Tennis: Bopanna is hoping for a successful 2017 season with new partner
Rohan Bopanna partnered a number of different players in 2016 like Florin Mergea, Denis Istomin, Jean-Julien Rojer, Nicolas Mahut, Leander Paes (in Davis Cup and Olympics), Frederik Nielsen, Jeevan Nedunchezhiyan, Daniel Nestor, and Treat Huey.
Though he ended the year on a positive note by reaching the Semi-finals of the Paris Masters, Bopanna commences the 2017 season at the Chennai Open partnering Jeevan and then joins forces with Pablo Cuevas of Uruguay for the season.
Admitting that the change of partners hampered his 2016 campaign, Bopanna is hoping to change things around in the new campaign. “After Wimbledon, he (Florin) was playing with Horea Tecau and I was consistently looking for a partner for different tournaments. It’s not easy to play with different partners and that was the main reason (for bad results),” Bopanna said.
“It’s a dream to win a Grand Slam, hopefully it (new partnership) will make a difference. I have always liked the way he plays the game. I have played numerous times against him. He is a solid player who serves and stays at the back, just like Florin. He has won one Grand Slam before. He has experience of playing at high level, so it’s a good chance for me to do well,” added Bopanna.
“This (partnership with Cuevas) also gives me a chance to play on the deuce court having played on the ad-court for some time with Florin,” said Bopanna who is presently ranked number 28 in the World Doubles Rankings.
source: http://www.tennisworldusa.org / Tennis World Magazine / Home> News / by Akshay Kohli / January 04th, 2017
A scene from the play ‘Mithuna’, the Kannada version of Kodava play ‘Baduk,’ staged by Rangabhoomi Prathishtana, Kodagu, as part of ‘Kadamba Rangaavali’ at Kalamandira last evening. Seen are Anitha Cariappa as Thangachi & Addanda Cariappa as Changappajja.
Mysuru :
The jam-packed audience at Kalamandira here last evening was sent down the memory lane of marital bliss during the staging of the play ‘Mithuna’, the Kannada version of Kodava play ‘Baduk’ by Rangabhoomi Prathishtana, Kodagu, as part of ‘Kadamba Rangaavali’ organised by Kadamba Ranga Vedike.
The play was literally a song of matrimony tune for the evening of one’s life and was excellently portrayed by Addanda Cariappa as Changappajja and Anitha Cariappa as Thangachi, both as an octogenarian couple with a long 62 years of married life.
The actors effectively conveyed the bond of matrimony after passing through various ups and downs.
The couple relentlessly waiting for the arrival of their son Major General Ganesh and Kakamada Ajith essaying the role of Chubra who frequently gets scolded by Chengappajja has added a twist to the play.
The elderly couple in every dialogue has asked all married couple to sink their trivial differences and not to recall bad memories so as to lead a pleasant life. The couple’s silly arguments followed by a compromise with each showering love and compassion on the other was well appreciated by the audience.
Once in Kodagu a torrential rain accompanied by gale brings down fully-grown trees and Chengappajja on seeing that gets upset very badly and passes away. Thangachi tries to come out of grief and continues her journey of life, thus bringing the end of the play.
Kadamba Rangaavali will feature staging of the play ‘Berilladavaru’ today at 7 pm at Kalamandira and ‘Seetha Charitha’ tomorrow at 7 pm at Vanaranga.
source: http://www.starofmysore.com / Star of Mysore / Home> General News / January 03rd, 2017
Over three centuries after coffee plantation was first reported in Chikmaglur district of Karnataka, Himachal Pradesh is pushing for commercial cultivation of coffee in the hill state. There is a proposal to start plantation in Bilaspur, Hamirpur, Una, Kangra, Solan and Sirmaur districts of the state with the help of Coffee Board of India.
At present, the state produces only 5-7 quintal of coffee, mainly as the result the initiative by some progressive farmers.
Coffee board member Dr Vikram Sharma of Bilaspur, who is credited with bringing coffee plantation to the state in 1999 after a visit to Chikmagalur, said the topography of lower Himachal resembles that of Chikmagalur and varieties like Chandragiri and selection-nine are best suited for the state. “Chandragiri is temperature tolerant and it would have enhanced flavour due to variation in temperature compared to the rest of India where coffee is grown,” he said.
Talking about his efforts, Sharma, said, “I had grown coffee in my waste land in 2002, so can be done in lower Himachal areas. A proposal has been submitted to the Union ministry of commerce and industries to provide the seeds to farmers in these districts.”
He said the coffee board’s survey of Bilaspur, Hamirpur, Una and Kangra districts found the state suitable for coffee cultivation. In Dramman area of Kangra, a teacher has a flourishing coffee plantation, he pointed out.
According to Sharma, interested farmers would get seeds from the coffee board soon.
Apple is the main commercial crop in upper Himachal, but Sharma says coffee has the potential to become the commercial crop of lower Himachal. With great demand for green coffee bean extracts due to its anti-obesity properties, it can prove to be a money-earner for those going in for the bean’s organic plantation.
source: http://www.timesofindia.indiatimes.com / The Times of India / News> City News> Chandigarh News / by Ananad Bodh / TNN / January 03rd, 2017
Kodava elders hope the festival of Kailpodh will encourage the community’s youth to enter international sporting events
Image credit: Shawn Sebastian and Tejaswi Dantuluri
Deep in the sanctum of his 150-year-old ancestral home, Lokesh Achappa is surrounded by weapons. Dressed in a Kupya, the traditional Coorgi outfit of knee-length black overcoat, a gold and maroon sash with an ornate, carved silver dagger tucked in its folds, Achappa prays to an array of weapons: an antique double-barrel, a .22 mm rifle, traditional daggers and swords, all garlanded with flowers and smeared with sandalwood paste.
Once the ritual is complete, he steps out of the house, and a series of thundering gun shots reverberate across the valley.
Coorg, a district in Karnataka famous for its coffee, is home to the Kodavas, a martial hill tribe with a population of less than six lakh. Historically, the community has shared a deep connection with its weapons. Valiant guerrilla fighters and agriculturists, the Kodavas once defended territories with locally made bow-and-arrows. With the advent of firearms, guns became central to Kondava life. Weapons appear frequently in important social customs: births and deaths in the Kodava tribe are announced with gunfire, every newborn touches a bow and arrow, as initiation into the tribe. At the annual harvest festival of Puttari, one of the most important events on the Kodavas festival calendar, everyone in the valley opens fire.
Weapons are also celebrated at Kailpodh, the annual Kodavas (or Coorgi) festival in the first week of September which marks the end of hardships for the agrarian community – once the paddy has been transplanted. During the festival, Kodavas clean and worship weapons to express their gratitude for the protection they have offered.
“The period is a time for jubilation when distant families get together,” local resident Ashik Appanna explained.
Image credit: Shawn Sebastian and Tejaswi Dantuluri
With the tightening of gun regulation laws, the ban on hunting, and due to large-scale migration of younger generation Coorgis, many have predicted that the Kodava weapon culture will disappear altogether. Elders of the Kodava community are hoping that festivals like Kailpodh will encourage young Kodavas to return to their traditional shooting skills.
Gun Rights and Regulations
In 1861, the British administrators granted Kodavas an exemption from the Arms Act, for their support to the East India Company in administrative and military affairs.
“Gun ownership is a birthright for us,” said Appanna Bacharinanyanda, an 80-year-old retired lecturer who exhibits antique Kodava weapons and utensils in his front yard every Kailpodh.
Bacharinanyanda says the Kodavas never “misuse” guns. He expresses a deep apprehension over the government’s attempts at over-regulating weapons: “These days authorities have started demanding bribes to grant us the exemption certificate, which is completely unacceptable.”
With the Wildlife Protection Act of 1971, hunting has been prohibited in India. The legislation came as a big blow to the Kodavas, for whom hunting was an integral part of life and survival.
Naveen Bidappa, a young Kodava lawyer, pointed to a photograph in his house of a man named Tiger Thimmaiah. In the picture, Thimmaiah stood next to a tiger he had killed and then tied to a tree.
“He shot 12 tigers, hence the name,” smiled Bidappa.
Since tigers posed the biggest menace for livestock, tiger hunters were once highly venerated figures in the Kodavas society.
“Narimangala (tiger-marriage) was a big tradition in the olden days,” he said. “The tiger hunter was married to the tiger he killed, and villagers would offer them gifts and cash as a mark of respect.”
Changing relevance of gun culture
In early September, scores of Kodava youth assembled at a school ground at the Coorgi village of Chettali. Each carried a gun.
Bidappa, a 70-year-old elder from the community, walked into the ground filled with curious onlookers, and shot a coconut hung several yards away to inaugurate the annual shooting competition that coincides with Kailpodh. He hit the bulls-eye with a single shot.
“Shooting skills are in our blood,” he said, shrugging at the crowd’s deafening cheers.
Over the last few years, shooting competitions that were once limited to households have turned into larger events, with an increasing number of shooting enthusiasts showing up from all over Coorg.
“Our aim is to prepare and pass down shooting skills to the younger generation,” Bidappa said.
Over the next five years, local shooting competition organisers plan to develop a shooting range in the village to groom young shooters, and train them for national shooting competitions.
“Festivals such as Kailpodh have found a new meaning in changing circumstances,” he said.
A Kodava shooting competition. Credit: Shawn Sebastian and Tejasvi Dantuluri
Fifteen-year-old Lakshan Ayyappa is a widely recognised face at Kodavas shooting competitions. He is the great-grandson of Tiger Thimmaiah, but has also established himself as an ace shooter in his own right – he has won more local competition prizes than he can remember.
“My target is to make it for 2020 Tokyo Olympics,” he said. Ayyappa first learnt to shoot at the age of five. He was taught by his mother.
“Whenever I see a new gun, I discuss it with my dad,” he said. “I know everything about its make, calibre, range, the cartridges used. I feel by the time we are born, we are already half trained.”
Like in Punjab, it is usual for Kodava households to send a member of their family to join the military. Many attribute this to early affinity Kodava youngsters develop with weapons.
Credit: Shawn Sebastian and Tejasvi Dantuluri
Shooting is not a male sport in the Kodavas tribe. Kodava women traditionally kept guns to protect their families when the men left for hunting and battle. Everyone from septuagenarian grandmothers to 16-year-old girls participate in local shooting competitions.
Credit: Shawn Sebastian and Tejasvi Dantuluri
Shooting is not a male sport in the Kodavas tribe. Kodava women traditionally kept guns to protect their families when the men left for hunting and battle. Everyone from septuagenarian grandmothers to 16-year-old girls participate in local shooting competitions.
Credit: Shawn Sebastian and Tejasvi Dantuluri
Several modern-day sports like shooting and archery have been born of indigenous communities across the world. In India, the attempts at unearthing such indigenous talents have been poor.
A few notable exceptions are people like Laxmirani Manji, from the Santhal tribe in Jharkhand who represented India in archery at the 2016 Rio Olymipcs, and Limba Ram of Ahari tribe in Rajasthan, an Arjuna awardee archer who represented India at three Olympics. If they are given enough support and attention, many modern-day Tiger Thimmaiahs might emerge from Coorg.
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source: http://www.scroll.in / Scroll.in / Home> Magazine> After the News / Point & Shoot
Looking ahead: Ashwini Ponnappa and N. Sikki Reddy are looking to take it match by match as they chart their course in the big league in the doubles.
Ashwini Ponnappa and N. Sikki Reddy, who will play for Bengaluru Blasters, look to the ongoing Premier Badminton League (though they feature only in the mixed doubles event as there is no women’s doubles) as a huge learning curve.
Their first target will be to break into the elite group in women’s doubles after finishing runner-up in the recent Welsh International Challenge and picking up a bronze at the Irish Grand Prix.
Ashwini says they will take it match by match as they chart their course in the big league.
“PBL is a major platform with so many Olympians. Anyone can pick up a few new things to improve their game,” says Ashwini.
“Personally, I am very keen to focus on fitness and be more consistent,” she said.
“It is only a question of how quickly we understand each other in the next few tournaments. It will be a different experience for me compared to the partnership with the more experienced Jwala,” said the 27-year-old Ashwini.
“It’s been only a month since we began training together and I am happy at the way Sikki has been responding, especially in mastering how to rotate in simulated match situations. We have a very good doubles coach (Tan Kim Her),” says Ashwini.
“I always believe that everything happens for a reason. So also my split with Jwala, and it is time now to look ahead. I am confident Sikki and will be a formidable force in women’s doubles,” she said.
On her part, Sikki, fresh from the Brazilian and Russian Grand Prix titles and finishing runner-up in the Scottish Grand Prix partnering Pranaav Chopra in mixed doubles, is excited about playing with Ashwini.
“Unlike many seniors, she is a very sweet person always pushing me to be better. The best part is she tries to make me feel comfortable.
“Breaking into the top-15 in mixed doubles in such a short span is a huge morale-booster. These are the kind of results which can change your perception and confidence level,” said Sikki, who shot into the limelight after losing to Saina Nehwal in the 2008 Pune Commonwealth Youth Games final.
A serious knee injury, however, forced her to focus only on doubles.
“I don’t want to talk big, but yes there was some pressure initially as I stepped into the shoes of the formidable Jwala. She is a fabulous player and, like me, a left-hander,” Sikki said.
source: http://www.thehindu.com / The Hindu / Home> Sport> Premier Badminton League – Other Sports / by V.V. Subrahmanyam / Hyderabad – January 02nd, 2017
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