IPLomania: A look at team strategies

V Sudarshan, VP, Hansa Research Group, writes about IPLomania, a syndicated study conducted for deciphering strategies using data that has been collated over the years on the 3Ps of each player

e4m by V Sudarshan
Published: Dec 18, 2019 4:59 PM  | 9 min read
Hansa

An ardent IPL fan (or any cricket enthusiast for that matter) could make a team with just the players that were shuffled around during the trading window. 11 players – including a captain, an erstwhile captain, a couple of overseas players and a few uncapped players – were traded amongst the IPL teams last month. This trade-off was insightful of the team’s character that has been built up during a decade of the IPL’s existence.

Indeed, even the players that were retained / released are in sync with the team’s strategies that have been revealed over the years.

IPLomania, a syndicated study conducted by Hansa Research tries to decipher these strategies using data that has been collated over the years on the 3Ps of each player – Popularity, Performance and Payout. This article takes a look at the team composition based on the key feature – Performance.

Cricket lends itself to measure a player’s performance through a plethora of variables. From the basics such as runs scored and wickets taken, to the nuances of strike and economy rates, to the impacts of boundaries, sixes, and performances deserving a man of the match award. All the variables you would look at when making a team for your Fantasy League. The IPL franchises too would certainly be looking at these while formulating strategies for the player auctions.

So let’s play Super Selector!

… Well, we did!

Each player was awarded points, based on the match scorecard data from all IPL matches over the last 5 years, and a Performance Value (PV) was derived for each player. This helped in comparing player performances and determining a team’s collective strength. We have used this algorithm to compare the team composition of all IPL franchises, and have used an average of the last 5 years’ points for comparison to adjust for unusually strong / weak seasons for individual players.

Consider this for a ‘Dream Team’, based on the IPLomania algorithm, from the PV of each player in the last IPL.

(psst: save it for this year’s fantasy league).

The player list is reflective of the impact they had in the IPL this year…proof that the algorithm works! Armed with confidence in the numbers, let’s get down to brass tacks!

This is an overview of the collective PV of the players each franchise has retained, released, traded in or traded out. We will now look at each franchise in detail to decipher their strategies.

CHENNAI SUPER KINGS

 Players Retained: MS Dhoni, Suresh Raina, Faf du Plessis, M Vijay, Ravindra Jadeja, Mitchell Santner, Lungi Ngidi, Kedar Jadhav, Ambati Rayudu, Narayan Jagadeeshan, Harbhajan Singh, KM Asif, Shardul Thakur, Shane Watson, Imran Tahir, Ruturaj Gaikwad, Deepak Chahar, Monu Kumar, Karn Sharma.

Players Released: Sam Billings, David Willey, Mohit Sharma, Dhruv Shorey and Chaitanya Bishnoi.

Players Traded: None

Strategy Insight

As always, CSK leads the pack in retaining the core of their consistent performers. They have lost only 8% PV, (lowest amongst all teams) from the players that they have released. The only notable absentee is Mohit Sharma, who has been their mainstay bowler for a while, but has been released this season. They might still buy him back as they are currently short on fast bowling options. With one of the smallest purses remaining at 14.6 Cr, it will be interesting to see who do they bid for.

DELHI CAPITALS

Players Retained: Shikhar Dhawan, Prithvi Shaw, Shreyas Iyer, Rishabh Pant, Ishant Sharma, Axar Patel, Amit Mishra, Harshal Patel, Avesh Khan, Kagiso Rabada, Keemo Paul, Sandeep Lamichhane.

Players Released: Hanuma Vihari, Jalaj Saxena, Manjot Kalra, Ankush Bains, Nathu Singh, Bandaru Ayappa, Chris Morris, Colin Ingram, Colin Munro.

Players Traded IN: Ravichandran Ashwin, Ajinkya Rahane, Mayank Markande

Players Traded OUT: Jagadeesha Suchith, Trent Boult, Rahul Tewatia, Sherfane Rutherford

Strategy Insight

DC continue with their chop & change routine, and have released almost half their team. However, even with releasing 43% of their team, they have lost only 22% PV. It is not the loss in value that matters much, as more than half the released players were uncapped. It is the absence of key T20 players such as Colin Munro and Chris Morris that might impact their team balance. They have also traded the most amongst all teams, and not at a like-for-like swap. With 27.85 CR in their purse one would expect them to bid high for T20 heavyweights and garner some star power that is currently lacking in their team.

KOLKATA KNIGHT RIDERS

Players Retained: Dinesh Karthik, Andre Russell, Sunil Narine, Kuldeep Yadav, Shubman Gill, Lockie Ferguson, Nitish Rana, Rinku Singh, Prasidh Krishna, Sandeep Warrier, Harry Gurney, Kamlesh Nagarkoti, Shivam Mavi.

Players Released: Chris Lynn, Carlos Brathwaite, Robin Uthappa, Piyush Chawla, Nikhil Naik, KC Cariappa, Joe Denly, Srikant Munde, Yarra Prithviraj, Anrich Nortje.

Players Traded IN: Siddhesh Lad

Players Traded OUT: None

Strategy Insight

One of the shrewdest teams in the IPL, KKR have built a new core with Dinesh Karthik at the helm. 10 players were released which cost them 29% in terms of PV. The uncapped player did not do any damage, but they released their opening batsmen in Robin Uthappa and Chris Lynn, as well as their bowling mainstay and floater in Piyush Chawla. With the second largest purse remaining at 35.65 CR, they can still call the shots and reinforce their opening combination, and possibly gun for another fast bowler.

KINGS XI PUNJAB

Players Retained: KL Rahul, Karun Nair, Mohammed Shami, Nicholas Pooran, Mujeeb ur Rahman, Chris Gayle, Mandeep Singh, Mayank Agarwal, Hardus Viljoen, Darshan Nalkande, Sarfaraz Khan, Arshdeep Singh, Harpreet Brar and Murugan Ashwin.

Players Released: Varun Chakravarthy, Andrew Tye, Sam Curran, Simran Singh, David Miller, Moises Henriques and Agnivesh Ayachi.

Players Traded IN: Jagadeesha Suchith, Krishnappa Gowtham

Players Traded OUT: Ankit Rajpoot, Ravichandran Ashwin

Strategy Insight

Releasing a third of their team has cost them the most PV at 38%. They also look the most unsure about building a team. Having traded out their captain Ravichandran Ashwin, and a consistent performer in Ankit Rajpoot, they have brought in relative unknowns. The only semblance of a strategy is evident in the retaining of KL Rahul and, arguably, Chris Gayle. As if releasing high PV players such as Andrew Tye and David Miller was not enough to shake things up, they have also released their most standout performer from last season in Sam Curran. It’s a good thing that they have the largest purse 42.7 Cr, because they’ll need all of it (along with a heavy influx of a game plan) to basically build the entire team again.

MUMBAI INDIANS

Players Retained: Rohit Sharma, Hardik Pandya, Jasprit Bumrah, Krunal Pandya, Ishan Kishan, Surya Kumar Yadav, Rahul Chahar, Anmolpreet Singh, Jayant Yadav, Aditya Tare, Anukul Roy, Quinton de Kock, Kieron Pollard, Lasith Malinga, Mitchell McClenaghan.

Players Released: Evin Lewis, Adam Milne, Jason Behrendorff, Beuran Hendricks, Ben Cutting, Yuvraj Singh, Barinder Sran, Rasikh Salam, Pankaj Jaswal, Alzarri Joseph.

Players Traded IN: Trent Boult, Dhawal Kulkarni, Sherfane Rutherford

Players Traded OUT: Mayank Markande, Siddhesh Lad

Strategy Insight

Only MI can manage to release 40% of their team, thereby losing 38% of PV, yet retain the entire playing XI.

Their consistency across all IPL seasons has been built around their team core, and it looks set to continue on course. It almost seems that they buy players just to increase their bench strength. They have even traded wisely and reinforced their fast bowling. Having the lowest purse remaining at 13.05 CR should not have any effect on the team’s prospects, because they actually don’t need to bid for anyone at the auction. But you can trust them to do so, only if to again have a rich bench.

ROYAL CHALLENGERS BANGALORE

Players Retained: Virat Kohli, Moeen Ali, Yuzvendra Chahal, Parthiv Patel, Mohammed Siraj, Umesh Yadav, Pawan Negi, Devdutt Padikkal, Gurkeerat Singh Mann, Washington Sundar, Shivam Dube, Navdeep Saini, AB de Villiers.

Players Released: Marcus Stoinis, Shimron Hetmyer, Akshdeep Nath, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Colin de Grandhomme, Prayas Ray Barman, Tim Southee, Kulwant Khejroliya, Himmat Singh, Heinrich Klaasen, Milind Kumar.

Players Traded: None

Strategy Insight

RCB have almost emulated MI … released 46% of the team, lost 36% PV, and retained the playing XI. The key word here is ‘almost’. While MI retains a balanced team, RCB is still top heavy, still needs to have strong middle order and has virtually no fast bowling backup for Umesh Yadav. This auction they’ll have to manage with a middle of the road purse remaining at 27.9 Cr to fortify almost all departments. Buying players should not be a problem for the perennial underachievers, the challenge is to get the team balance right.

RAJASTHAN ROYALS

Players Retained: Steve Smith, Sanju Samson, Jofra Archer, Ben Stokes, Jos Buttler, Riyan Parag, Shashank Singh, Shreyas Gopal, Mahipal Lomror, Varun Aaron, Manan Vohra.

Players Released: Ashton Turner, Oshane Thomas, Shubham Ranjane, Prashant Chopra, Ish Sodhi, Aryaman Birla, Jaydev Unadkat, Rahul Tripathi, Stuart Binny, Liam Livingstone, Sudheshan Midhun.

Players Traded IN: Ankit Rajpoot, Rahul Tewatia

Players Traded OUT: Ajinkya Rahane, Dhawal Kulkarni, Krishnappa Gowtham

Strategy Insight

How not to build a team? – 101: Release more players than you retain. Trade out your mainstays and consistent performers for relatively average players. Have a moderate budget while bidding for key players during the auction. RR seem to have excelled at the lesson. Having released 52% of their team and 35% PV, they have traded out Ajinkya Rahane and Dhawal Kulkarni – two of their key, and consistent players. They have retained scant little Indian players, and will have to bid aggressively to ensure they have a team that does not rely solely on the 4 overseas players they have retained. Good luck doing that with 28.9 Cr.

SUNRISERS HYDERABAD

Players Retained: Kane Williamson, David Warner, Manish Pandey, Vijay Shankar, Rashid Khan, Mohammad Nabi, Abhishek Sharma, Jonny Bairstow, Wriddhiman Saha, Shreevats Goswami, Bhuvneshwar Kumar, Khaleel Ahmed, Sandeep Sharma, Siddharth Kaul, Shahbaz Nadeem, Billy Stanlake, Basil Thampi, T Natarajan.

Players Released: Martin Guptill, Deepak Hooda, Ricky Bhui and Yusuf Pathan.

Players Traded: None

Strategy Insight

How to build a team? – 101: Retain the core of your team. Release the excess baggage. Don’t trade if not required. Have a handy budget to take care of contingencies. SRH seems to have learned from two of the most celebrated IPL champions – CSK & MI. SRH have lost very little PV at 9% a la CSK, and have virtually no need to bid for additional players a la MI. A low purse remaining at 17.0 Cr should take care of any emergencies, otherwise SRH looks the most sorted.

It would be interesting to compare the PV of each team after the auction. The next article will detail how each team has performed on the parameter after reinforcements from the auction.

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DD Purkayastha’s maiden book to be launched in New Delhi today

The launch of ‘Headline: Memoir of a Media CEO’ will be held at IIC, New Delhi

e4m by e4m Desk
Published: Apr 24, 2024 8:05 AM  | 1 min read
DD Purkayastha Headline: Memoir of a Media CEO

DD Purkayastha’s memoir and maiden book ‘Headline: Memoir of a Media CEO’ will be launched in New Delhi today (April 24).

The first leg of the book launch was held in Kolkata on April 18. The event was attended by renowned media personalities including Dhruba Mukherjee, CEO of ABP. Following the book launch, Sankarshan Thakur, the Editor of The Telegraph, had a fireside chat with Mr Purkayastha.

DD Purkayastha, the former long-standing CEO of ABP Group, is one of the most respected CEOs in the Indian media landscape. He has written his maiden book titled "Headline Memoir of a Media CEO".

‘Headline’ is the story of a small-town boy from a remote town who reaches the highest rung of the glitzy media corporate house. The story is intertwined between Mr Purkayastha’s life and the media.

DDP, as Mr Purkayastha is known, is serving on the board of ABP Limited post his tenure as a CEO at ABP Group.

Hollywood producer Ashok Amritraj – Forever ahead of the game

Guest Column: Author Dr. Bhuvan Lall pens down the success story of Ashok Amritraj

e4m by Bhuvan Lall
Published: Apr 23, 2024 6:03 PM  | 12 min read
Dr. Bhuvan Lall

On the evening of 13 December 2018, as the lights slowly dimmed, and the music softly faded, the guests were requested to take their assigned seats in the large hall of a hotel in suburban Mumbai. The French Ambassador to India Alexandre Ziegler and many major stars and filmmakers were in the audience to witness a special ceremony. The stage was set for the exclusive event to commence. With the television cameras in position, it was time for action. At the request of the presenter, a tall athletically built handsome man immaculately attired in a dark Jodhpur jacket elegantly stepped on the stage. He was introduced as the Hollywood producer and former tennis champion of India, Ashok Amritraj. That evening, he was being honored by the Government of France. The French Minister of External Affairs Jean-Yves Le Drian had flown in from Paris to officially decorate Ashok with the French distinction of a Chevalier (Knight) of the Ordre National du Merite for his contribution to the arts in France and the world. Thunderous applause followed. In his acceptance speech, Ashok first thanked his mother for being his lifelong inspiration and then added, “I am humbled and privileged to receive this honor. I would like to thank the government of France for recognizing my journey in the world of cinema. This award is a tribute to the growing cooperation between the film industries of France and India, an idea whose time has come.”

Soft fade to a distant past when Ashok the youngest of the famous Amritraj brothers along with his siblings Vijay and Anand made India proud with their magnificent careers in international tennis. Ashok was the finalist in the junior Wimbledon and won the World Team Tennis championships with Jerry Buss’s Los Angeles Strings. Inspired by the Hollywood movies he had seen while growing up in Chennai Ashok hung up his tennis racket for a different ball game. In the early 1980s, he decided to enter the incredibly attractive but tremendously challenging entertainment business as a film producer.

An Indian immigrant in America, Ashok launched a start-up film production company in vanity-charged Los Angeles with nothing more than a car, an office desk, a telephone, and a Rolodex network of powerful showbiz contacts. His dream was to produce a few high-grossing Hollywood motion pictures that were released globally. However, the young enterprising India-born producer soon found out Hollywood’s playground operated on very different rules from the tennis courts. The great age of the Hollywood moguls and old-time studio czars was over. The Hollywood of the 1980s was characterized by its meanness, ruthlessness, and aggressiveness which didn’t exist before. Consequently, the initial years were no fun and games and Ashok struggled to get his scripts turned into movies. Hollywood legends played tennis with him in the floodlit courts of their enormous mansions off Sunset Boulevard but cold-shouldered the scripts of the Indian producer. However, Ashok, trained to keep his eye on the ball was not deterred by the abrasiveness of the studio executives, talent agencies, and the legions of suits in the Hollywood system. Eventually, his self-belief, posh manners, sense of humor, authentic light charm, and strong Indian family values served him well. He gradually cultivated the super elite of Hollywood. Doors that had been firmly shut somewhat opened, invites to distinct industry events glided in, and his proposed projects were written about in Hollywood’s trade press. But he was still considered an outsider.

In 1984 through determination, inventiveness, and charisma Ashok managed to get his first Hollywood film off the ground with a meager half a million dollars. Then he went on to associate with the famous filmmaker Roger Corman. A quick learner Ashok turned out to be a terrific problem solver and figured out how to evaluate the financial prospects of a script, fix a budget, convince leading stars to bite on a project, find international distribution, retain the final cut, and if required gracefully fire a director. He did all the heavy lifting himself and soon his name appeared in the credit scrolls of several movies ranging from hits earning top dollars to embarrassing misfires. In these years the prolific producer lived a high-profile swashbuckling life and was often seen in the company of iconic stars including Frank Sinatra, Sidney Poitier, Harry Belafonte, and Roger Moore. Fond of Indian food he frequently savored Indian delicacies at Paul Bhalla’s Cuisine of India near the UCLA campus or at Deep Sethi’s Bombay Palace in upscale Beverly Hills accompanied by his growing circle of celebrity friends.

On his annual business trip to the Festival de Cannes in 1989, Ashok fortuitously bumped into a Belgian actor and martial arts professional who had in 1984 dropped by his office in Hollywood with a portfolio of pictures. The two soon reunited and embarked on a film project that was partly shot in Hong Kong. Their movie Double Impact released in 1991 was a global blockbuster hit grossing over US$ 120 million. The muscles from Brussels Jean Claude Van Damme became a household name overnight plus a US$ 20 million Hollywood action hero. Van Damme disclosed, “Like Arnold Schwarzenegger I did not mind being known as the guy with a different accent. That’s what brought me close to Ashok, who too was an outsider and had wandered to Hollywood from India”. The success of the breakthrough film catapulted Ashok into the topmost bracket of independent producers in Hollywood. He became the first Indian producer to be invited as a voting member of the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Science (Oscars). Ashok had by then paid his dues in Hollywood and was irrevocably respected as a major industry power player. Charlton Heston, Oscar winner and the megastar of Ben Hur and Ten Commandments had once stated, “Ashok came to me for advice on launching his film production company and I said, Ashok if you do as well as a film producer as you have as a tennis player you have nothing to worry about. Well that turned out to be true…”.

Twenty-five years ago, Ashok ambitiously founded Hyde Park Entertainment to develop, finance, and produce entertainment products for the world market. Hyde Park’s big-budget productions have attracted the Super A list and Oscar-winning talent of Hollywood including Angelina Jolie, Antonio Banderas, Bruce Willis, Cate Blanchett, Danny Devito, Don Cheadle, Dustin Hoffman, Kate Hudson, Kevin Bacon, Kurt Russel, Jennifer Aniston, Idris Elba, Michelle Williams, Richard Gere, Robert De Niro, Susan Sarandon, Sylvester Stallone, among others. Ashok’s box office triumphs include Ghost Rider: Spirit of Vengeance starring Nicolas Cage; Walking Tall featuring Dwayne Johnson; Premonition with Sandra Bullock; and the $164M-plus grossing Steve Martin-Queen Latifah hit comedy Bringing Down the House. Hyde Park’s critically acclaimed features are Shopgirl starring Steve Martin and Claire Danes and 99 Homes featuring Andrew Garfield and Laura Dern.

As the Chairman and CEO of Hyde Park, Ashok displays an overwhelming combination of focus, brilliance, showmanship, and audacity in his business deals. He has slowly but solidly built his privately held Hyde Park Entertainment Group, into a financially successful and award-winning cutting-edge independent alternative to the traditional Hollywood system. In the era of streamers and AI, Hyde Park has closed deals with Universal, Paramount, Sony, Apple+, and Netflix. Ashok’s company has grown to be a globally recognized brand and a creative powerhouse operating from its headquarters in Los Angeles with offices on three continents. In 2013, Jean Claude Van Damme flew into India for the first time in his life to launch his longtime associate Ashok’s autobiography ‘Advantage Amritraj’. Unveiling his extraordinary life as a Wimbledon tennis player and a multi-billion-dollar film producer the book is a compelling read providing a glimpse into the life of India’s most successful export to Hollywood.

Exceedingly proud of his Indian roots, Ashok in his early years in Hollywood chaired the Indians in American Media Association formed by Krishna Shah, Jagmohan Mundhra, Mira Advani, Raju Patel, and a few others, to promote Indian interests. He is a pioneer in bridging Hollywood and India and back in 1989 produced Bloodstone filmed in Bengaluru starring Rajnikant in the lead along with Brett Stimely and Anna Nicholas. In 1998, Ashok produced the multi-lingual Hindi and Tamil film, Jeans and Indian entry for the foreign language Oscar, starring Aishwarya Rai with music composed by A.R. Rehman. Ashok also produced the special feature documentary, Louder Together narrated by Hugh Jackman, chronicling the iconic 2016 Global Citizen Festivals in New York's Central Park and Mumbai’s BKC featuring a speech by Indian PM Narendra Modi. Hyde Park Entertainment is expanding its production operations by adding an Asian base in Chennai. His company is developing a franchise of films based on Maximum City by Suketu Mehta and a drama series adaptation of Shweta Bachchan Nanda’s Paradise Towers. Ashok’s life is the stuff Hollywood dreams are made of and the media often refers to him as the Maharaja of Hollywood. Shah Rukh Khan in a television interview added, “To me, who’s who (in Hollywood) is only Ashok… he’s been doing it for years maybe ahead of his time. And taking cues from great personalities like Ashok we can bring Indian cinema to the West”.

As Ashok’s business flourished multifold, he moved into an exquisite home with a stunning view in a gated community in Bel Air - the most exclusive neighborhood of Hollywood housing legendary film personalities and the most formidable corporate giants. Here he is usually found sitting in his study assessing scripts and deal memos, surrounded by Picassos, Monets, full-sized posters of his movies, framed pictures with heads of state and Hollywood icons, along with several global accolades including an Honorary Doctorate from the University of East London and the International Emmy award that he won for Lost Christmas. On most weekends he watches the latest movies in the state-of-the-art screening room in his house or takes out his favorite Bentley for a drive in the hills and more importantly, makes time to play tennis with his Hollywood friends. Former CEO of MGM, Chis McGurk recalls, “I’ve also played a lot of tennis with him (Ashok) over the years, but I’ve never won. He never lets me win. He’s very competitive”.

After all these years of being on top of his game, Ashok has remained a private and down-to-earth figure in the Hollywood universe of ego-addled narcissists. His approach to life remains professional, non-judgmental, and sincerely spiritual. Playing the real-life role of a supportive family man he regularly explores India, Africa, and Europe on holidays with his wife Chitra, and their children Priya and Milan. He has silently revealed himself to be a person with a passion for philanthropic activities on a global scale. He was elected a member of the Board of Governors of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, the leading hospital facility in California, and was appointed United Nations India’s Goodwill Ambassador for the Sustainable Development Goals in 2016. The Asia Society recently presented Ashok with the prestigious Asian Gamechanger Award.

Fading back into present-day Hollywood, Ashok in his trademark black suit walks into Spago restaurant in Beverly Hills where the film industry’s luminaries like to conduct business. He is courteously ushered by the maître d’ to his usual table with a commanding view of the packed restaurant. Hollywood is back in business after the pandemic and the writer's strike. As the owner of Spago, the celebrity chef Wolfgang Puck arrives to greet one of his favorite patrons Ashok switches off his phone that has been ringing constantly. The Festival de Cannes is just weeks away and it’s one the busiest times of the year for Ashok. Right through the past week dinner invitations and requests for meetings have poured in from Arab and European royalty, tech billionaires from Silicon Valley, Wall Street bankers, Asian business tycoons, globally known stars, award-winning filmmakers, top diplomats, friends from Indian filmdom and scores of celebrities who are heading to the South of France for the razmataz that is the Festival de Cannes. Known for his extravagant parties on yachts last year at Cannes Ashok hosted the most sought-after event on the Croisette for his upcoming project Night Boat to Tangiers starring Michael Fassbender to be directed by Oscar-winner James Marsh. And when Michael Douglas landed at the Bharat pavilion at Cannes, he was soon on a phone call with Ashok as both friends enquired about each other’s whereabouts and well-being. At this year’s Festival de Cannes Ashok has his hands already full with some high-profile crème de la crème projects. Hyde Park’s forthcoming films include The Sanatorium starring Anne Hathaway, Joy Luck Club 2 – the sequel to the groundbreaking and heartwarming Asian box-office hit, the feature adaptation of Richard Wright’s novel The Man Who Lived Underground and Hip-Hop Cop created by Oscar winner Kevin Willmott.

In the glamorous, fast-moving, and exhilarating Hollywood ecosystem, the average shelf life for a successful producer usually ranges from a weekend to just over a decade. In 2024, Ashok with over 120 movies and more than US$ 2 billion in global gross, celebrates an incredible forty successful years in Hollywood. Ashok’s journey is about an immensely talented self-made Indian who reached the pinnacle of the global entertainment industry against all odds. And his best is yet to come. Film Producer Ashok Amritraj remains one of the greatest success stories in Indo-American history and India’s one and only Ambassador in Hollywood over several decades.

 

Dr. Bhuvan Lall is the biographer of Subhas Chandra Bose and Har Dayal and the author of India on the World Stage. He can be reached at writerlall@gmail.com

Disclaimer: The views expressed here are solely those of the author and do not in any way represent the views of exchange4media.com