T20 management game: Hitwicket - Cricket's parting shot at its footballing rival

Jose Mourinho – Fantasy turned into reality!

I wasn’t given an alternative. I had a solitary option, taking into account my background, and that is to follow cricket. I did exactly that, and I believe I have done it quite well, too. After all, I am not of the opinion that Cheteshwar Pujara is (was) sidelined from ODIs due to fitness issues, and I did prevision Jimmy Neesham getting to where he is now, before my landsmen did. That is to mention a few.

So why hasn’t anyone come up with a game like football manager for cricket? Why should I be put at disadvantage for someone’s lack of artistry or someone’s naiveté to think cricket isn’t strategically of the same level as football to give it the completion it deserves? Football manager, the game if seen once in action, must be the envy of any cricket fan.

To be there, to do what an international cricketer does in a cricket field is what fantasies are made of. But that is it, pipe dreams they are. Hardly anyone is given the wings to take off, at least that was the case when I was growing up.

The next option for someone who could, now, take a call for himself is doing a Jose Mourinho. I have not ruled that out, and no, I do not have bats in the belfry as I say that. In the course of time, you need to stop blaming and take your life by the scruff of the neck. I hope BCCI doesn’t do something as harebrained as bringing restrictions to limit people who could take up a coaching role, just like they brought the curtains down on commentary. Fortunately, Harsha Bhogle managed to find a way in before all these, and how pleased I am that it happened: a voice to alleviate all your trouble.

I will, someday down the line, manage a team, but there is time left.

Meanwhile, what was I left with? Choices included EA Sports, Brian Lara cricket, and, at best, fantasy cricket. I presume you would not need a breakdown on why a 23-year-old would hate EA and Brian Lara cricket. I mean, seriously? Are we that worthless to have these as options?

Fantasy cricket solves the dilemma to an extent. However, traditional fantasy, unless it is as good as the one that was provided to us by the official website of IPL and CLT20, is not my cup of tea. It all looks cool as you try your hand at it for the first time. But much of it depends on how the captains manage their teams, and given the state of captaincy these days, I am not so excited about it. You still make the top 100 if you are damn good, and I do, too, but to be the undisputed champion, you need to run the show.

The alternate version of fantasy cricket excites me. More on that in my next article, where I plan to take up an equally scintillating concept for the gamers.

Still, nothing can match the feeling which controlling a team can provide. Well, come on, admit it. Every one of us mentally picture ourselves being the one in-charge; the one who has the ultimate reins in the game we love. Simply put, every one of us wants to be a Jose Mourinho. I cite ‘The Special One’ as I could relate more to him, as he isn’t your everyday player-turned-coach. And also for being the virtuoso he is.

Given very few of us move out of our comfort zone and do what he did, being a manager of a virtual team is the best solution to tone down the hankering. Football fans have a solution in football manager. What do we have?

Cricket fans trying to brush up on football, after all this while, is the last thing I would recommend. If your intention is to know the game to its full – which, in my case, it was – you are most likely to be misled. To get a knack of a new sport, especially when you are in a country to which football is as alien as Daniel Christian is to cricket, isn’t as simple as ABC. I learnt it the hard way.

Just when I was in need of something, enter Hitwicket!

Homepage of a user’s team

Hitwicket was set in motion as a private Beta in May 2012, and within a year and a half, it has attracted 15,000 active users. It wasn’t surprising when they finished as runners-up in the ‘software product of the year 2013’ category, in the 22nd annual awards function presented by ITsAP – The IT and ITES Industry Association of Andra Pradesh.

It is an online T20 cricket management game where you can own a cricket team, buy players by winning a bidding war in an auction market, train your players, pay their wages, watch them play matches that will be streamed, scout players, get promoted/relegated, and to top it off, strategize.

This is gamers’ Shangri-la! Isn’t it? Did you miss the part where I said your matches will be streamed, as in you will see a live commentary, or the part of purchasing a player in auction? Read it again. It happens. I freaked out, too, when I first saw this.

The Hitwicket Team

Five months back, incidentally, I came across a Hitwicket ad in a website and logged in, as I found it appealing. I got a notification that one of my matches had been scheduled to start in 15 minutes time and that I was required to set the line-up. Maybe, if I had not caught a glimpse of that match, I would never have logged in again. But I did and I have never logged out since then. Smart ploy, indeed.

I was literally stunned to notice a live commentary page exclusively for my match, just like you would have for the real-life matches. I would be lying if I say that was the most thrilling part, as the player auction was one step better. You will see thousands of players in the auction market, ranging from a scale of Vinay Kumar to Virat Kohli. You will have a tug-of-war though; it isn’t easy picking them up. Wannabe Mourinhos from some corner of this world would be bidding against you. The manager who outbids all his counterparts bags the player.

Make sure you don’t get an Irfan Pathan for 1.9 million US dollars, just like Delhi Daredevils did in one of those auctions. Odds of that happening are incredibly high. After all, there were teams that made Delhi keep raising the bar to reach that level.

You have 7 divisions in the game, each division has multiple leagues and every league has 10 teams. You are given a squad to start-off with. You will have to make your way up-top to the first division. The league topper gets promoted to a better division at the end of the season, which spans two months, while the last 4 get demoted to a lower division.

The game is no quick-fix. When I first realised that Hitwicket is designed to play in a way that a user spends little time on a day-to-day basis, but does it so for months, I thought that these guys had been surely living in an ivory tower.

I mean, how can anyone expect a player to continue playing for months, in fact years, with just 2 matches a week? Yet, here I am, penning this after 150 days of being a part of it. May be, had they pushed in more matches a week, I would have left the game by now. May be, it would have been like the seasonal games. We all have played PlayStation wrestling; how did that end, and why did that end?

What else can you do in Hitwicket? You can have a youth team as well; one that will compete in the U20 cup to bring you all the glory. If you train your players the right way, they will get selected to represent their respective states in the India Cup. The best of the lot are elected to oversee the state teams. However, the rest have fantasy cricket to be content with. Yes, a fantasy within a fantasy world: Hitwicket’s version of inception.

Home page of one of the leagues

The most reassuring aspect of this game is not the game in itself. Instead, it is the developers. They have a clear vision, and they, sure, do appear to have what it takes to execute it.

What’s better? The game is constantly improving, and by no means, the developers are willing to rest on their laurels. I predict the game reaching its pinnacle when the feature of ‘player characteristics’ comes to play, which is in works now. It is a trait that will enable you to develop players with unique abilities as against generalised pace/spin bowling and batting options now.

Hitwicket can never be complete without a reference to ‘Match Engine’, which is in many ways similar to the Duckworth-Lewis method, but with one striking difference, and that is the attempt being made to make people comprehend it. This engine is the one that generates all the matches that take place. But, trust me, it is more rational than most human beings ever aspire to become. May be it is exactly why a number of them don’t get a hang of it. Keep this is mind: every match is generated in a way that at the end, a fair result is achieved.

Your best batsman can be dismissed by your opponent’s weakest bowler, but it will be compensated by your weaker batsman scoring the runs you merit. And this is just an oddity. It is proved by the fact that, at the end of the season or through the midway, only the finest batsmen top the run charts and first-rate bowlers lead the top wicket-takers list. The ability of a player is determined by stars. Virat Kohli would be a 12-star batsman, while Vinay Kumar would be a 3 star-bowler, the later strictly on a green wicket in peak fitness and superb form. And you read it right: wickets, fitness and form do affect the star ability.

With that, you are good enough to have a go and check for yourself.

Credits to the developers Rishav Rastogi, Rajat Singal, Saurabh Maheshwari and Kashyap Reddy for making this fantasy a reality. It is a fascinating world – the Hitwicket world – one in which you need to be because you deserve to be. This game is indeed, cricket’s parting shot at football, as there is nothing to be envious of our rivals any more.