jerermy, you've clearly never been to India: enthusing children about cricket isn't a great problem - they play it all over the place. Its not like the UK where every 2nd child has an ipad or some other techie gadget. There, a bat and a ball is ubiquitous. At the same time, as we saw last week in Cape Town, we had 11 players standing around a field and another 9 sat in their changing room for hours on end with few if any wickets being taken, and runs galore being scored. It happens. Are you saying that the England and S. African coaches should have required their respective batsmen to retire once they'd scored 100 or perhaps even 50?
I think that's right.
Sure no-one likes getting completely whalloped, but I suspect India has less of the 'everyone must be a winner' culture that we have here.
But these kids (all of them) have been part of history being made. They will talk about that match until there are old.
Which would make them feel more positive.
1. Being skittles out for 31 - then fielding when the opposition makes a record score and a player makes history by breaking an individual scoring record that had lasted for 100 years. Then getting 52 in their second innings to lose.
Or
2. Being skittles out for 31 - then fielding when the opposition bats you out of the game with each of the top batmen making 150 and then retiring to end on 600-1 (excluding the retirements). Then getting 52 in their second innings to lose.
I think the first is going to leave them much more positive.