Meru Hills and presented an exclusive verse, in praise of the tower, at the feet of Kesava Kavi Raja, a descendant of Periyazhvaar. Also, Kamban, who belonged to the Chozha kingdom, was so thrilled on hearing the Prabhandham verses of Andal presented to her the ‘Kamban Kunjam’, an ornament that he had won after winning over the Pandya poets in a big debate. In memory of this event, Andal adorns this special ornament to this day every year in the month of Thai.’  

Sudharsanan resides in the over 1000 years old Thirumaligai opposite the Andal Sannidhi.

(a different version of this featured in The Hindu Friday Review dated July 29)

Ezhuthurai Nathar Temple Innambur

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Liberation from Stammering
A Prarthana sthalam to regain one’s Voice
The Lord’s Vimana is in the form of a sleeping elephant

Located 8kms from Kumbakonam off the Kallanai Highway is the ancient Ezhutharai Nathar temple in Innambur, a temple praised by Thiru Gnana Sambanthar and Thirunavukkarasarar. The base structure of the sanctum is a strong Karungal construction and there are several inscriptions dating back a 1000 years. Chozhas are said to have contributed to the temple and undertaken renovation in the 9th and 10th century AD

A sincere saivite devotee Sudasman took care of the accounts of the temple. The story goes that he once missed updating an entry and was summoned by the king the next day. Being the sincere devotee, that night he invoked the blessings of Lord Shiva. The next morning when he visited the king, he was told that the accounts were intact and that all entries were fine. While he was happy that he had got out of the awkward situation, he was surprised at this turn of events and wondered as to how this had happened. On return and on opening the door of the temple, Lord Shiva provided darshan to him as Ezhuthurai Nathar.

Liberation from Stammering
In Sanskrit, the Lord is referred to as Akshara Pureeswarar. He is said to provide solution to those with voice problem and stammering. A visit to the temple is believed to help those interested to develop their writing skills. As part of the process, one can visit the temple on any day and recite the relevant slokas as directed by Shivacharya.

Sun’s rays on the Lord
The Sun God’s rays falls on the Lord at 6.08 am on Avani 31, and Puratasi 1 and 2 as well as on 13th, 14th and 15th days of Panguni at 6.18 am. The town is named after the Sun God as Innambur (Suryan is referred to as Inan)

Unique Vimana
Another legend relates to the white elephant that was directed by Sage Agastya to invoke the blessings of Lord Shiva here for from a curse. After bathing in the sacred tank, east of the temple, the elephant found it difficult to enter as the steps were small. It is believed that Lord himself came down to the lift the elephant to enable the tusker to perform pooja at this temple. In memory of this event, the vimana is named as Gaja Pirashta Vimana, the sacred tank as Airavatha Theertham and the Lord as Airavateswarar. The Vimana is in a rare form – that of a sleeping elephant.

Performing an archanai on the full moon day for Nitya Kalyani at this temple is said to help the unmarried tie the wedding knot.

Festivals
10 day Thiruvathirai festival
Thiru Kalyanam in Avani
Kodai Abishekam – 21 days in Chitrai 

The temple is open between 7am-12noon and 4.30pm-8pm. Contact Balasubramaniam Gurukal @ 94439 14958.


How to reach: Bus No. 6 every hour from Kumbakonam bus stand. Auto from Kumbakonam station will cost Rs. 125.

Krishnaswamy V

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The TN opener from the 1970s who mentored several youngsters at IOB 
In the mid 90s, Kerala Ranji player KN Ananthapadmanabhan refused a four-fold increase in salary to move from IOB to India Cements. VB Chandrasekar, the then captain of India Cements, called in Ananthapadmanabhan to his house for a discussion but that meeting lasted just a minute.  Anantha told VB that  the love and care (at IOB) was extraordinary, it was like a family team and that he would not move for the lure of money.’ No amount of financial motivation could lure the leggie away from IOB.

That is  V Krishnaswamy (Kichcha to his friends) for you. The TN state opener from the 1970s had moved away from all cricketing activities to focus on a professional career at IOB in the early 1980s. And yet, from far away, he followed IOB cricket and took care of each of the cricket players like one of his own family. 

Just a year prior to Ananthapadmanabhan refusing this lucrative offer, it was Krishnaswamy who was instrumental in roping in Ananthapadmanabhan from a star studded Chemplast to IOB. Completely trusting Krishnaswamy, the then 23 year old leggie quit the job at Chemplast and remained without a job for almost 6 months while Krishnaswamy was convincing his management that Anatha was indeed a good long term pick for the team.

15years earlier, it was the same trust that had led collegiate cricketer NP Madhavan to choose IOB ahead of several other corporate offers and much stronger banks like SBI and RBI.

Bowl from 18 yards, please
B Kalyanasundaram (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2011/08/kalli-b-kalyanasundaram.html), the great fast bowler from the 60s and 70s, says that Kichcha once asked him to bowl from 18 yards in the nets. There were no helmets in those days and most of the league matches were on matting wickets. This showed the fearless side to his character and his keenness to gear up to the best of challenges. 

Aside of his fearless style of cricket, Kalli says that Kichcha was one of the most honest cricketers he had seen. ‘You could trust him completely and he personally took delight in seeing others succeed.’

The Early days in the 1960s
Krishnaswamy had no fear of fast bowling right from his days at PS high school in the late 60s. Before he had turned 15, he started scoring heavily in the third division league playing for CUC.  The very first year for the State schools was an outstanding one for Krishnaswamy and the amount of runs he accumulated earned him a place in the South Zone squad. He captained the state schools the next year and narrowly missed the flight to Australia with the India Schools team, one that comprised of Brijesh Patel and Karsan Ghavri, among others.

Huge Influence on his cricket
The one and a half month coaching camp organized by TNCA in the summer of 1969 under the stewardship of MJ Venkatesan made a huge impact on Krishnaswamy. Thanks to Venkatesan, he learnt the art of playing all around the wicket. Venkatesan would throw cricket balls at Krishnaswamy and get him to play a wide range of strokes both off the front and back foot on both sides of the wicket.

In 69-70, the year he joined Vivekananda College, he signed up for Bunts (in the first division), a team that provided him with the big early encouragement that is so critical for a teenager. The then captain KSS Mani had a lot of faith in Krishnaswamy and liked his fearless style of play. That season playing against a strong SBI side that included VV Kumar at his best, Krishnaswamy scored a fighting century. And then under the captaincy of his cousin S Venkataraghavan, he made a stroke filled 90 for TNCA XI against Jolly Rovers in the Buchi Babu final, a knock that earned him a place in the Ranji Trophy squad at the age of 17.

He was very consistent throughout his college days scoring several centuries during that phase. He also scored heavily for the Madras University including a stand out knock of 140 in a match where Sundaresan scored a double hundred. He followed that knock with a 90 against Bangalore University at Dharwar. It was the first of many big knocks against Karnataka who turned out to be his favourite opposition in the 1970s.

Ranji Debut @ 17
He made his Ranji debut in November 1970 against Kerala at Tellichery. The following year Madras University won the South Zone championship under his captaincy. Unfortunately, he had to miss the two most talked about matches in TN cricketing history – the Semi Final and Final in the 72-73 season (his university exams coincided with those two matches).

Soon after he completed his graduation, IOB offered him a job that Krishnaswamy took up with no second thoughts, even though he had offers from corporate giants SPIC and TVS as he felt that the bank offered better long term career prospects for him. He played for a decade for IOB and mentored many players during this period. 


The best match of his life
In January 1975, Krishnaswamy played the best match of his career, one that TN lost to unfancied AP by just one run. The loss still hurts him when he is reminded of that match. He was involved in a big partnership with TE Srinivasan in the low 4thinnings chase but his dismissal triggered a collapse.

Best year in Cricket – Crucial knocks against Bedi/Shivalkar/Chandra
Margazhi of 1975-76 turned out to be his best month in first class cricket. In the Ranji match, he top scored against Hyderabad. A week later, on a turning pitch at Chepauk end of December 1975, he scored a top class half century against Bishen Bedi and Rajender Goel in the final of the Duleep Trophy that South Zone won.
A few days later, he scored another half century, this time against West Zone in the Deodhar Trophy Final and followed this in a couple of days with yet another 80 against Chandra and Prasanna, the fourth year in succession that he enjoyed success against Karnataka in the Ranji Trophy. He was in the Rest of India squad for the Irani Trophy match against Bombay in Delhi in 1976 but narrowly missed making it into the XI. That was the closest he came to national reckoning.

A wedding gift to his wife - His first Ranji century
Towards the end of his Ranji career, Krishnaswamy scored his first and only Ranji century in Coimbatore. It was a special match for Andhra was bowled out for just 29 runs. Krishnaswamy had just got married to his long time girl friend Radha and it seemed that he had decided to hand her a special wedding gift as he came up with a terrific century. In the process, he also put on a century stand with his opening partner for almost a decade V Sivaramakrishnan. He saw a future in banking and quit cricket before he turned 30.
Sivaramakrishnan has fond memories of their decade long association on the cricket field ‘Kichcha was immensely talented. I remember the year when he struck century after century for the college. He would simply dominate the bowling. In a match against Pachaiyappas College, playing normal cricketing shots the two of us put together a century stand in just 10 overs which was a rare occurrence in those days. His cover drive was a treat to watch and he was an excellent fielder in the cover region. I learnt a lot just by watching his game. He was a very meticulous person, had a systematic approach to the game and was a supremely confident person.’

Cousin Venkat and Krishnaswamy
In TN, it has always seemed that ‘we’ spoke more than warranted. In those years, there was a lot of gossip that went around including ‘stories’ on cousin Venkat playing a role in his selection. Venkat was his cousin and elder to him by almost 10 years. Krishnaswamy clears the air on this. 

He says that they had a cordial relationship but rarely discussed cricket at home so much so that Krishnaswamy has not even discussed the infamous knock of 36 NO by Gavaskar in 60 overs in the inaugural world cup in 1975 under Venkat’s captaincy, this even after 40 years. He says that much against the popular perception, Venkat was always well intended. He never carried grudges. He almost never cribbed. ‘To me, he has never said a bad thing about any player. On the field his expectations were high and he would let know his feelings in a very expressive way.  But he never spoiled anybody’s career.’

The ‘Sporting’ Love Story
It was December of 1972 and Krishnaswamy had just taken off his pads after his 15 minute batting stint in the University camp nets when his eyes fell on the star athlete, Radha, who was training at the Union ground. And they instantly hit it off so much so that she even trained him on fitness and weight training at the Rajaratnam stadium in the 1970s and was a regular at the Ranji matches that he played!!!
Well over four decades later, both of them past 60, still remain fitness fanatics. She still runs a full Marathon (42 kms) and takes part in leading marathons across the country. She has been a fitness trainer for the TN women’s cricket team for the last three years. Previously, she has been a fitness trainer for the Bombay U19 women’s team and currently trains marathon runners. At 63, Krishnaswamy is a regular at the gym at MCC and does a 2 hour fitness training session every day. No wonder he looks fit and strong.

A century soon after a serious Skull Injury
Kichcha with NP Madhavan, M Santosh Kumar and TA Sekar in Kerala

In 1983, after he had stopped playing and had gone on a posting to Gujarat, his employer IOB called for his cricketing services and he returned to Madras to play a few matches. At the Tirupanuthura tournament that season, his skull was broken facing a quick K Arun Kumar that required a major operation. And yet soon after, he took on TA Sekar (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2013/08/ta-sekar-fastest-indian-bowler-of-1980s.html) at his fiery best to score 170 in a league match at Marina on a matting wicket, his most memorable innings in cricket. Late H Sundaram was with Kichcha right through at the hospital in Kerala and it was he who brought Kichcha back by train to Madras. Sundaram was a great source of strength for him in those dark hours especially as Kichcha’s family did not even know about the injury till he reached home. 

Soon he had an overseas posting in Seoul (Korea) -1984-88 and achieved a steady rise in the Bank until his voluntary retirement in 2012 as GM. He then took on the role of President and COO at KVB in Karur for three years before returning to Madras last year.
                     
Big Mentoring Role at IOB
During the period of his cricketing career from the late 60s to the early 80s, he won the hearts of many of a colleague with his honest approach to life and his helpful attitude that the cricketers from that era are grateful for. In fact, he remained helpful to cricketers well past his playing days. He saw it as his duty to share his experiences with others in the team and to help them grow. The respect others (especially at IOB) had for him was so immense that he was a father figure and mentor to many of the youngsters of the era gone by. And almost all of them continue to cherish the memories from the decades gone by.

Ranji Cricketer NP Madhavan (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2016/05/np-madhavan.html) had been in prolific form as a collegiate cricketer in the mid 70s and had offers from multiple banks even as he was completing his graduation. It was Krishnaswamy who managed to convince Madhavan to join IOB. It was a time when Krishnaswamy was at the end of his Ranji career while Madhavan was trying to making his way into the Ranji squad as an opener. 

Madhavan heaps huge amount of praise on Krishnaswamy for playing a mentoring role in that early phase. 
‘Through those 3-4 years that I was at IOB, he motivated everyone in the team. He was personally very hard working. We used to discuss everything in practice and each of the players understood their respective roles. For a team that did not have big stars, it was his motivation and personal involvement that helped the players perform to the top of their potential that resulted in IOB performing very creditably both in the league as well as in the tournaments that we participated in. It was a golden period for IOB and a lot of credit for that should go to Krishnaswamy in the way he brought the team together.’

First player to give importance to fielding
Former Ranji Trophy winning captain Vasudevan (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2007/10/s-vasudevan-tn-ranji-winning-captain.html) played under Krishnaswamy’s captaincy for Vivekananda College in the early 70s. He calls him an astute captain and says that he brought out the best in every individual. Under his captaincy, Young Men’s Club, a team comprising of cricketers from different league teams, won many private tournaments.

'He performed extraordinarily at the college and university level. He was clearly the best opener in that phase with the amount of runs he scored. Even at the Ranji level, he did make useful contributions at the top of the innings.’

‘Kichcha was probably the first cricketer to give importance to fielding. He himself was a brilliant fielder and under his captaincy, the college team would have long sessions of fielding practice. It was also Kichcha who inculcated hard work as a daily routine and that really helped a lot of the budding cricketers of that time to progress into the next level.’

A Motivator, Mentor and above all a Honest Human being
He opened the batting for Tamil Nadu through the 1970s, most of the time with V Sivaramakrishnan with whom he had previously opened for the State Schools, Vivekananda College and Madras varsities. His record for Tamil Nadu may not be something to write home about, though every now and then he showed glimpses of his grit and determination, symbolized by his consistent knocks against Chandra, Prasanna and Vijayakrishna year on year through the first half of the 70s.

With the local matches being played on matting, there was a huge technical adjustment that was required to be made on turf wickets at the state level against top class bowlers.  There was not too much technical guidance in those days, especially in critical periods when players went through a downturn (a fact that L Sivaramakrishnan too touched upon as a critical factor for him when he went through that phase in the late 1980s).

Krishnaswamy has a philosophical view on cricket and life ‘One has to realize that it is one’s own performance that matters in the end. And one only has to look outside of himself to realize how blessed we are in our lives. ‘I could have wished/wanted to be Sunil Gavaskar’s opening partner for the life time of my career but I couldn’t be because of my own reasons’!!!

His best Knocks
Match winning 90 against Chandra/Prasanna on a rank turner at Chepauk in Feb 73
Half century against Rajender Goel and Bishen Bedi in the Duleep Trophy Final in Dec 75


Quitting Chemplast trusting Kichcha was the biggest decision of my life - Ananthapadmanabhan  

In the early 1990s, Leggie Ananthapadmanabhan was a tenant at Kichcha’s house in Mylapore along with a few other cricketers including UR Radhakrishnan (Kichcha was working in Ranchi at that time). When he returned to Madras, Ananthapadmanabhan moved to the next flat. Kichcha, who continued to track TN cricket closely even after his playing days, had heard of Anantha and his potential. Anantha was employed with Chemplast at that time. 

One day, Kichcha called on Anantha and asked if he would join IOB if he got an officer’s post and that he would pitch for it with the management. It was unheard of at that time – to get a direct officer posting for a cricketer (who had not even played Zonal cricket). But it was to take some time.

It was one of the biggest decisions he had taken at that time but he had great respect for Kichcha and trusted him and quit the job at Chemplast in March 1993. He was without a job for a few months but started playing for IOB in the league. Finally, the officer’s posting came in Aadi of 1993. He joined a month later in the 2ndhalf of August.

‘In the very first season, I got close to 50 wickets for IOB. Kichcha gave me a lot of confidence. He was a task master. He roped in his wife Radha for fitness training, something unheard in the bank circuit at that time. He used to come back from office at 5.15 pm and provide us with fielding practice. After having been at the bottom zone of the table the previous year, we were in the top four that year having beaten Chemplast, MRF and IC.

Later when he was posted to Delhi, he would often enquire about my well being and followed my progress.  He would even come to watch me during my zonal match in Delhi. He was really a father figure to me. During that period we went twice to Malaysia ( again unheard of for Banks in the city) and even won a tourney there beating a strong India Cements. We won the IPCL tourney beating the cream of corporate clubs in India such was the unity that he had forged in the team.
  
'Through that phase, Kichcha would constantly call me to ask if I required any particular player for the team and he would go out of his way to securing approvals. Such was his involvement with IOB cricket.'

Ananthapadmanabhan K.N

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The small town boy from the agraharam in Thiruvananthapuram who went on to become Kerala’s best ever cricketer taking close to 350 wickets
He is now aiming to making it big in Umpiring

Through the entire 1970s, this young school boy, who resided in the agraharam in Thiruvananthapuram (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2009/11/anantha-padmanabhaswamy-temple-in.html) played marbles and gilli thanda as his favourite pastime. Like all boys his age, he played tennis ball cricket in the agraharam. Much later, in his early teens, he got to play with the red cork ball, one that would turn into brown after a few knocks at his school ground. There were no gloves and pads and he was a short kid but would bat doggedly for long in the innings game. There were occasions when he would bat 2 hours for just 10runs. Frustrated at this ‘boring’ bat, the opposition bowlers would often target his pad-less legs.

In the 1970s, there was no school cricket in Thiruvananthapuram and the focus was to be on studies. But this young boy spent all his time away from home playing one game or other, only to get fired by his mother, who later on in his career became his biggest fan.

It was much after his schooling days in the mid 1980s did he have a feel of real cricket. And only after he joined college, did he first hold a cricket ball in his hand. And his foray into cricket came under unique circumstances at the Under 19 selections in Thiruvananthapuram.

A wicket keeper to an off spinner
At the trials, he gave his name as a wicket keeper for he had kept wickets for his first club team Chasers. But there was already a regular wicket keeper and this young 16 year old wouldn’t stand a chance as a keeper. He changed it to fast bowling but there were four established fast bowlers already!!! And then he presented himself as an off spinner. But lo… there were off spinners as well.

And thus destiny got the young 16 year old KN Ananthapadmanabhan (Ananthan to the cricketing fraternity in Kerala) into leg spin. He wrote his name as a leg spinner and surprised everyone including himself with the performance in his debut match. After helping his team recover from 35 for 7 with a typically dogged knock of 35, he spun out the U19 team from Quilon with 7 wickets for 7 runs helping Thiruvananthapuram win that inter districts match. And a new cricketing star had risen in Kerala, one who was to serve the state with distinction for almost 15years and was at one point of time in the 1990s on the verge of national selection.

In the next match, he got 4 wickets for 0 runs and was immediately included in the zonal team in Kerala (there were three zones in Kerala and coming as he did from Thiruvananthapuram he  was chosen for the Southern Zone). He continued to be primarily a batsman and it was his knock of 45 that secured him a place in the State U 19 squad. It was amusing that when the wicket keeper batted for long and needed a break, Ananthapadmanabhan was asked to keep wickets and his keeping was appreciated to the extent that even the state team was confused if he was a batsman or a wicket keeper or a leg spinner.

In 1987, he scored a century against Goa and then against a strong TN team comprising of Senthilnathan and Shyam Sundar, he got 6 wickets that earned him a place in the South Zone U 19 team under Senthilnathan’s captaincy. 

Ranji Debut at 19
A year later, in 1988-89, he made his Ranji Debut when he was  just 19 years having picked up a cricket ball for the first time in his life only three years earlier, quite a dramatic progress. In his first full season in 89-90, he showed the early signs of his special talent bagging five wicket hauls against two of the bigger teams in the Zone - Karnataka and Tamil Nadu.

Top 5 in Ranji Trophy in 90-91
But it was when turf wickets were made compulsory for the first time in 1990 for Ranji Trophy matches and the teams moved to SG Test ball that Ananthapadamanabhan made the first big leap as a Ranji cricketer.

That season (90-91) he took 30 wickets in 5 games including a 10 wicket match haul against Srikkanth led TN that Kerala lost from a winning position on the final day. His 8 wicket haul helped his state post an outright win over Goa and another 8 wicket match haul against Karnataka made it an outstanding year for Ananthan and one that was a turning point in his career. In just his 2nd full season in Ranji, he had broken into the top five wicket takers in India, quite a memorable achievement.

His rich vein of form continued into the next season when he was once again in the top 10 wicket takers in the Ranji Trophy with 26 wickets.

Through the first half of the 1990s, a stand out factor in Ananthapadmanabhan’s performances was his ability to perform against TN, Karnataka and Hyderabad, the three star teams in the South Zone. This consistent wicket taking ability against star studded sides from the South earned him a place in the Duleep Trophy squad but unfortunately he could not break through into the playing XI through that important phase in his career.  And he continued, through that decade, to remain in the shadow of supposedly bigger stars (players from the bigger named states) from the South!!!!

His performances did not go totally unrecognized for he did manage to make it into the Irani Trophy and Wills Trophy teams in 1993 and made immediate impact.

Legend GR Vishwanath’s praise
In the 50 overs Wills trophy Semi Final against Bombay in January 1993, he bowled unchanged from one end in the last 20 overs of the innings and took 4 /24 helping Board Presidents XI reach the final. It was his first big performance at the national level.

He followed this with an 8 over spell against Delhi in the final conceding just 22 runs. Bowling the last over of the match, he got the final wicket that helped tie the game. National Selector and legend GR Vishwanath who watched the final came up to Ananthapadmanabhan and told him that he was a good prospect for India and that his name was being discussed as a contender. For the legend to personally chat with him was a big confidence booster for Ananthan and was one of the biggest moments of his career. It was probably the first time in its cricketing history that a player from Kerala had earned such kudos on the national stage.

Under Bowled in Irani Trophy
Later that year, he played for Rest of India in the Irani Trophy match but was grossly under bowled even though his team bowled closed to 100 overs in each innings, yet another classic example of poor treatment meted out to players from down South and more so to the then unheard of Kerala.

His best bowling Performance - Dec 1993
He did not let this Irani Trophy fiasco affect his performance, for in December 93, he was involved in two matches that brought out the best in him. He had three five wicket hauls in four innings including his match haul of 14 for 94 against Andhra, one that he rates as his most satisfying performance. That season, he once again topped the 30 wicket mark (for the 2nd time in his Ranji Career). This assumes even more significance as historically and through the early part of the 90s as well, Kerala were bowled out for such low scores that rarely did their top bowlers get an opportunity to bowl a 2nd time in the match.  For the 3rdtime in four years, Ananthapadmanabhan was among the top 10 wicket takers in the domestic circuit, quite an achievement coming from someone playing for a state that for long had been considered as the minnows of South India.

Low Point in his career
In 1995, after years of strong performances, at the age of 25, he finally got the nod from the selectors and was selected to play for India A against the touring England A in the cold conditions in Chandigarh. He had been carrying a shoulder injury previously but it was a big match for him and a break that had come after years of consistent performances. Unfortunately for Ananthapadmanabhan the shoulder became stiff under the wintry conditions and he managed to bowled only 4 overs in the 2nd innings. It was to be one of the lowest points in his career, having missed out on a great opportunity to impress the selectors in such an important match.

APPA’s message to Ananthan
His father once asked him to focus on batting as well but Ananthapadmanabhan was keen on leg spin alone. When asked by his father as to how he would feel if he managed to face one ball from the best bowler in the world (Wasim Akram), Ananthan said he would feel elated.

The father then gave him the message that has stayed with him to this day: Play every ball as if that was the only ball he had to face in cricket. It was an eye opener for Ananthapadmanabhan and he credits his father’s message for his centuries in Ranji Trophy cricket including the double century he scored against Maharashtra.
  
He also had a successful outing in the Challenger trophy in 1997-98 with an impressive 5 wicket haul against India Seniors. In March 98, he had another opportunity against an international touring side. This time, playing for India A he prized out the scalps of Steve Waugh, Ponting and Lehmann. Within the next 12months, he bagged a 5 wicket haul against Pakistan in front of his home fans in Kochi.

It was a phase where he was performing really well and one when he came closest to being selected for India.  On the verge of national selection, Chief selector Ramakant Desai told him that it was a direct choice between Sairaj Bahutale and him and the scales tilted in favour of the former supposedly because of his better batting skills.

Frustration at Chemplast
Till he was past 20, he had not played league cricket in Madras. After a year with SBI, he joined Chemplast but it turned out to be a frustrating two years for Ananthapadmanabhan for he was vastly under bowled with the team favouring the local bowlers - Sunil Subramaniam, Venkatramana and D Vasu – who were all trying to make their mark in Ranji Trophy and beyond. Ananthapadmanabhan got minimal chances in the first division league. It was a crucial two years that he lost out with Chemplast. 

It was around that time that he got the call from V Krishnaswamy at IOB (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2016/08/krishnaswamy-v.html) asking if he could join the bank. It was a big decision for him and trusting Krishnaswamy, he quit Chemplast in the summer of 1993 and was without a job for a few months that year before the officers posting came in Aadi of that year (later he even rejected a four-fold increase in salary at India Cements that came in from its captain at that time VB Chandrasekar, such was the joy with which he had begun to play for IOB).
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Standing up for his State's Players
From a very young age, Ananthan has been known to speak his mind without fear or favour.In one such meeting with the state association in Kerala he expressed his displeasure at them considering PB Anand ( a first division player from Madras) for the Ranji Selection. It was just the period when players were Kerala were gaining confidence on the Ranji Stage and as the captain, Ananthan was forging great unity in the team similar to what was happening with IOB in Madras.

Despite the threat of a ban, he stood firm and finally the proposal was rejected and Anand did not play for Kerala. However, Ananthapadmanabhan was suspended for a year in 1996 (See story at the end, below).

To this day, he conveys his views in a forthright manner to the Kerala State Association when ever his opinion is sought by him on a particular issue.
Golden years at IOB
He thoroughly enjoyed playing with a young team at IOB and later that decade captained the bank to its first Palayampatti shield. His century, batting with the tail-enders against Alwarpet was an important knock for it gave him the confidence that he could bat at the highest level. He converted this confidence into batting form for Kerala scoring centuries against Maharashtra (200), Orissa and Tamil Nadu

In the latter half of the last decade, having served them for 15 years and on the verge of turning 40, IOB was still keen on him bowling 40 plus overs every innings in the first division league here in Madras. Instead he opted for a transfer and moved back to Kerala bringing his cricketing days to an end. 
His mother who literally knew nothing about cricket till he was into his 20s went on to watch most of his Ranji matches int he 1990s. And now, she does not miss a ball when he is umpiring. His father too knew very little of cricket and whenever Ananthan failed in those early days in cricket as a batsman, he would come back home and remark that he was run out (indicating to him that it was his partner's mistake). No sooner that his father understood a little more of cricket, he retorted to Ananthan asking him to first improve his running between the wickets bringing a sheepish smile in the young boy.

Giving his best till the very last ball of his Ranji Career
Batting had always been a problem for Kerala in the early 90s and Ananthapadmanabhan rarely got a chance to bowl long spells in both innings of a state game against bigger oppositions like Karnataka and Hyderabad for his team would always be bundled out for low scores in both innings. He took pride in playing for his home state and always wanted Kerala to perform well and never considered the option to playing for a stronger team in the Ranji Trophy that could probably have enhanced his bowling performances and consequently helped him stand a better chance to be in the reckoning for national honours.

But he had made up his mind early into his career that he would play only for his home state and took great delight in Kerala’s victories against top notch opposition in the 1990s. He rates Kerala’s outright wins against Karnataka and TN in the 1990s as one of the most proud moments for the state. In those 5-6years in the mid to late 90s, Kerala beat the big teams in the South Zone and that changed the outlook in Kerala from being minnows of cricket and gave them a lot of confidence.

When Kumble got his 10 wicket haul against Pakistan, Ananthapadmanabhan decided that it was curtains for him and his dream of playing for India was sealed as Kumble then became a permanent fixture in the team.

The man from the Agraharam in Thiruvananthapuram was the first Kerala player to top the milestone of 2000 runs and 200 wickets in Ranji Trophy. Through the 90s, he consistently topped the wickets tally for his state. In 96-97,  his best all- round year in Ranji Trophy he took 27 wickets and topped the batting charts with 597 runs. In 98-99, he topped both batting and bowling aggregate for Kerala, a rare occurrence indeed.

Towards the tail end of his career, after he had given up hopes of a national call, he got 38 wickets in the Ranji season from 7 games, his highest tally ever tally that included match figures of 10 for 54 against Tripura. He ended the season with yet another five wicket bag against Karnataka in the Plate final and was instrumental in Kerala moving into the Elite Group for the first time.

He played Ranji Trophy for 15 years and continued to perform creditably till the very end. Even after he had announced his retirement and in his very last innings, in December 2004, he signed off with a five wicket haul at his favourite town of Palakkad, where he had registered some of his memorable performances during his career. This final sign off from him was a testimony to his commitment to Kerala cricket. 

Recently he held the ball once again as a leg spinner for the first time in many years. Playing for his first league team Chasers in Thiruvananthapuram, Ananthapadmanabhan played with a lot of pride that symbolized him throughout his cricketing career, took 6 wickets for 3 runs to save his first club team from the 1980s from relegation. 

He was the first player from Kerala to play over a 100 matches. He took close to 350 wickets, a remarkable achievement indeed. With a little more luck, he could have easily played for India during the 1990s.

In his first Ranji match as an umpire, he gave 13 decisions prompting his partner S Ravi to remark that he was bagging wickets like in his playing days. Last season, he umpired the Semi Final and the Ranji final (3rd Umpire) . He also umpired many matches in the IPL last year, his best year to date. With that, he also jumped into the top 15 on the BCCI’s panel..
  
He narrowly missed playing for the country. One hopes that the dream of umpiring on the international stage will soon become a reality for this quiet and down to earth man.

Ananthapadmanabhan will be celebrating his 47th birthday next week. Advance Birthday wishes to him.

 Wedding Ban on his Cricket – The controversy involving PB Anand
Ananthapadmanabhan landed himself in trouble in the mid 1990s when he objected to PB Anand (a first division league player in Madras) being considered and included in the Kerala state squad. Ananthan had taken 26 wickets in four games that season including three five wicket hauls and a 10 wicket haul and he was on a high. Perviously, Kerala had beaten TN in Palghat and qualified for the knock outs for the first time in their history. It had been one of his big moments in his career.

He thought that bringing in a player like Anand who had not been in the TN squad would shatter the confidence of the Kerala players and would be a step in the wrong direction for Kerala. It was one thing to bring in a big star from another state (to lift the performance of the state team) but it was quite another to bring in those who did not measure up to the standards of another state.

It was argued by his detractors at that time that Ananthapadmanabhan took advantage of the league system in Madras and gained vital exposure and experience in the 1990s but when it came to providing players from Madras an opportunity in the Kerala Ranji squad, he opposed it as he wanted to protect his own local players.

Ananthapadmanabhan’s view at that time was that if Kerala endorsed the view of roping in players like Anand, any number of first division cricketers from Madras could figure in the Kerala team for that was the standard of the top division league cricket in Madras.  

There also seemed to be pressure on the state association from employers of Anand, who had got a job transfer to the state and was thus eligible to be selected as a player from Kerala (not as a professional from another state).

Protesting against the decision of the selectors to include Anand in the squad, Ananthapadmanabhan took the extreme step of sitting out of an important state match. It was also the week of his marriage in Thiruvananthapuram. He was to get married on Feb 2, 1996 and was to drive back to Thiruvananthapuram after finishing the Ranji match on Jan 31. Similar to the controversy surrounding VB Chandrasekar ( just prior to his marriage, VBC had knocked out the three stumps after being given out caught and bowled – Ananthapadmabhan was the bowler for Chemplast!!!!), Ananthapadmanabhan too made headlines just around his marriage week.

Having walked out of the team, he had a relaxed wedding with no tension of having to return from Tirunelveli on the eve of his marriage.

However, much to his shock, the wedding gift from the State Association was a one year ban on him. On the morning of his marriage, the one year ban was announced and he could not play for the rest of the year. 

He had written a detailed letter citing the reasons for his opposition to the inclusion of PB Anand but the association felt that he did not apologise to them!!! The state secretary fought for him and helped revoke the decision later in the year though he missed out on Duleep Trophy selection during that period. 

TNPL

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Gokulakrishnan beats his mentor VB at Natham
TNPL - A concept that cashes in on the flavour of the season - Everything quick and now
Tuticorin Patriots’ coach J Gokulakrishnan and Thiruvallur Franchise Owner (cum coach) VB Chandrasekar (VB) - http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2016/06/vb-chandrasekar-tnpl.html
have been almost inseparable for well over two decades. In the early 90s, Gokulakrishnan was one of the first players VB sought for after he took over the captaincy from V Sivaramakrishnan at India Cements.  In one of those one off moments in his life, VB (and Dr. Natarajan) reached out to Gokulakrishnan  at the latter’s residence in Guindy to ‘seek’ his signature for India Cements and actually rolled out an offer letter as well (such was the regard VB had for Gokulakrishnan’s bowling).

Since then, the two forged a strong partnership and played together for several years for India Cements winning many tournaments and championships (with VB using Gokulakrishnan as his strike bowler) and for Tamil Nadu in the Ranji Trophy. When VB moved to Goa, he took Gokulakrishnan along (a phase where Gokulakrishnan came close to national selection).

A few years ago, VB worked together again with Gokulakrishnan as the coach of Tamil Nadu team.

For the first time since the early 90s, the two have come face to face against each other after Gokulakrishnan quite surprisingly rejected a coaching offer from VB (he had never rejected any offers from VB in the past two decades!!!) and went to the Patriots with his younger brother J Madanagopal -http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2012/05/madanagopal-set-for-big-leap-as-umpire.html
(the coming together of the brothers was a first in their career for the two never played for the same league team at the peak of their career and have rarely done things together in the cricketing arena!!!).

Over the last many years, in addition to focusing on umpiring, Madanagopal has earned himself a lot of respect amongst cricketers in the state with his coaching and mentoring. While other franchisees boast some big international names, the Tuticoring Patriots have gone for the brothers who have done a lot of work with the local cricketers over the last decade.
A lot was at stake last evening in the beautiful setting at the NPR Ground in Natham. Tuticorin was under extreme pressure in a must win match for they had lost three in a row. Their star player and captain, Abhinav Mukund was struggling in the T20 format. Dinesh Karthik was missing again but Balaji was back after an injury.

Mentor vs Mentee
Gokulakrishnan was up against his mentor whose offer he had just rejected a couple of months ago. There was added pressure with TNCA President and Managing Director of India Cements N Srinivasan settling into his seat at 6.30pm to watch the match from just over their shoulders (NS was at the hospitality box above the players’ area).

As VB’s family entered the ground from the VIP entrance on the Western side a tad late to the loud beating of the drums, they were welcomed with Balaji’s double strike in two balls that left Veerans tottering at 30/3.

Ganesh Moorthy, an unknown left arm spinner from the districts, had the biggest moment of his life a couple of days back when he was surprisingly entrusted the task of bowling the super over for the Patriots with the TV cameras zooming on him from all angles, something that would have been previously unthinkable for a player from the districts. He failed that night and once again this evening his overs cost a lot for the Patriots. But it is the kind of opportunity that has sprung up for completely unknown cricketers from remote districts and towns in Tamil Nadu including Tirupur, Krishnagiri and Palani.

The quality of cricket and trying to bring in professionalism within the teams has caused frustration for some of the coaches in the TNPL. But they are hoping that as matches go by, these unknown players will learn from their mistakes. Many may fall by the way side unable to cope up with the pressure but there may be a few who could rise.

Performances here in the TNPL could also set up hot competition amongst first division clubs next season who could grab some of the performing players from here. Relatively unknown players like Vijaykumar, Rajkumar and Natarajan have become the cynosure of all eyes. There are many new players for whom this is a great platform to showcase themselves.

Hari Nishanth, an opener from Coimbatore, starred last evening and held the innings together and was instrumental in Veerans posting a challenge tally of 140. However, a majority of his shots were on the leg side, calling into question the quality of the stroke play. An experienced bowler like Aushik Srinivas played into his hands by bowling the middle and leg line that assisted in his leg side swipes.

It was heartening to find Abhinav finally giving up his opening spot to more attacking players in his team. Right from his school days, he had never given the opener’s slot to anyone so much so that when once his school team came up against a minnows in school cricket, he was asked to present an opportunity to lesser ranked players in his school. But when the coach was away for a few minutes from the dressing room, he padded up, went to bat and notched up a big score for himself, leaving the coach furious.

With the openers giving a rollicking start, Patriots reached 70 at the half way mark, exactly half the tally of the opposition. The entry of Abhinav Mukund slowed things dramatically and with the dismissal of Washington through a much expected run out, the asking rate had climbed to almost 10 with 3overs remaining. Abhinav played the perfect brand of cricket that he is so known for and in the way his father coach TS Mukund had taught him to play. In his entire innings, he did not play a single lofted stroke and played as straight as possible.

Abhinav slows things down
He is just not made for T20. He did not learn cricket that way. And his mindset just does not allow him to play shots that are suited for this brand of cricket. It is one more reason as to why he should focus on longer version of the game. At the end of 17 overs, VB seemed confident while there were different reactions at the opposition team’s’ enclosure – one coach was continuously throwing the ball from one hand to another while the other did not seem too happy at the way the game was heading. A third one was seen scratching his head.

3 overs and 29 runs to win was a needless situation that Patriots had got into.  His running between the wickets leaves a lot to be desired. 

It was SP Nathan ( yet another player from the districts who had made a big impact in lower division cricket a few years ago with his big six hitting) hit Rahil Shah out of the ground bringing a bit of smile back into the Patriot’s dressing room. As Abhinav walked down the pitch, he seemed to ask Nathan to go for the big one again. And as the junior partner, Nathan obliged only to find a slower well flighted ball beat his swing and rolled on to the stumps.

Abhinav made up for the slow batting in the previous overs with three cleanly struck fours – a square drive of a widish delivery, a straight drive along the ground and a flick to square leg sealed the win for the Patriots. The TV camera zoomed in on VB at the most inappropriate time in the last two overs as the two big screens showed his anger at letting go the boundaries when their team had pushed Patriots to the corner in the 2nd lot of 10 overs.

It was an important match for Gokulakrishnan in more ways than one and it was the first big battle between the mentor and the mentee, one that Gokulakrishnan won on the night as his team survived and kept their hopes alive in the TNPL.


The Coach Point of view
‘Sweety’ Suresh, former TN Captain under whom the State reached two successive Ranji Finals is now the head coach of the Kanchi team. He is disappointed with the amount of leg side play that has crept in and believes that this could have serious long term repercussions 'There is an immediate course correction required to develop overall stroke play lest they get found out in longer version of the game. Those who play well under pressure and succeed are likely to be noticed and will go up the growth ladder and could get picked in the U19/U22 sides.'
For all of us, it has been a new experience. Very few have been involved in T20 cricket in Tamil Nadu in the past. ‘Picking the right mix of players has been a challenge for the teams. Only over a period of time will this evolve. Performing in front big crowds and under the scrutiny of the TV cameras will boost the confidence for those who do well.’

Abhinav Mukund and T20 cricket
Despite his seemingly winning knock, Abhinav’s innings on Wednesday evening showcased yet again as to why he is not suited to this form of cricket. When as a Ranji captain and coming off from a century in the Duleep Trophy he should have helped his team coast to victory, he made heavy weather of the chase coming as he did at a time when his team were in a strong position.
                                                                                                    
This section had written many years ago about the need for him to focus solely on the longer version of the game and to stay away from T20 cricket.
                                                                    
He has started in rich vein this season in Duleep Trophy and it would be good if he focuses on making his way back into the Indian Test team instead of continuing to have an eye on the IPL. 

It takes great courage to accept one’s limitations and I hope Abhinav this season will finally accept that he is not made for T20 cricket. He has some fundamental shortcomings there including a mindset that focuses on not getting out. 

While he did not play any T20 shots last night, his style of play could have easily sent Patriots out of the tournament from a winning position.

He has age on his side and he has it in him to make a contribution to the test team but that may require undivided attention to focus on the challenges of longer version of game.

Will he listen?
The crowd at the ground
One of the favourite jokes I encountered as I sat with the transistor in the 70s and early 80s was the constant query from my uncles whom I visited during vacations ‘How many goals did Kapil Dev and Gavaskar score’? It was an indication as to how far away from cricket were people living in remote villages in India. Cricket meant little to them. 

By 730pm, all the stands at the NPR ground were full. In a first of its kind, there seemed to be even an exclusive stand for women or rather a bunch of over hundred young girls with their teachers made it to a particular stand. There were many senior citizens who came in with their grand children. It did however seem that most of them knew very little of cricket. They were probably roped in through one mode or other to make up the crowd. 

With TV cameras constantly zooming in on the crowd, there is a lot of noise and general entertainment. They dance to the cameras. Several selfies were taken with Bosskey after he completed the mid innings interview with Hari Nishanth. But there was very little of the so called ‘knowledgeable crowd’ that TN is so renowned for.

While the cricketers and coaches and team owners have been positioning this as a platform to groom talent and unearth ‘unknown’ cricketers, the officials and the TV programmers are playing to the gallery positioning this as ‘entertainment’ for the evening with semi clad women, mixing overseas cricket experts with the Tamil language and food.

In its urge to promote TNPL, it is important that NS and Co do not fall prey to the temptation of making this as a ‘masala mix’ with a bit of everything for everyone in the evenings.  Hope at least from a positioning point, they focus on the cricketing aspects and not the 'masala entertainment'.

Quality of Cricket


The coaches and teams themselves are getting to terms with the lack of quality. Within the first fortnight, there is already talk of sponsorship of players ( bats and kits and the like). A couple of good performances is converted to stardom and distractions start creeping into the lives of the young cricketers many of whom have not yet scored a century in league cricket or taken a five wicket haul!!! It is important to inculcate very early on in their cricketing career the need to not get swayed by one or two star performances and to focus on working towards the long term success.

The Good News - New Opportunities for many

Debut as Fourth Umpire
My league team mate from the 1990s and a very serious and committed cricketer Dharmaseelan made his debut as the fourth umpire yesterday. It was a big day for him – He is likely to umpire more matches during the TNPL and a just reward for him.From one who won many league matches for his side with his gritty batting and continues to play in the TNCA league, it is a great recognition of his long standing efforts to be given this opportunity at the TNPL

Long Standing service with the TNCA
Gururajan, who has been a TNCA umpire since 1984 has been performing the role of the Venue manager at Natham and Tirunelveli over the last fortnight  including managing the food arrangements for several hundreds of officials on the day of the match working from 7am to well past midnight each day of the match. He did not take a seat through a 12 hour period yesterday moving between one corner of the ground to the other to ensure that everything was in place and that every official at the ground including the drummers had their stomachs filled.

He also ensures that several ball pickers are placed outside the ground at Natham to fetch the balls hit out of the ground especially on the Eastern side. However, given the quality of cricket, none seemed to go even remotely out of the ground despite 60/65 yard boundary (depending on which wicket they are playing on). His work extents late into the night much after the completion of the match and he is the one ensuring the cleanliness of the ground/stands. 
BCCI umpire Rajesh Kannan has got on field posting as an umpire for several matches and that is a nice leap for him, especially the experience to be in front of the cameras and to be interacting with the third umpire which would then stand him in good stead for the upcoming domestic season. 

The Not so Good Part

Positioning this as a family outing ‘An evening entertainment’ – Loud Music is played between each ball making communication between players in the field difficult

Dance show at the end of each over is clearly avoidable. It is not a direction you want to take cricket to

Anchor / Announcer at the ground with very little cricketing background - he got many names wrong

Prescribe a dress code for the lady anchors in the TNPL. Clearly what we are seeing is undesirable

Former Aussie stars have been brought in for their expert views on Cricket. Getting them to speak in Tamil and unrelated subjects on the large screen is not a way to impress the cricketing audience

K Srikkanth's commentary:-)

Two Wheeler Parking in the College Garden (NPR) crushing the plants in the process

Cricketers as 'Entertainment models' on Ads - Badri, the serious cricketer, cannot be dancing on the streets to promote TNPL

Favourite dish and gadgets in personality intros can be replaced with favourite grounds and more cricketing related activities

It is also hoped that TNCA under NS will not create too much hype about this being a grooming platform, leveraging on T20 as the flavour of the season. It will be good if they bear in mind the oft made remarks from Cricketing greats 'Test Cricket is the ultimate'. It will also be useful to remember at the back of the mind the favourite remark from the past of one of the franchise owners 'Do you call this cricket'

Thiru Kurukkai Verateswarar temple

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The place where Manmatha was burnt to Ashes by Lord Yogeswarar 
13kms West of Mayiladuthurai in a remote location is the ancient over 1000years old Verateswarar temple in Thiru Krukkai, one of the five ‘kka’ sthalams. Thiru Anaikkaval (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2014/12/thiruvanaikaval-jambukeswarar.html) and Thiru Kodikkaval (http://prtraveller.blogspot.in/2013/11/thiru-kotteeswarar-temple-thiru.html) are two others. This is a temple praised by Thirunavukarasar ( Appar). There was a separate Sannidhi in the Eastern Prakara for the saint poet that is now in a dilapidated state.

Ancient Name
In the 12th century AD, this place was referred to as Vikrama Chola Chaturvedi Mangalam in Kurukkai Nadu. 
An interesting 12th Century event
An inscription on the Northern wall of the mandapa in front of the Central shrine of the temple dating back to 1169AD tells an interesting story relating to an event at this temple. A piece of land had previously remained uncultivated for over 50years. The assembly of the temple paid the taxes that were due for all these years to reclaim the land. Subsequently once again it remained fallow and taxes unpaid. Hence it was decided to gift the land to the temple. The land was to be cultivated with paddy and with the income generated from it a 100 red lotus garlands (Chengalanur) were to be presented to the deity for mid night service.

It was here that Lord Shiva, who was originally in an East facing direction, opened his third eye, turned west towards Manmatha and burnt him to ashes after the God of Love tried to wake him up from his yogic state by sending an arrow (of Love) directed at the Lord. In memory of the event, the bow is still seen in the Chathura Peedam and the Lord is referred to as Kama Dahana Murthy. 
Saddened by this turn of event, Manmatha’s father Lord Vishnu performed pooja here at this place invoking the blessing of Yogeswarar to bring his son back to life. Rathi too undertook penance here seeking back the life of her husband. Answering her prayers, Manmatha was reborn here. Rathi and Manmatha are seen as procession deities at this temple.

One still finds the place of this historical event a few furlongs south from the current location of the temple.

20 years later, in 1188AD, during the rule of Kulotunga III a gift of house was made to the temple. There was a provision made for bailing of water from adjoining well and for taking water by digging a channel.

Legendary Name        
Theertha Vahu Muni who undertook penance called out for the Ganges to be brought here in order for the consecration formalities to be performed. Suddenly when his hands shortened in this process, it was Lord Vinayaka who provided darshan to him in a similar posture with shortened hands. Delighted at the sight of the Lord, the rishi forgot about the state of his own hands. Hence Pillayar is referred to here as ‘Kurungai’ Pillayar which also became the name of this place. In course of time, Kurungai became ‘Kurukkai’. 
Gift of Paddy to take care of Servants!!!
In early 13th century AD, there was a gift of paddy to meet the expenses of servants of Palliyarai and also for the construction of a cave called Thirunavukarasu Thiru Kuhai for the destitute apurvins who visited it and Mahesvaras who attended the festival of Thiruvai Gasi Thirunaal. Also, there is a record of the recitation of Thiru Thandagam at the temple in 1207AD.

Names of Slaves!!!!
One of the most inscriptions inside the temple is recording of the names of slaves that included both men and women numbering over 100 who were purchased!!!!

Through the 12th and 13th Century AD, there were several ongoing contributions for the burning of the perpetual lamp at the temple. These contributions came in the form of cash as well as gift of land.

There are several such inscriptions dating back a 1000 years. Many of them on the outer walls are intact. However, some of them on the inner walls have lost some of the sheen and are not in a readable state.

Where are the Annual Festivals?
Festivals are a time that bring together people from different locations and was generally regarded as a celebratory time.

In the century gone by, several festivals including Navarathri, Pillayar Chaturthi and Thiruvathirai Nataraja procession were celebrated in a grand manner at this temple with Vahana processions taking the Lord around the streets of Kurukkai. However, all of these have been stopped as a result of lack of funds. There was also a 10 day mahotsavam in Maasi. The Vahanas are still there but the traditional inhabitants have all gone away seeking greener pastures.

Somasundara Gurukal who has been here for close to two decades is the only one to take care of all the poojas and the activities at the temple. He is paid a monthly salary of Rs.500/- by the Atheenam, in addition to some provisions for the household!!!!! 
Dilapidated state of the temple
The temple itself is in a dilapidated state with big cracks on the walls of the madapalli that could come down anytime. The Vimana of the Lord which has several sculptures is also in bad shape. The huge wall at the entrance of the temple next to the Raja Gopuram has also caved in

The previous restoration work had taken place in 1959. Since then, there has been very little repair and maintenance work that has been undertaken and this has resulted in the sheen going off several inscriptions.

The temple is under the administration of Dharmapura Atheenam.

The temple is open between 730am-12noon and 5pm-8pm. Contact Somasundara Gurukal @ 94435 27044.

How to reach
Buses ply every half hour from Mayiladuthurai bus stand to Manalmedu. Get down at Kondal Junction (about 10kms). From there, take an auto to the temple (3kms).

From Mayiladuthurai bus stand, one can also reach the temple by taking the Kallanai road and turning right towards Ponnur, Pandur to reach Kurukkai (10 kms).



Thiru Chotruthurai Othavaneswarar Temple

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Significant Contributions made from the 9th Century for the conduct of annual festivals, to burn a perpetual lamp and to feed Brahmanas
IT Consultants seek to restore the temple to its ancient glory, to revive centuries old festivals
Two interesting IT industry equipped people are currently engaged in the revival of the huge and ancient Othanvaneswarar temple in Thiru Chotruthurai seen right on the Southern Bank of the Cauvery, one that has inscriptions dating back to the 9th Century AD. This is the only one among the Sapthasthanam temples (other than Thiruvayaru) that has been praised by the three three saint poets. Every here in the month of Chitrai, Iyaravappar of Thiruvayaru makes his way to this temple as part of the Sapthasthana Utsavam.

From IT Industry to this remote temple
Moved by the Lord during one of his annual trips and saddened at the ignored state of the temple, a determined and devoted Agora Shivam Gurukal quit a high paying IT job in Hyderabad and settled at this temple earlier this decade for a three digit monthly salary (Yes, priests performing pooja in remote Saivite and Vaishnavite temples under the HR & CE administration are paid only three and low four digit salaries every month).

Since his arrival, the temple has seen a dramatic transformation with the revival of many festivals that had earlier come to a halt.  The maintenance and improvement of the Nandavanam in the outer prakara is also a redeeming feature at the temple.

Taking care of the temple with a BE, MS…P.hd!!!
Kannan, the trustee at the temple, has an Engineering and a Masters degree in Computer Science and is currently pursuing a P hd from Sastra University. Despite the temptation to move out for greener pastures, he has chosen to settle down here in his hereditary home opposite the temple to maintain and make improvements at the temple.

The two are also involved in teaching young children in the village the entire Thevaram verses. These children help out in the maintenance of the temple with cleaning activities every weekend. It is no wonder that the temple despite very little support from the HR & CE looks totally clean. There were no devotees present but unfazed by this, the Gurukal performed Abhishekam for Lord Muruga, seen in a special posture and Dakshinamurthy.

Jointly and with support from devotees, the two are hoping to restore the temple to its ancient glory and to revive the festivals that were celebrated in a grand manner a 1000 years ago.

The legend
A devoted couple undertook penance here invoking the blessings of the Lord and Ambal seeking liberation from famine. The Lord and Ambal are believed to have provided darshan in Thiru Kalyana Kolam and presented the Akshaya Patram to the couple. Hence this is believed to be a temple to provide relief from financial troubles.
                                             
Indra, Surya, Gautama rishi and Adiseshan performed pooja invoking the blessings of the Lord.

Lord Muruga is seen between the Sannidhis of the Lord and Ambal, with the peacock on the left, a unique feature at the temple.

Soruthaana Canal
In centuries gone by, this place was so sacred that the nearby canal was filled with rice instead of water such was the prosperity and the purity of the people in this region. Hence the canal was also referred to as Soruthaana Canal.

As part of the Sapthasthanam festival in Chitrai, sacred food is sent from here as their special offering for the wedding celebrations of Nandi, the vehicle of the Lord.

Thiru Gnana Sambanthar’s praise
At the end of each of the verses, Saint Poet Thiru Gnana Sambanthar concludes with ‘ Chotruthurai Senru Adaiveney’ indicating that he had already started invoking the blessings of the Lord right from the beginning of his journey to this temple, such was his special devotion to this Lord.

Appar’s special praise in all his compositions
This is also the only temple in this region where Thirunavukarasar has sung praise of this temple in all his compositions – Nerisai, Virutham, Kurunthogai and Thandagam. 

All the four Saint poets go on a street procession on their respective Avatharam days every year. An abhishekam also takes place on each of those days.

The temple way back in the 9thand 10th Century AD
During the rule of Varaguna Pandya II, ongoing contributions were made by devotees in the late 9th Century AD to the burning of a perpetual lamp at the temple. From the contribution of 300 kasu to a 100 sheep to 20 Kalanju of gold, contributions poured in and devotees ensured that the lamp burned throughout.

A decade later, in 890AD during the rule of Aditya I, there was a gift of two conches for blowing in connection with Thirupalli Sevai and other services. 

Sacred bath on Sankranthi day
A few decades later, in 930AD, when Parantaka Chozha I reigned the region, there was a gift of 45sheep to provide for Ghee, Milk and Curd for the sacred bath of the Lord on the Sankranthi day. During that decade, there were also gifts of two separate lamp stands.

Brahmanas were fed at this temple
In 954 AD, there was a land endowment for feeding Brahmanas including a lady and yogis in the temple.

A very interesting arrangement
In the last decade of the 10thCentury AD, a huge quantity of oil was provided to light 50 lamps during the service in the night. The arrangement was such that 8 people engaged in the maintenance of cleanliness of the temple were assigned the task of lighting these 50 lamps along with four persons who were engaged in blowing the trumpet, one cook and 8 people living in house-sites belonging to the temple.

During this same decade, there was a cash gift made for providing fly-whisk, arecanuts, ghee, curd, gingely seeds, rice and service for the conduct of two festivals. 
Vaikasi Visakam Festival and Lord’s procession
In the year 1000AD, there was a gift made to support the procession of the deity during the Vaikasi Visakam festival.

In the second half of the 12thCentury, Kulotunga Chozha purchased a Nattuvakini from Devan Udayanayakan and gave it as Stridhava to his daughter. And thus her husband secured the right of doing service in the temple like other Padiyilar and of enjoying the privilege due thereunto.

Vaishaka Celebrations every month
Also, when Para Kesarivarma Chozha took over the reign, there was a gift of money by a lady for worship and special offerings on Vaishaka day every month. Also there was a list made of gold ornaments with precision stones presented by her including gold handled fly whisk and silver salver.

Plastering the Mandapa
The support for the temple continued well into the 13th century. During the rule of Rajendra III, there was a sale of a house site for purchasing jaggery to plaster the mandapa.

Contribution to new Vahanas??
A new Dwajasthambam has recently been installed and plans are afoot to revive the 10 day Brahmotsavam from Panguni of next year. Efforts are on to build 11 Vahanas ahead of the Brahmotsavam.  Support for four of these is already in place. Those interested to support the building of the balance 7 Vahanas may contact Trustee Kannan @ 99438 84377. 
Historically, as seen above, contributions poured in for the temple to burn the lamp. Devotees interested in supporting the temple with oil for burning the perpetual lamp may contact the trustee or the Gurukal.

Festivals 
Sapthasthanam festival in Chitrai
Anna Abhishekam in Aipasi (full moon day)
Akshaya Trithigai
Theerthavari on Aadi Amavasya day
Margazhi Thiruvembavai festival with dance and music concerts through the month
Celebration of Soora Samharam in Puratasi

Quick Facts
 Lord   : Othavaneswarar
Ambal : annapoorni (Separate Sannidhi in the South)
Saint Poets: Thiru Gnana Sambandhar, Thirunavukarasar and Sundarar

The temple is open between 63am-12.30pm and 430pm-8.30pm. Contact Agora Sivam Gurukal @ 83446 58671

How to reach
Thiruchotruthurai is 4kms from Kandiyur on the Ayyampettai route. Buses ply every half hour on this route. Mini buses also ply on this route.

Auto from Kandiyur will cost Rs. 50 (Auto numbers: 96770 27052/95787 88505).
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