Gayle is ‘Oppa Gangnam Style!’
You can call it ‘Gayle Gangnam Style’ or ‘Oppa Gayle Gangnam Style’
that Windies dance routine at the T20 World Cup which has had 129,345
hits on U tube at this point of writing, and still counting.
However, U Tube notwithstanding, there is no substitute to seeing it
live, as this columnist did with delight and relish at the Premadasa
Stadium in Colombo last Sunday.
The adoption of the hottest dance sensation of South Korean Rapper
PSY’s steamy and rendition of ‘Oppa Gangnam Style’ meaning “Big Brother
is Gangnam Style’ lifted the spirits of the capacity crowd of the 35,000
capacity crowd—largely Sri Lankans—even as they left the stadium stunned
and dejected as fortunes changed so swiftly.
And what has this dance has got to do with sport and cricket? one may
ask. The PSY sensation which has entered the Guinness Book of world
records, has over 433 million hits—- nearly 9 million per day—on U Tube
and continues to go viral, features, among others, in the video a rap
scene at a Tennis court.
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Chris Gayle - the Windies star thrilled Sri Lankan crowd |
And with that sporty flavour it has been adopted by players and cheer
leaders at high profile sports events ranging from Soccer, American
Football, Baseball, Formula One and even a Presidential political
campaign, if politics is regarded as a sport!
And then following suit are such celebrities as Music Diva Britney
Spears, the singing heart-throb Justin Bieber and dashing film star Tom
Cruise. Even a United Nations agency has signed off on it.
West Indies changed mood
It took a while, though,
for Cricket to wake up!
Cricket, founded on the hallowed traditions of white flannels, a
cuppa and biscuits, or and a swig of beer at the Lord’s, is always
behind the curve when dash and jazz visits.
But West Indian style of Calypso cricket changed that prim and proper
outlook: now with the way the bat was swung, the ball was hurled or spun
or, and the way cheer squads jived to musical strains, and erupted.
Limited-over cricket went further and changed even that welcome
departure and transformed the game into a much awaited Carnival
atmosphere, especially when the Windies and emerging nations such as Sri
Lanka, India, Pakistan and Bangladesh engaged. It took even more vibrant
tones with the 50 Over games, and especially the T20 World Cup.
And leave it to the Windies to inject a new dimension: the rave rap
dance routine led by the irrepressible and delightful Chris Gayle.
ESPN’s Crickinfo Editor Sambit Bal decorated him as ‘Propeller in
Chief’ and one wondered whether it was because of Gayle’s skyscraping
hits over the boundaries into the stands, and on one occasion into the
car park, or whether it was a flattering reference to his dancing
prowess. But whatever the provocation was, Chris Gayle —-and the West
Indies team—deserves the decoration if not the coronation, and the
opportunity to let go and celebrate.
Windies had pleasure of celebration
For who can deny the Windies the pleasure of this celebration? Take
the T20 Semi Final against the Australians : Marlon Samuels, 2 sixes in
his score of 26 ; Dwane Bravo, 3 sixes in his 37; Kieron Pollard 3 sixes
in the very final over. And then Gayle’s unforgettable “gale” that
pulverized the Australians with 75 runs off 41 ball.
And that included 6 — yes six— sixes to boot!
Here was the Propeller in Chief who had to his credit, per ICC
statistics, as many as 8 centuries including 344 boundaries and 306
sixes in all Twenty20 Cricket encounters he has played in so far.
With this blistering trend, it almost seemed as if it was Gayle vs.
Sri Lanka in the final last Sunday.
And all eyes were on him as was the astute strategy that Mahela
Jayawardene had adopted. As columnist Elmo Rodrigopulle so graphically
put in his coverage of the final in our sister paper the Daily News, “as
Chris Gayle took strike the Sri Lankan strategy was obvious: crowd the
batsman with only a square leg and third man out of the ring and pitch
short of a length….Gayle was like a cat on a hot tin roof, playing and
missing.
They (Sri Lankan fielders) ambushed him, manacled him and jailed him
and trying to break free Ajantha Mendis caught him plumb in front in the
fifth ball of his first over”.
It only went to show that the Mythical Chris Gayle was also human! An
Indian spectator next to me lamented in frustration: “shoot, I came here
to see Gayle bat not to be given out”! But then enter Marlon Samuels. He
compensates as it were to win the match for the Windies with six sixes,
three fours in his 105 in the last 10 overs!
Gayle led celebration
No wonder then ‘Oppa Gayle Gangnam’ got into action as fireworks
crackled and lit the evening sky at the Stadium as Big Bro led the
Gangnam routine, with a stump in his hand wearing his # 45 Jersey with #
55 Marlon Samuels and Ravi Rampaul #14 carrying a stump each in their
hands, galloping on the imaginary horse, lasso move and all –one and
two, up and down, three and four, up and down…giddy up! Oppa….
And Gayle was in his element: with stump in his hand, one could
almost hear him singing and paraphrasing the English version of the rap
with the rest of the team in chorus:
I’m a guy,
A guy who is warm as you during the day
A guy who one-shots his coffee before it even cools down
A guy whose heart bursts when night comes
That kind of guy
Oppa is Gangnam style, Gangnam style
Oppa is Gangnam Style
Oppa is Gangnam style
You know what I am saying
Oppa Gayle, yes Oppa Gayle
Is Gangnam style
And as we end this column the number of U Tube hits on the Gayle-
West Indies dance reads @ 157,430 and the clock is rolling!
To contact Mohamed Muhsin e mail : [email protected]
or visit http://pavilionparade.com/
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