Showing posts with label Sourav Ganguly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sourav Ganguly. Show all posts

He Played From The Heart

Sourav Ganguly retires from international cricket


How will one best remember Sourav Ganguly? What will be his most enduring legacy? These are questions being asked all over the cricketing world on a day when Ganguly will wear his India colours for one final time in Nagpur. While some say that he will be best remembered for his never-say-die spirit and perhaps as India’s best ever captain, history will also surely remember him as someone who rescued Indian cricket from its deepest low: the tribulations of match fixing.


At a time when the match fixing scandal was eating into the very edifice of Indian cricket and the national side under Sachin Tendulkar was in disarray, Ganguly assumed the mantle of leadership. Fans had started to lose interest in the game and only a handful in the cricket fraternity — one of them being Ganguly — was above suspicion. To compound problems, he was soon challenged by Steve Waugh’s record-breaking Australians seeking to conquer the “final frontier”. It was a team that came to India on the back of 15 wins on the trot.

Ganguly’s initiation into Test captaincy in 2000 could not have been more dramatic. To add to his woes, India was mauled at the Wankhede in a little under three-anda-half days in the first Test of the series. Add to this the scoreline at the end of Day 2 at the Eden Gardens in the second Test: Australia having scored 445 and India reeling at 128-8, the situation looked set for Ganguly to lose the captaincy even before he had warmed up to it. Reality, however, could not have been more different. India won at the Eden match thanks to a miracle partnership between V V S Laxman and Rahul Dravid and a match-winning spell by Harbhajan Singh. This was followed by a series-winning victory at Chennai. It was perhaps the best Test series ever to be played on Indian soil and suddenly to borrow the words of the man of the moment, Barack Obama, Indian cricket had a three-word mantra: “Yes we can”. Under Ganguly, nothing seemed impossible and innovation was routine.

Ganguly converted Virender Sehwag into an opener, discarding all the conventional idioms about opening the batting. It was a decision that still continues to pay dividends. Remembering the decision, Ganguly suggested in a conversation last week at the end of the Delhi Test, “In India you need quick runs at the top of the order for once the ball gets older, you can’t score fast. And if you get off to a flier the opposition will always be under pressure. Sehwag was our best bet.” He played Dravid at number six and promoted Laxman up the order, an innovation that won India the Eden miracle, and could be something we need to resort to again to get Dravid back in form. He inspired Harbhajan to become a proven match-winner in all forms of the game and motivated the team to win in adverse overseas conditions. In doing all this, his hair may have turned grey and his batting form may have suffered but the nation surely gained.

Ganguly’s personal journey may be divided into two distinct phases — the pre- and post-Greg Chappell periods. While the first witnessed near unrivalled elegance in batsmanship, the second was a more cautious and hardened phase, one in which he valued his wicket much more. While in the first, dancing down the track and hitting spinners out of the ground was routine and caressing the ball through the offside to the boundary second habit, in the second, milking the ball for ones and twos was the norm. The first phase resulted in comments like Sourav was god-like in his offside play; the second forced critics to acknowledge that he was more mature and solid after his stunning comeback in South Africa in the 2006-07 series.

The one link between the two periods was his aggression. Be it the over-thetop waving of his shirt at the Lord’s balcony after the Natwest victory in 2002 — something that he gets slightly embarrassed about when reminded of — or making Steve Waugh wait for him at the toss in the 2001 series or his valiant counter-attack en route to scoring a series-defining century at Brisbane in 2003, aggression and confidence have been his defining traits.

In retirement, too, Ganguly stands out. Even in his final Test match at Nagpur, Ganguly scored a flawless 85. Giving it up before critics call for his head, despite knowing full well that he could have continued for some more time given his current form, he remains someone who has always exceeded expectations and fought his way out of trouble. In fact, it is this ability that endears him most to the owner of the Kolkata Knight Riders, Bollywood star Shah Rukh Khan.

In commenting on his legacy, one is forced to acknowledge Ganguly’s ability to surprise one and all. You may not trust him with your life if you apply the parameters of reason and rationale, but you can certainly bank on him if you think with your heart. And who better to tell us than Ganguly that modern competitive sport is more often than not played from the heart and not in the mind.

THE LAST DANCE


WHILE GRACE and timing were the hallmark of Sourav Ganguly’s cricket, I'm unsure if his decision to ride into the sunset was true to those qualities.

The boy from Behala who galvanised the Indian team at the start of the new millennium announced in a very off-handed manner in Bangalore yesterday that the four-Test series against the visiting Australians will be his last in international cricket.

It wasn’t befitting a man who never went down without a battle. Probably, at 36, there’s no fight left in his stomach after having to prove his credentials to those who run Indian cricket over and over again. Or perhaps the fuel indicator is just hovering over the E mark and there’s just enough in the tank to take on the Australians before he puts his feet up.

“Before I leave, I have to make an announcement,” said Ganguly as a postscript to the pre-match press conference. “This is going to be my last series. I have decided to quit. These four Tests are going to be my last.” he said betraying his emotions.

“I have spoken to my team-mates that these four Tests would be my last matches. Thanks for all the support, hopefully I will go out on a winning note.”

Those in the know say that the BCCI was all set to bring down the curtain on Ganguly’s career after the second Test at Mohali. But the former skipper bargained hard for the entire series.

MORE PRESSURE


BY MAKING the decision public he may have only added more pressure on himself to bow out on a high and if the scene gets awry for India against Ricky Ponting’s men, the BCCI may not wait till Nagpur, which ironically was Ganguly’s Waterloo as the captain of Team India in 2004.

We pray this is not the case but we’re unsure who writes Ganguly’s script. Mere words will not do justice to a career that was as heroic as it was tragic.

For a teenager who reportedly dragged his feet to ferry drinks during his maiden tour of Australia in 1992, Ganguly emerged four years later to score a sublime hundred on debut at Lord’s amidst a smearing campaign that he was in the team courtesy Jagmohan Dalmiya.

This wasn’t going to be his only comeback as we all know it too well.

As his career progressed, Indian cricket regressed under Mohammad Azharuddin and Sachin Tendulkar’s leadership. The Board finally offered captaincy to Ganguly in 2000.

It was a difficult time. Tendulkar had stepped down as the captain and the match-fixing scourge was about to raise its ugly head. With Kapil Dev at helm as the coach, it was a coronation under fire for the Prince of Kolkata. Six months into his term, the winds of change started to blow and a young unassuming Ganguly-led squad, much like the one that won the Twenty20 Championship in South Africa last year, reached the final of the mini World Cup in Nairobi.

Ganguly went on to add steely resolve to the group and the Indian team started to win Test matches and one-day games abroad frequently. In John Wright, he had a perfect coach to complement him although the relations wasn’t exactly hunky-dory.

Ganguly’s slide started in 2004 following his withdrawal from the Nagpur Test citing a hamstring injury. That he had a showdown with Shashank Manohar, the current BCCI president, over the nature of the pitch was no secret and that is when he lost a few friends in the team.

The arrival of Greg Chappell and his subsequent spat with the Australian for whom he had batted, added a bitter and painful twist to his career. He was banished to wilderness.

‘GANGULY’S DECISION WON’T AFFECT KKR’

While Sourav Ganguly has announced his retirement from cricket, his Indian Premier League (IPL) team — Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) — don’t believe they need to worry too much about his participation in the second edition of the BCCI-backed tournament at the moment.

“There is no reason why it should (affect Ganguly’s IPL commitments),” KKR’s team director Joy Bhattacharya told Mumbai Mirror yesterday. “The only thing is that he will have to find a way to stay fit. If you are not playing cricket, it’s difficult to motivate yourself to stay fit. But I think he is professional enough to manage that.”

Bhattacharya also said that Ganguly had not spoken to team owner Shah Rukh Khan or him regarding his IPL participation or commitments. “At the moment, I think we just have to give him some space at this time.” The fighter in him saw him staging a dream comeback facilitated by Dilip Vengsarkar taking over the selection committee in 2006. Ganguly batted with gusto to score heavily in both form of the games and in every possible condition on offer.

POOR SERIES

A POOR series against Sri Lanka, primarily because of inappropriate preparation and fitness, once again brought his career on the brink. But with another change in the selection committee and yet another lifeline thrown at him, Ganguly was back but with murmurs that he had struck a deal with the BCCI for a ‘dignified’ farewell.

A match-winning hundred followed by the announcement to quit would have been more apt for the man who along with Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman changed the face of Indian cricket for good.

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