Ganguly, Dravid, Dhoni: Who’s the Best Captain?


All three had captained the Indian team (One still does) - in three different styles and all the three are at very different stages of their careers today but the Indian Premier League (IPL) brings them together on a single platform where their leadership skills are evaluated them – Sourav Ganguly, Rahul Dravid and MS Dhoni once again – quite differently.

All the three have contributed immensely to Indian cricket and many argue that a comparison of these outstanding three is unfair. However, debate, undoubtedly, is also the best part of watching sport. And there is the IPL battle being played out in front of us and so, we can be the judges of the present without much of assumptions and imaginations.

There is a difference, a unique feel that Sourav Ganguly brings on to the cricketing field when he takes over the captaincy. And today when he is back with his leadership tactics on the field, the nostalgia begins to jumpstart among the cricket frenzy Indian crowd.

Ganguly’s inputs as the captain of Pune Warriors have been noticeable when his side overthrew the Mumbai Indians on the third match of IPL V. The furious captain rung in the changes and with his unique style, he made some remarkable field placements and as always, he was constantly looking for wickets.

Ganguly who took over the captaincy of Indian team at a very tumultuous period with a task of lifting a team that lost its credibility to the match-fixing controversy. He did rebuild the side reeling from the fallout and had to battle the odds stacked against the Indian team such as “tigers at home and lambs away.” The flamboyant captain created a team that wants afraid of anyone, just like Ganguly who always spoke his mind and dared the orthodox as he took off his shirt at the Mecca of cricket – eventually making the Indian team an aggressive and confident unit.

As today he leads a unit of new commerce, it should be noted that it was with his backing, India saw the emergence of a bunch of talented youngster like Yuvraj Singh, Virender Sehwag, Zaheer Khan, and Harbhajan Singh etc. And in the absence of Yuvraj, Ganguly comes to the Pune Team as its captain and mentor, with a not-so-good record in KKR, to prove something and a motivated Ganguly can do wonders.

One of the finest batsmen in the world, technically perfect, carrying a rich experience of 16 years of international cricket, Rahul Dravid will remain to be admired for his exemplary work ethic, meticulousness, and methodical approach for eternity. On the grounds of IPL season V, the world saw a highly spirited Rahul Dravid who carried the role of captaincy and coaching from its talismanic leader Shane Warne with ease, taking the his team Rajasthan Royals to the top spots in the points table. Dravid, with a different temperament that of Warne, could handle the transition with exceptional maturity and cricketing intelligence.

“Warne was loud, aggressive and loved being the centre of attention. Rahul Dravid is quiet, restrained and simply goes about his business,” Tariq Engineer writes espncricinfo. However, both these cricketing greats share something in common – their ability to lead by example and deep knowledge of the game. “A game of T20 lasts for little over three hours, but he bats for three hours on days we have to practice! His work ethics and discipline have become the benchmark for the team,” Dishant Yagnik says about his captain.

It’s no wonder Rahul exhibit his best during this IPL season as he is probably under the least amount of pressure because for Dravid, these two months of IPL is the cooling down period for him. The former Indian captain, who always took decisions by books than by pure instinct, has the best of his chances and he proves to be implementing his great knowledge of the game this time.

Dhoni’s record as skipper makes him one of the best captains the team ever had; however, the recent poor shows first in England and then the tour Down Under have severely dented his reputation.

Dhoni added a finishing touch to what his captain Sourav Ganguly had began with and brought in a new culture of consistency and the team went on to clinch a number of tournaments. Indian cricket team reached to the No.1 in Test cricket and in the biggest games, unlike the past, the team didn’t crumble under pressure. As a result, Team India Under MS Dhoni made history by winning the top tittles in ICC World T20 2007 and ICC Cricket World Cup 2011.

The fearlessness that Dhoni instilled in the team has helped the new comers like Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina and Ravichandran Ashwin, to name a few, who exhibited their exceptional skills at the highest levels. And the good forms of the seniors like Tendulkar, Dravid and Laxman brought back the good memories of the Ganguly era.

It’s here Dhoni faces the real test. After having an exceptional period of captaincy, India’s awful performance away that brought back unwanted memories of the past, generated doubts from different corners on his leadership qualities. The IPL extravaganza is going to be a salvage operation for Dhoni, a chance for him to figure out what’s gone missing and this cricketing festival, without the pressure of leading a national team, will draw his true self once again.

Rahul Dravid’s Master Strokes


The ‘Wall of Indian CricketRahul Dravid has announced his retirement from international cricket. He grew along with the Indian cricket greats like Sachin Tendulkar and Saurav Ganguly. In his 16 year cricket career, he achieved the most remarkable 13288 test scores in 164 test matches and 10889 ODI runs in 344 matches.

The Wall made his debut in 1996 during India’s tour of England. He scored 95 runs in his first test at Lords stadium in London. In his parting speech, he declares his retirement from international and domestic first class cricket and says “No dream is ever chased alone. As I look back, as one does at such a time, I have many people to thank for supporting me, teaching me and believing in me.”

From 1996 he has done an extraordinary job in Indian cricket and had gained the title of being ‘The Wall’ which credited many Indian victories.  Here are the best knocks of his career.

January 1997

In January 1997 it was his first highest test score against South Africa in Johannesburg. He scored 148 runs in 362 balls along with 21 boundaries in this innings.

January 1999

In 1999 Rahul became the third Indian batsman scoring centuries in both innings of the test match. In the match against New Zealand in Hamilton he scored 190 runs in 354 balls with 31 boundaries. Vijay Hazare and Sunil Gavaskar were the other two Indian players who achieved this feat. In this test match

May 1999

Dravid was the only Indian player to score back-to-back centuries in the 1999 World Cup matches. One prominent match among them was against Sri Lanka in Taunton. He scored 145 runs in 129 balls and also become the top scorer of the series with a total score of 461 runs.

March 2001

In 2001 Rahul scored 180 test runs in 353 balls (not out) against Australia in Kolkata. He with the partnership of Laxman made a huge score of 376 runs. This huge score was the greatest comeback victory in Indian cricket.

August 2002

One of the most notable matches against England, where Dravid scored total of 602 test runs in the series which got him the man of the series award. His highest score in the series was 148 in 307 balls.

September 2002

Rahul once again earned the man of the match title against England in London, scoring 217 runs in 468 balls.

December 2003

In 2003 India tour of Australia Rahul scored total 619 test runs in the series and got the man of the series award. His outstanding score in the series was 233 with a partnership of Laxman it was a huge score of 303 which become a danger for Australians to win the series.

April 2004

In 2004 against India tour of Pakistan in Rawalpindi, Rahul earned the player of the match. He scored 270 runs in 495 balls along with 34 boundaries and won the innings by 131 runs.

January 2008

In 2008 test match against Australia, Rahul was a life saver. He scored 93 runs in 183 balls and we won the match by 72 runs. This is not a big score but every other Indian player scored less than 29 runs in the innings.

June 2011

Dravid once again became a life saver wall when other batsmen failed to score not more than 28 runs against West Indies. He scored 112 in 274 balls and leading Indian to the victory by 63 runs.

India suffer 7th consecutive overseas defeat at Perth


India stretched their away Test losing streak to seven as they lost the third cricket Test against Australia by an innings and 37 runs shortly after the first session on the third day at the WACA Ground here.

For India, it was their third successive Test loss in Australia and with still a match to go, the hosts regained the Border Gavaskar Trophy for the first time since 2008.
Going into the third day, Australia were on the brink of a win as India were struggling at 88 for four in the second innings. India needed another 120 runs to make Australia bat again, but they fell short mustering only 83 in little over a session before being bundled out for 171 runs in the second innings minutes after the lunch break. India had made 161 runs in the first innings.
Virat Kohli struck an impressive 75, his highest Test score, while Rahul Dravid made 47 and offered the last resistance with their 84-run stand for the fifth wicket before a three-wicket in a over post lunch by Ben Hilfenhaus wrapped up the day for Australia. Hilfenhaus picked up four for 54 in the second innings to finish with a match haul of eight for eight for 97.
But the star of the Test was David Warner, whose whirlwind 180, built the foundation of the massive win as Australia made 369 in the first innings despite losing 10 wickets for 155 runs. Warner was also adjudged as the Man of the Match for his century, which was the fourth fastest in Tests.
India needed a similar knock from one of its batsmen to save the Test. The hopes were on Dravid and Kohli. But once Dravid and India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni (2) departed in a space of 20 balls the slide continued and it was just a matter of time for Australia.
Ryan Harris (1/34) set Dravid nicely to give Australia the first breakthrough of the day. Having beaten Dravid’s bat several times with away going deliveries, Harris got one back in sharply off the seam to rattle his stumps. Alarmingly, Dravid was bowled for the eighth time in his last ten innings.

Dhoni’s poor run with the bat continued as he pushed hard at an away going delivery from Peter Siddle (3/43) only to guide a simple catch to Ricky Ponting at the second slip as India slipped to 165 for six at lunch.
Hilfenhaus then removed R. Vinay Kumar (6), Zaheer Khan and Ishant Sharma all in one over while Kohli was the last man out caught behind off Peter Siddle (3/43) as India surrendered without a fight.

Kohli’s gritty knock was the lone bright spot for India, who stare at another whitewash overseas going into the fourth Test at Adelaide.

The 23-year-old showed maturity while playing the Aussie pacers and displayed class with some exquisite straight and cover drives.

Shoaib says Sachin ‘can’t finish a game’


An innings-by-innings breakdown of Tendulkar's...

Image via Wikipedia

Pakistan cricket’s enfant terrible Shoaib Akhtar has stirred yet another controversy, this time questioning the class and temperament of India’s batting stalwarts Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid.

In his just-published autobiography ‘Controversially Yours’, the temperamental Pakistan speedster has accused Tendulkar of being scared to face his scorching pace on a slow Faisalabad track.

He also claimed that Tendulkar and Dravid were not match-winners nor did they know the art of finishing games.

“….Vivian Richards, Ricky Ponting, Brian Lara and the likes of them are great batsmen who dominated with the bat and were truly match-winners. Initially, when I bowled against Sachin, I found these qualities missing. He might have had more runs and records, he lacked the ability to finish the game,” he said in the book, to be formally launched on Friday.

Akhtar, who announced his retirement during the World Cup this year, also cited an example where he felt that Sachin was mighty scared to face him.

“We would have faced a humbling defeat in the series but for the fact that we reined in Sachin Tendulkar.

“What went in our favour was that Sachin was suffering from tennis elbow! This severely handicapped the great batsman. We managed to psychologically browbeat him.

“We bounced the ball at him and were able to unnerve him. I returned to the dressing room that first day with the knowledge that Sachin was not comfortable facing fast and rising ball. He was distinctly uncomfortable against me. That was enough to build on”, he said.

“I bowled (Sachin) a particularly fast ball which he, to my amazement didn’t even touch. He walked away! That was the first time, I saw him walk away from me — that, too, on the slow track at Faisalabad. It got my hunting instincts up and in the next match I hit him on the head and he couldn’t score after that”, Akhtar wrote.

The 36-year-old Akhtar, who had scalped 178 wickets in 46 Test and 247 I wickets in 163 ODIs, said that Tendulkar and Dravid who have together conjured over 56,000 international runs (over 33,000 by Tendulkar and over 23,000 by Dravid) are not “match winners”.

“I think players like Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid weren’t exactly match winners to start with, nor did they know the art of finishing the game,” Shoaib said.

Sachin though, said that ‘it was below his dignity’ to reply to Akhtar’s remark against him. “It is below my dignity to comment on what Shoaib has said,” he said.

Akhtar on the other hand, who played for Shah Rukh Khan co-owned Kolkata Knight Riders during IPL has also accused the Bollywood superstar and former IPL commissioner Lalit Modi of “cheating.”

“Shah Rukh and I talked about my not being happy with the money settled on me. Shah Rukh and Modi got me to agree. I should have never listened to Modi and Shah Rukh,” he said in the book.

Akhtar also spoke at length about politics in Pakistan Cricket Board. He didn’t shy away from taking a dig at two former captains Wasim Akram and Shoaib Malik.

He didn’t stop short of calling Malik a “stoodge of PCB chairman Naseem Ashraf” and that’s why he was made the captain.

Akhtar has also alleged that he was cheated by Shah Rukh Khan and former IPL Chairman Lalit Modi. He states, “Shahrukh and I talked about my not being happy with the money settled on me. Shahrukh and Modi got me to agree. I should have never listened to Modi and Shahrukh.” Akhtar, who retired from cricket following the 2011 World Cup, has also shockingly revealed that he tampered with the ball claiming, “everyone tampers with the ball. I did so too. Tampering should be legalised.”

Source – REUTERS

The Last Match of the Great Wall


As the whole world watches, amidst the thunderous applause from the crowd and the players, the man walks past the ground, ending a legendary era of class, passion, and rectitude in the game of cricket – a scene best wished for The Wall of Indian Cricket, Rahul Dravid as he plays his last ODI match. He is a man the world adores for his skills and techniques, but the real worth of the great cricketer has often been hidden in the shadow of his contemporary legends, Sachin Tendulkar and Sourav Ganguly.

Rahul - The Wall

What will his absence mean to the world cricket? We are going to miss the graceful flicks, the breathtaking timings, and the poetry in motion on the crease – those standards of cricketing fast vanishing from the game in this new era of unorthodoxy and pinch hitters. He epitomized the test cricket and played the role of India’s ‘go-to man’ in pressure situations. Nearing the end of an embarrassing two-month England series in which victory looked far ahead of Team India, Dravid’s exit from ODIs will definitely leave a void in the squad, the dependability factor which many wonder if any can fill.

The Wall of India

Great talents cannot be hidden and so was Dravid’s who was spotted by former cricketers seeing an amazingly skillful kid scoring a century on debut for his school team. Fondly called Jammy by his classmates, the Bangalore boy began his cricketing career in his early teens as he represented the state at the under-15, under-17 and under-19 level. He made his one-day debut in 1996 against Sri Lanka replacing the spoiled kid of Indian cricket Vinod Kambli. He mastered the art of this gentleman’s game and lived by it for over 15 years now, a great cricketing saga that can never be erased from the books of cricket. In 2007, he become the third Indian player and the sixth in the world to score 10,000 runs in ODI cricket and with one match to go, he has 10,820 runs from 343 matches to his credit. The 38-year-old right-hander has scored 12 hundreds and 82 fifties.

Records are many but to cite an unusual one, he is the highest scorer to be overlooked for the Man of the Match award. Despite his career best 153 against New Zealand, the MoM went to Sachin Tendulkar for his unbeaten 186. Though a fault of none, he has been overshadowed, not once but many a times, by some of the equally great performance from his contemporary stars. The delight of his debut ODI century in 1997 was sunk at the glory of Saeed Anwar’s then world record of 194.

Mr. Dependable

Against the popular notion, Rahul Dravid holds the record of scoring the second fastest fifty by an Indian in one-day cricket. His 82 fifties in ODI is the second highest by an Indian and the third highest by any in the history of cricket. He has been a part of two of the largest partnerships in world cricket – A 331-run stand with Sachin Tendulkar for the second wicket against New Zealand in 1999 and a 318-run partnership with Sourav Ganguly.

He has always been in the scene, cricket never left him neither he did. His embraced the spirit of the game so tight that he emerged victorious at each falls. And now, as he walks down the crease, one last time in the blue jersey, it bleeds not blue but tears down the eyes of his loyal spectators who loved the glorious game in its entirety.

Author – Binu Paul,SI