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'కివీస్ ఆటగాళ్లకు ఐపీఎల్​ ఎంతో ఉపయోగపడింది' - ros taylor

ఇండియన్ ప్రీమియర్ లీగ్​ న్యూజిలాండ్ క్రికెటర్లకు ఎంతగానో ఉపయోగపడిందని అంటున్నాడు కివీస్ సీనియర్ ఆటగాడు రాస్ టేలర్. ఈ టోర్నీ వల్ల వివిధ దేశాల ప్లేయర్ల ఆటతీరును తెలుసుకునే వీలు కలిగిందని తెలిపాడు.

టేలర్
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Published : Aug 10, 2019, 7:21 AM IST

ప్రపంచ క్రికెట్​ లీగ్​ల్లో ఇండియన్ ప్రీమియర్​ లీగ్ ఎంతో పేరుగాంచింది. ఎంతోమంది విదేశీ ఆటగాళ్లు ఈ టోర్నీలో ఆడేందుకు ఆసక్తి చూపుతారు. ఆటగాళ్లను ఇంతగా ఆకర్షిస్తోన్న ఐపీఎల్.. క్రికెటర్లు ఆటను మెరుగుపర్చుకునేందుకు ఉపయోగపడుతుందని అంటున్నాడు న్యూజిలాండ్ క్రికెటర్ రాస్ టేలర్.

"ఐపీఎల్​లో ఆడటాన్ని అదృష్టంగా భావిస్తున్నా. గొప్ప గొప్ప ఆటగాళ్లతో కలిసి ఆడేందుకు వీలు కలిగింది. ఈ టోర్నీ న్యూజిలాండ్​ క్రికెట్​కు ఎంతగానో ఉపయోగపడింది. వివిధ దేశాల ఆటగాళ్ల ఆటను దగ్గరగా చూసే వీలు కలిగి వారి ఆటతీరును అంచనా వేసేందుకు వీలైంది".

-రాస్ టేలర్, కివీస్ ఆటగాడు

ఐపీఎల్​లో రాజస్థాన్ రాయల్స్, రాయల్ ఛాలెంజర్స్ బెంగళూరు, రైజింగ్ పుణెకు ప్రాతినిధ్యం వహించాడు టేలర్. మొత్తం 55 మ్యాచ్​ల్లో 25.42 సగటుతో 1,017 పరుగులు సాధించాడు.

ప్రస్తుతం శ్రీలంకతో రెండు టెస్టుల సిరీస్​కు సిద్ధమవుతోంది న్యూజిలాండ్ జట్టు. ఆగస్టు 14న ఈ సిరీస్ ప్రారంభం కానుంది.

ఇవీ చూడండి.. టీమిండియా క్రికెటర్లకు ఇకపై డోప్​ పరీక్షలు..!

ప్రపంచ క్రికెట్​ లీగ్​ల్లో ఇండియన్ ప్రీమియర్​ లీగ్ ఎంతో పేరుగాంచింది. ఎంతోమంది విదేశీ ఆటగాళ్లు ఈ టోర్నీలో ఆడేందుకు ఆసక్తి చూపుతారు. ఆటగాళ్లను ఇంతగా ఆకర్షిస్తోన్న ఐపీఎల్.. క్రికెటర్లు ఆటను మెరుగుపర్చుకునేందుకు ఉపయోగపడుతుందని అంటున్నాడు న్యూజిలాండ్ క్రికెటర్ రాస్ టేలర్.

"ఐపీఎల్​లో ఆడటాన్ని అదృష్టంగా భావిస్తున్నా. గొప్ప గొప్ప ఆటగాళ్లతో కలిసి ఆడేందుకు వీలు కలిగింది. ఈ టోర్నీ న్యూజిలాండ్​ క్రికెట్​కు ఎంతగానో ఉపయోగపడింది. వివిధ దేశాల ఆటగాళ్ల ఆటను దగ్గరగా చూసే వీలు కలిగి వారి ఆటతీరును అంచనా వేసేందుకు వీలైంది".

-రాస్ టేలర్, కివీస్ ఆటగాడు

ఐపీఎల్​లో రాజస్థాన్ రాయల్స్, రాయల్ ఛాలెంజర్స్ బెంగళూరు, రైజింగ్ పుణెకు ప్రాతినిధ్యం వహించాడు టేలర్. మొత్తం 55 మ్యాచ్​ల్లో 25.42 సగటుతో 1,017 పరుగులు సాధించాడు.

ప్రస్తుతం శ్రీలంకతో రెండు టెస్టుల సిరీస్​కు సిద్ధమవుతోంది న్యూజిలాండ్ జట్టు. ఆగస్టు 14న ఈ సిరీస్ ప్రారంభం కానుంది.

ఇవీ చూడండి.. టీమిండియా క్రికెటర్లకు ఇకపై డోప్​ పరీక్షలు..!

UK BEER FESTIVAL
SOURCE: ASSOCIATED PRESS
RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only
LENGTH: 5:50
SHOTLIST:
ASSOCIATED PRESS - AP CLIENTS ONLY
London, UK - 7 August 2019
1. Various of bar staff serving beer at the Great British Beer Festival
2. Tracking shot of beer taps to bar staff serving beer
3. Close of beer glass on bar top
4. Close of beer branding
5. Action camera shot of bar staff pouring beer
6. Pan right of bar staff serving beer to festival visitor
7. Various of festival visitors drinking beer
8. Wide pan right of Great British Beer Festival event floor
9. SOUNDBITE (English) Nik Antona, National Chairman, The Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA):
"This year, we have taken a bold step and announced it upfront and made it quite clear that we won't have anything. So, all thousand beers that we've had here this week at the Great British Beer Festival have been vetted, checked and made sure that they are not offensive in any way - or potentially offensive to anybody. So, we are trying to encourage the industry to recognise that 50 percent of the population of this country are female. And significant numbers of females, 63 percent of those who expressed an interest in drinking a beer have said they will not buy beers that have been marketed in an offensive way."
10. Various of bar staff serving beer
11. Various of beer branding
12. Close of bar staff pouring beer
13. Close of beer branding
14. SOUNDBITE (English) Nik Antona, National Chairman, The Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA):
"What we're trying to do is say to the industries; Come on, let's move into the 21st century. Recognise that you are disenfranchising a big proportion of your potential customers and if we're going to be successful as an industry and as a campaign to promote beer, then we want as many people to drink beer, not putting them off. So, we have taken a stand and we will continue that going forward for all of our festivals."
15. Pan left to Seb Cranston, The Wild Beer Co., serving visitor
16. Close of beer branding
17. Tilt down of Cranston pouring beer
18. Close of visitor taking beer from bar
19. SOUNDBITE (English) Seb Cranston, The Wild Beer Co.:
"We're seeing a range of different people from different backgrounds, different genders, ethnicities getting involved in beer. Beers a great product, it's a tasty product, there's lots of variety. So, why wouldn't people be interested, you know. People get interested in different types of food and it's the same for beer."
20. Various of bar staff serving beer
21. Various of beer branding
22. Various setup shots of Lily Waite, The Queer Brewing Project, speaking to visitors
23. SOUNDBITE (English) Lily Waite, The Queer Brewing Project:
"I don't think there's enough diversity at all. I think that beer has long been marketed as a man's drink, through historical sexist marketing and awful tropes. I think there's been a lot of beer is for men, but that's changing now, I think. It's slow and there's a long way to go, but I think that there's more diversity and there's more work being done to promote more diversity, but no, there isn't enough."
24. Close of bar staff pouring beer
25. Close of visitor holding beer
26. SOUNDBITE (English) Lily Waite, The Queer Brewing Project:
"I think that it's been a long time coming. Because I think before CAMRA has been pretty lax on cracking down on any kind of offensive or even just unpleasant imagery or marketing. So, I think it's a very good thing. It's a very good thing."
27. Pan left of visitors
28. Close of visitor holding beer
29. SOUNDBITE (English) Jess Onacko, Festival Visitor:
"I think gone are the days where it's just old men in a pub sitting at the bar for hours on end. I think there is no stereotypical beer drinker anymore, I think it could be anyone and I think that's really good."
30. Various of bar staff pouring beer
31. Close of female visitor drinking beer
LEADIN:
Organisers of one the world's biggest beer events have called time on beer names and branding that's deemed to be sexist or discriminatory.
All 1,000 beers served at London's Great British Beer Festival have been vetted by the event's organiser, the Campaign for Real Ale (CAMRA).
STORYLINE:
Serving time at London's Great British Beer Festival.
There's everything here a beer-lover could wish for - pilsners to porters, saisons to stouts - from about 250 breweries.
But there's definitely one thing missing from this beer extravaganza - names or branding deemed to be sexist or discriminatory.
"This year, we have taken a bold step and announced it upfront and made it quite clear that we won't have anything," says Nik Antona, CAMRA's national chairman.
CAMRA's move chimes with a recent survey by UK-based market research company YouGov.
It found that 68 percent of female drinkers are unlikely to buy a beer if they see an advert for it which they consider to be sexist.
That could lead to female beer drinkers actively boycotting certain products.
"If we're going to be successful as an industry and as a campaign to promote beer, then we want as many people to drink beer, not putting them off," says Antona.
Antona says the move has prompted one brewery to redesign the branding on one of its beers.
According to beer and women's group Dea Latis, only about 17 percent of women in the UK drink beer at least once a week.
That's compared to 53 percent of men. But that's slowly changing, claims Seb Cranston from brewery The Wild Beer Co. in Somerset.
"We're seeing a range of different people from different backgrounds, different genders, ethnicities getting involved in beer," he says.
"Beers a great product, it's a tasty product, there's lots of variety. So, why wouldn't people be interested, you know. People get interested in different types of food and it's the same for beer."
Campaigners have praised the move but say it's a long overdue.
"CAMRA has been pretty lax on cracking down on any kind of offensive or even just unpleasant imagery or marketing. So, I think it's a very good thing," says Lily Waite from The Queer Brewing Project, a charitable project that aims to raise the profile and awareness of LGBTQ people in brewing.
"I don't think there's enough diversity at all. I think that beer has long been marketed as a man's drink, through historical sexist marketing and awful tropes."
One thing is for sure, the long-held stereotype of the traditional beer drinker has become a thing of the past.
"I think gone are the days where it's just old men in a pub sitting at the bar for hours on end," says festival visitor Jess Onacko.
"I think there is no stereotypical beer drinker anymore, I think it could be anyone and I think that's really good."
The Great British Beer Festival runs till 10 August.
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