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Special Feature :
Embracing the Chappelway |
From
The Cricket Journal, published on Nov 18,
2005
Team
India has been on the upswing these days and
this article is dedicated to what has actually
gone behind the making of the rejuvenated Indian
team. It's surely been strange that for three to
four months since he took charge of 15
cricketers and 1 billion cricket fans, Greg
Chappell had to devote more time bothering about
what went behind the BCCI doors in Kolkata, and
settling his personal dispute with the discarded
skipper Saurav Ganguly, than talk, teach and
play cricket. Having said that, it took him
virtually no time to discard the faulty pieces
and gather his forces back on the chessboard,
when Sri Lanka took on India. In the beginning
of the series, one expected a real tough
home-test for the Indians, but the sublime
confidence with which India played really
indicated the short memory the team had about
that disastrous tour to Zimbabwe. Was it more of
Greg Chappell stamping his class and leaving a
mark or just Sri Lanka being poor tourists ?
What seems really interesting and intriguing
when you read into the mind of an Australian is
not the amount of cricketing skills he brings
into the game, but also non-cricketing factors
like professionalism, toughness (both mental and
physical) and most importantly discipline.
Somehow I feel that it was more of "sticking to
the basics" that won India the series with such
a whooping margin than the 183* of Dhoni (as
more cricket fanatics would fancy). I somehow
fancy Indian cricket to rule the roost during
his tenure because there is a sense of purpose
that has emerged within this unit.
Tough-decisions being taken have never been a
part of an Indian curry, rightly called as
emotional fools. But here is a sea-change one is
witnessing, after the advent of Chappell where
the mind, the heart and the body seemed to have
synchronized pretty well. It was indeed
important for the Indian coach to make an
impression, especially keeping in mind the short
public memory the Indian cricket fans have. A
famous Marketing guru has stated the four Ps of
Marketing - Price, Placement, Product and
Promotion. Greg Chappell has brought the famous
old 3 Ps of Aussie sport into India - Passion
(unquestioned), Pride (playing for the country)
and indeed Performance. Another famous slogan
that Chappell has brought in his baggage from
Adelaide seems to be "Perform or Perish". For
once, we go beyond Zones to assess who is
actually performing and who isn't. Some of the
Indian regulars have surely been on the wrong
side of Chappell and this adage has surely seen
them on the sidelines ever since. Another key
aspect of this management jargon means
insecurity. But there is a positive side to it
too. Insecurity for a player means more hunger
and hence possibly more performance. The series
win over the Lankans has highlighted, how subtle
changes can bring about results.
One just needs to spend a little while in that
confident Indian dressing room to gauge what
Chappellway actually is. Contrary to theorists,
I would not assess a coach by his results. Tom
Moody was hailed as Sri Lanka's future hope and
look what has happened to his side. Maybe, we
get too judgmental seeing the number of wins and
losses. Times have changed and so have the
demands of the game and the way it needs to be
analyzed. With development of a side given due
importance, the future matters more than the
present. With this regard, Greg deserves 100%
for the young bench strength he has formed and
more importantly blood them in to feel the heat
and demands of the highest level. Perhaps, we
wouldn't have seen an RP Singh or Sree Santh for
that matter steaming in against some of the most
dangerous batsmen in ODI cricket. What really is
impressive is the bunch of talent he has gone
about choosing (thanks to the selectors also),
have delivered. The Dhonis, the RP Singhs and
the Rainas are tomorrow's India, and certainly
from the way the management has handled them so
far, their future seems to glow brighter by the
day.
Having said that, it surely is too early to
judge the impact of Chappell. By the time he
finishes his first anniversary with Team India,
looking at his report card would be interesting.
It will contain a few scars, but hopefully with
the charisma, the character and the confidence,
the scars will fade away. Indian cricket is
certainly on the brink, I say on the brink,
simply because of the nature of its
unpredictability. Consistency is the watchword
and if Chappell commits himself to the levels of
excellence he promised when he arrived, that
word will surely have more than just one
meaning...
Over to you Greg and Rahul...
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