Read Editorial with D2G – Ep CXV

GOOD MORNING FOLKS! IT’S A TEA TIME AND WE ARE HERE WITH OUR NEW ENDEAVOR – “READ EDITORIAL WITH D2G”. SO FRESHEN YOUR EYES, PUT YOUR PILLOWS BACK AND TAKE A SIP OF YOUR TEA WHILE ENJOYING THIS SHORT PIECE OF A NOTE.

EPISODE – CXV
TOPIC:
 A Lesser Team
BLOG: The Indian Express
WRITER: Editorial
GENRE: Sports

editorial

READ BEFORE YOU PROCEED:
D2G wears no responsibility of the views published here by the respective Author. This Editorial is used here for Study Purpose. Students are advised to learn the word-meaning, The Art of Writing Skills and understand the crux of this Editorial.

MEANINGS are given in BOLD and ITALIC

There will, of course, be much analysis of how exactly India’s T20 team was so thoroughly taken apart by the West Indies, and how India messed up a tournament that was theirs to lose. The moment of wreckage shouldn’t deflect from the truth, however. In fact, India were just a shadow of the champion side that subdued (To subdue feelings means to make them less strong) Australia and won the Asia Cup. In hindsight (Hindsight is the ability to understand and realize something about an event after it has happened, although you did not understand or realize it at the time), maybe the favourite tag was illusory — after all, none of the sides that they had beaten had qualified for the semifinal. The likes of Australia, Pakistan and Sri Lanka were hardly ever in contention (Someone’s contention is the idea or opinion that they are expressing in an argument or discussion).

This isn’t to say that India were not equipped to mount a title challenge. They had the requisite ingredients but couldn’t put up a collective effort that propels a team to winning a global title, as in 2011 and 2007. Instead, they relied overly on a select few. Apart from Virat Kohli, none of the batsmen thrummed (When something such as a machine or engine thrums, it makes a low beating sound) into top gear. The hitherto reliable opening pair of Shikhar Dhawan and Rohit Sharma were far from their destructive best. Suresh Raina — he bowled more balls than he faced — and Yuvraj Singh were not quite the audacious pair of yore. The bowlers were at best utilitarian (Utilitarian objects and buildings are designed to be useful rather than attractive), seldom menacing. There wasn’t a single bowler whom M.S. Dhoni could summon and be guaranteed a breakthrough. That they reached this far in itself owed as much to Kohli’s composure under duress (To do something under duress means to do it because someone forces you to do it or threatens you) as Dhoni’s intuitive captaincy, which deserted him in the semifinal generally and in the last over in particular.

There had been telltale signs of imminent doom as early as the first match, where New Zealand not only out-strategised India but also beat them at their own game. The famed twinkle toes of Indians, it seems, went AWOL. From there, it was about scraping through to the last four. The fortuitous (You can describe something as fortuitous if it happens, by chance, to be very successful or pleasant) run had to end sooner rather than later.

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TEST YOUR SKILLS

SYNONYM

FORTUITOUS
a) Bad
b) Calm
c) Lucky
d) Style

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c) Lucky

DURESS
a) Freedom
b) Control
c) Liberation
d) Peace

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b) Control

CONTENTION
a) Accord
b) Friendship
c) Enmity
d) Affection

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c) Enmity

UTILITARIAN
a) Functional
b) Sensible
c) Pragmatic
d) Any of the above

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d) Any of the above