Can Basketball Ever Overtake Cricket as India’s Favorite Sport?
If any of you have ever spoken to Hemanth Kundeti, or most any other native Indian about Cricket in India your gut-reaction to this question is most likely a definitive NO. The fact is, Cricket is the de facto national sport of India. While it is not the nation’s official national sport - a distinction held by field hockey - it is by far India’s most popular sport. Part of the reason for the sport’s popularity, I can only deduce, is not only the creation of the Indian Premier League, but also the fact that the Indian International Cricketing Squad has given the sport some of her greatest international players, and victories, resulting in the sport’s rich history in India.
Basketball, on the other hand, while considered one of the widely played sports in India, is far less popular than Cricket. Basketball started its journey in India during the first half of the 20th century, and has steadily grown in popularity since. The sport is played in most Indian high schools, colleges, and universities. The younger generation appears to be the main catalyst for Basketball’s adoption in India. Basketball in India is run and managed mainly by the large number of national and state level associations, spread all over India, but India’s contribution to the sport’s international talent pool has gone mostly un-noticed - until now that is.
Basketball players Sim and Tanveer Bhullar, a pair of brothers from Indian descent, will most likely be the next big thing in college basketball, and then professional basketball. Sim is only 17 years old and stands 7-4, 285 pounds. His younger brother Tanveer, is only 15 years old, and stands 7-2, 260 pounds. Both are described as having “solid skills,” and “developing quickly on the court.” The Bhullars dwarf the last notable pair of 7-foot brothers to play basketball together on the high school level - Brook and Robin Lopez, both of whom have had a great deal of success since attending Stanford, and entering the NBA during the first round of the 2008 draft.
Also in their favor, the Bullhars are now being coached by a man who has coached at various Division 1 schools, as well as in the NBA. Freedman’s background allows him to not only develop his players, but also to prepare them for the recruiting process that lies ahead. Both of these talents should prove invaluable to the 7-foot brothers of Indian descent, as schools such as Kentucky, Florida State, LSU, Penn State, Pittsburgh, USC, Stanford, and Texas have already expressed interest in both brothers.
Do you think that Basketball can overtake Cricket as India’s most popular sport? Do you think that the Bhullars will reach the level of success many are expecting from the gifted duo? Why do you think that of the 36 countries and territories represented in the NBA this season, the world’s second most populous nation is not included?
- John Barry
Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/India_national_basketball_team
http://www.indianetzone.com/5/basketball.htm
7 comments June 6th, 2010

