August 26 The minute I entered Central Broward Regional Park, I knew what Id been missing for the past year in the USA: the long queues, the over-enthusiastic fans trying to sneak into the press box so they could meet players, the emotion behind every Sachin, Sachin.You can move to the US for work, you can go to innumerable baseball games to make up for not being able to watch cricket in person, but there is nothing like going berserk over Yuvraj Singhs sixes and crying over a lost wicket. You can never leave the game behind. Its what makes us who we are.I stopped in my tracks the minute I heard my mother tongue, Tamil. Sekhar Krishnan, a BCCI cameraman, looked at me and said, Tamizh ah? (Are you a Tamilian?). Hugs were exchanged. Numbers were shared. It felt like he was my long-lost brother. It was then that I realised how starved I was for my people - the crazy cricket fans from Tamil Nadu who welcomed everybody in and made them feel at home. He introduced me to everybody around him as his sister. I was already in his inner circle.I talked to more than two dozen people that day, in Hindi, Telugu, Tamil and English. It felt like a reunion, although it was the first time we were all gathered together for an international series featuring India in the US.Day one ended with a trip to Hollywood, a 12-mile trek south from Lauderhill. It was my first time in Florida and Peter Della Penna, ESPNcricinfos USA correspondent, wanted me to eat at Mauros, a pizza joint he called the best outside of New York. The restaurant was tiny with no seating inside, strictly takeout, accepting cash only, and was tucked away between posh Thai and Italian restaurants.The pizza slices were huge and really good. I was also incredibly hungry and would have found a cardboard box tasty. With two days before I head back to Washington DC and with two matches to cover, I knew this was the most I would see of Florida during this visit.August 27 Why is there so much traffic on I-95, my Uber driver wondered out loud as we were making our way from Fort Lauderdale to Central Broward Regional Park in Lauderhill. He couldnt understand what was holding up the cars ahead on a Saturday morning. I knew the answer almost immediately. People were driving to Indias first official international match in the USA. Cars snaked down to almost a mile from the stadium two hours before the toss. People wanted to get there fast. Their adrenaline rush was palpable. As I walked into the stadium, I began to see people in India jerseys holding posters of Virat Kohli and MS Dhoni. It was like somebody had carved out Chepauk and planted it in Florida. It was like being back home. It was chaos, but it was my chaos. When Indias national anthem played before the match began, the crowd of 15,000 sang along, myself included.I spent most of the first match sitting with a group of Indian and West Indian fans in the stands. Suddenly this one Indian fan directly in front of me stood up on her chair and cheered, pointing to the big screen. Thats me. I am the fan of the day. Surely enough, her name, Fan of the day - Cherry Patel, popped up on the screen, with a picture of her. She was ecstatic, pointing to her jersey and screaming at the top of her voice. She had the word Virat painted on her legs and she was sporting a Virat jersey. And now she was going to get a picture taken with him at the end of the match as part of the Fan of the Day promotion.For the next ten minutes, she was up on her chair, cheering loudly. At one point, the whole stand started chanting Cherry, Cherry.I was in her shoes a few years ago when India played Australia in Chepauk. I screamed so much the first two days of the Test match that I lost my voice for a while. Indian fans are crazy and they embrace it. It put a smile on my face.I grew up in a household where family members took off work to watch India play, and this included watching pre-match analysis and post-match press conferences. Breakfast, lunch and dinner happened in front of the television and the conversations were limited to cricket talk. Since I was 15, all Ive wanted was to sit in as part of the media during a press conference.So when MS Dhoni walked in to the media room after the first T20I, it took a while to understand the magnitude of the moment for me. August 28 I walked down to have breakfast on the morning of the second T20I. Having been in the US for a year, Ive got used to noticing people of Indian origin. But Ive never seen a room full of them. People who didnt know each other eating their breakfast together and commenting about how India needed to have bowled better in the first ten overs of the first match.If I hadnt seen an American flag plonked in the corner of the room, Id have believed that I was in India. MS Dhoni was right. Even if the team went to the Bermuda Triangle, Indian fans would follow them there.Over the two days of cricket, there was a stark difference between the fan experience here when compared to India. While you get to eat peanuts and drink soda there, here you get to eat chips and drink beer. Fans jumped at the opportunity to relax and drink beers with their friends and family. The cheers got steadily louder as the day progressed, thanks to the alcohol. This aspect made it seem like a cross between baseball and cricket. Beer seems to be one of the main reasons fans trek to baseball games.The extent to which Indian fans love their team: players wives are part of their family. So when Sakshi Dhoni made her way to the VIP area above the press box, the fans were overjoyed. They stood against the railings that separated their part of the stand from the press box, phone in hand, trying to take a good picture of her.It something every Indian cricketer comes to accept - what he does is no longer just his business. Its the countrys business.After close to an hour and a half after the rain ended, the second match was officially called off - the outfield was too wet for play. Despite the washout, August 27 and 28 was a historic weekend - Indias first official series in the USA. And the fans seemed to walk out of Central Broward Regional Park satisfied.Peter generously offered to give me a ride to the airport, and on the way we stopped at Fort Lauderdale Beach. The rain had stopped by then. The clear blue sky, the breaking waves, the tall coconut trees and the Sunday afternoon beachgoers made my visit to Florida complete. It lived up to all the hype that beaches here get. I also learned that Fort Lauderdale Beach was Spring Break central in the 1960s and 70s before the crowd moved to Miamis South Beach. Timo Meier Sharks Jersey . Robredo, ranked No. 16, bounced back from an upset loss to Leonardo Mayer in the second round of the Royal Guard Open in Chile last week to down Carreno Busta in 1 hour, 25 minutes. On a day filled mostly with qualifying matches, fifth-seeded Marcel Granollers of Spain also entered the second with a 7-5, 3-6, 6-2 win over Aljaz Bedene of Slovenia, while Guido Pella of Argentina defeated Guillermo Garcia-Lopez of Spain 7-6 (6), 6-4 to advance. Antti Suomela Sharks Jersey . Vaives lawyer Trevor Whiffen claims the former 50-goal man wasnt provided with a copy of the claim beforehand and that he would not have agreed to the allegations made against the NHL had he been asked to review its contents. http://www.officialsharksnhlshop.com/brenden-dillon-jersey/ . -- Whether Jeremy Hill deserves a prominent role in LSUs offence this early in the season is a matter for debate. Aaron Dell Sharks Jersey .Y. -- Vancouver Canucks goaltender Roberto Luongo had little trouble picking up his first shutout of the season against a Buffalo Sabres team thats having trouble scoring goals. Melker Karlsson Jersey .C. -- Manny Malhotra had two goals and an assist, leading the Carolina Hurricanes to a 6-3 win over the Ottawa Senators on Saturday. NEW ORLEANS -- Brandin Cooks pulled out his arrow -- but the NFL stopped him from shooting it.The New Orleans Saints receiver abbreviated his signature bow-and-arrow touchdown celebration Sunday after an 87-yard touchdown catch against the Carolina Panthers, thanks to the NFLs recent crackdown on the move. Instead, Cooks knelt to the ground, kissed his hands and raised them to the sky.Cooks says he has used the bow-and-arrow touchdown celebration as a show of faith to God, based on a pair of Bible passages. He has also adopted the nickname, The Archer.But the NFL outlawed the bow-and-arrow celebration when it penalized and fined Washington Redskins cornerback Josh Norman for using it two weeks ago, with the leagues head of officiating Dean Blandino explaining that it mimics a violent act.Cooks -- who has never been penalized or fined for the celebration, which he used twice earlier this year -- was irked by the NFLs policy. But he said he didnt want to hurt his team.Ive been doing it for three years now, and there was never a complaint about it, Cooks told the New Orleans Advocate.dddddddddddd. Now, all of a sudden, there is. It just reminds me that, its almost as if they try to take so much away from us, but for something like this, that means so much to someone that has nothing to do with violence, its frustrating.Ill definitely continue to speak my opinion about it, and if they have a problem with it, so be it.Cooks now has the two longest receptions in the NFL this year. He also caught a 98-yard touchdown pass against the Oakland Raiders in Week 1.According to ESPN Stats and Information, Cooks is the first player with multiple 85-yard touchdown catches in a season since DeSean Jackson and Mario Manningham in 2010.He finished the game with a career-high 173-yard outing on seven catches in the Saints 41-38 victory. ' ' '