FACE THE NATION
Game for trouble: Why sportsmen don't behave
Published on Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 07:27, Updated on Tue, Apr 29, 2008 at 10:28 in Sports section
Tags: Face The Nation, Harbhajan Singh

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Off-spinner Harbhajan Singh was on Monday banned for 11 Indian Premier League (IPL) matches and fined 100 per cent of his last match fee for slapping his fellow Team India player S Sreesanth. [Read Story]
Harbhajan, stand-in captain for the IPL team Mumbai Indians, was found guilty of slapping Kings XI Punjab pacer Sreesanth after a match between their teams in Mohali on Friday.
"I got punishment for whatever I did but the Board (BCCI) has always treated me like its child and I hope they will continue to support me. When I come back to play again, I will bring smiles to your faces," said Harbhajan after the match referee's decision.
IPL Commissioner Lalit Modi told CNN-IBN Harbhajan’s action in Mohali was unprovoked and asked to players to “control their aggression”.
“An ugly incident like this shouldn’t have happened but on the field players become aggressive and it happens in all games. Players though should control their aggression and be gentleman like,” said Modi.
Does Harbhajan’s action reflect on cricket? Are sportspersons becoming too aggressive because they are under tremendous pressure? Is modern sport encouraging bad behaviour? CNN-IBN’s Senior Editor Sagarika Ghose asked this on Face The Nation.
Joining the debate were: former India captain Kris Srikanth, Malvika Banerjee, director of sports management agency Gameplan, Sharda Ugra, deputy editor with India Today, and Sunita Godara, former Asian marathon champion in swimming.
Sportspersons are getting carried away because of the attention they get, said Srikanth. "The camera in the sports field focuses on guys who are characters. It doesn't focus on the Tendulkars or Dravids. The camera will always focus on guys who do crazy things on the field. I think that is where guys like Sreesanth get carried away," he said.
Indians once had a relaxed attitude to sports but no longer, said Ugra. "The expectations from Indian cricketers are unreal. Young men have to handle pressure and for them it is winning or nothing—failure is not an option. Indians had a pretty relaxed attitude toward sports but no longer. Now, it is like you let your country down if you lost."
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