“Today, the global marketplace has made Indian players the best-paid, most famous cricketers in the game, men for whom the world is a stage.”
Q1. Name the lesson and author.
Q2. Why are Indian players the best paid, most famous cricketers in the game?
Q3.What does the writer mean when he says “ the men for whom the world is a stage”.
Plz answer for mark as brainliest..... This is from class 7th ncert English book..... The story of cricket
Answers
Answer:
From Shah to Shaw, from Philippe to Pope: the players we think will dominate the decade
JUNE 22, 2020
The 2020s, it is well acknowledged, have not exactly made a dream start. But as cricket slowly biosecures itself towards resumption, there remains the prospect of watching wunderkinds come into their own.
To compile this list, we asked 15 coaches, players, scouts, analysts and observers from around the world for their inputs on the exciting talent available in men's cricket: Tom Moody, Mike Hesson, Deep Dasgupta, HD Ackerman, Ian Bishop, AR Srikanth, Tim Wigmore, Russel Arnold, Paras Mhambrey, Hassan Cheema, Srinath Bhashyam, Tamim Iqbal, Andy Moles, Jarrod Kimber and Robin Peterson.
We imposed no age limit: the youngest on the list is just 15 - the Afghan left-arm wristspinner Noor Ahmad - while the oldest is Pakistani fast bowler Haris Rauf, who, at 26, is a veritable uncle in this group. Instead, we placed caps on the number of international matches a player had played to be eligible: no more than five Tests or seven ODIs or seven T20Is as on December 31, 2019. The names appear in no particular order.
Please remember to write us in 2030 to tell us whether we got it right or wrong.

Kai Schwoerer / © ICC/Getty Images
Shubman Gill
20, India, batsman
Few batsmen have towered over the rest at age-group level as Gill did, and he was Player of the Tournament at the 2018 Under-19 World Cup. His all-round game is built around quick hand-eye coordination, deft wrist work and a front-foot pull shot reminiscent of Ricky Ponting's. Allied to that is an unmistakable confidence, a penchant for scoring quickly, and astounding consistency. - Shashank Kishore
My hero: "Sachin Tendulkar. By the time I started enjoying the game, he was still at his peak. I have interacted a bit with him. I've asked him how he maintained consistency and form with the kind of pressure that was always on him."
Biggest ambition: "I was fortunate to be part of an U-19 World Cup- winning team, where I was Player of the Tournament. I want to play a big part in a [senior] World Cup-winning Indian team."
Favourite match: "India v Australia, Kolkata, 2001. I was too young to watch it live, but I have heard so much about the game. That special partnership, India's win, and a packed Eden Gardens - it feels surreal even when you watch the highlights."
Expert eye: "He's very level-headed for someone who has had phenomenal success at the age-group level. He considers every game as a blessing. You will never see him sitting idle at training. He knows when he should go the extra yard with his batting, what works for him, what doesn't. That from someone who is 20 tells you how sorted he is." - Abhishek Nayar, Gill's mentor at Kolkata Knight Riders

Stefan Gosatti / © Getty Images
Tom Banton
21, England, batsman
Banton's swashbuckling strokeplay earned him comparisons with Kevin Pietersen when he starred at the top