As
the cricket carnival approaches to its Mecca -
Eden Gardens at Kolkata, anticipation and hope
is something the city is living with. The
Kolkattans, known for their undying passion
for Indian sport, will surely be praying for
their Prince - Sourav Ganguly, sometime soon.
But, will their prayers be answered by all
those concerned ? It is surely something worth
digging into. The big question being asked by
everyone around these days is Will Ganguly
return or Should Ganguly return ? Its not
an easy question for me to answer, as I try
and put the logical reasons as to why he
should or he should not be in this team, and
the possible connotations of Team India and
its life without and life beyond Dada.
Its been a sad month for sport, more precisely
football and cricket - for it has lost two of
its greatest leaders for their respective
teams, coincidentally in similar fashion. Roy
Keane, the talismanic midfielder, epitomized
all that Manchester United was about, was
sacked by the club for his unceremonious
comments he made in public about Man United's
performance, while Indian cricket seems
unforgiving about its once-most famous Dada -
Sourav Ganguly, who was shown the door
momentarily, after his public spat with coach
Greg Chappell. Seeing all this fracas of
leaders in sport, all one can say is
disagreements do happen, but in these cases
they have only extended themselves to
downfalls of two idols. Aged, aggressive and
arrogant - sums both these personalities very
well, but in Ganguly's case, would the Indian
mindset forgive him for the
Zimbabwe tour
fall-out ? Or has Ganguly been the first
of many victims of the Chappellian adage of
"Perform or Perish" ? Such answers will
take a while to find out.
How
can Ganguly possibly return into the thick of
action once again ? With age not being a
criterion in India's selection policy these
days (inclusion of JP
Yadav is a precedent), what seems to be
against Ganguly is not his potential or
ability but performance. Ganguly has really
struggled ever since the short-ball rule came
into the lawbook and demanded him to adapt to
that delivery, which due to his capacity or
lack of it, has surely ignored it for his
record, which boasts of nearly 16,000
international runs. Very recently in the Times
of India, there was a conversation Sourav has
had with his daughter which goes "Sana : Bapi,
tumi khelchhona keno (Father, why aren't you
playing?)" to which he replies "Dada : Aami
bhalo khelte parina, tai (Only because I'm not
such a good player)". For Chappellians alike,
this may seem like a candid confession to
someone close, but that is certainly not
reality. I am not such a big fan of his
batsmanship of recent days, but I still do
maintain that he has something more to
contribute to Indian cricket. With immense
competition in the team for every spot at the
moment, Sourav will have to surely do more
past his
Duleep Trophy
effort for East Zone of a pair to open a
window of opportunity to try and scrape into
the team. Let's put it in a milder tone, all
he needs to is to score runs and hope for the
best, but at the same time, be prepared for
the worst, as the Rainas and the Kaifs are on
the run-hunt as motivated as Sourav himself
is.
Somewhere down the entire dirty episode that
brought the team closer, Sourav might just
have gone a step further to drive home his
point on Chappell, but the more experienced
man that Greg is, he has taken a wider
overview of things and quietly kept him out of
his plans. To worsen his re-entry,
a tennis elbow
struck him, may be not for long, as he
showed glimpses of him being back to his best
in his 114
for East Zone against North Zone. And more
recently, all Dada has done is to show
desperation to get back into the team, by
pointing fingers at his colleagues'
non-performance. Gradually, there seems to be
a final tone of surrender coming through with
statements like "I am ready to play
anywhere". It will only be left to see if
he does manage a look-in by the selectors for
the Sri Lanka test
series. A man, who was a vivant member of
the selection committee meetings himself, has
to now await these meetings for a very
different reason. Perhaps, somewhere one feels
that the Indian crest in Ganguly's shirt, is
fading slowly.
As of now, it looks as if Souravda will spend
more time with his family than Greg Chappell.
From a more individual point of view, Ganguly
must surely be hoping for an injury or a
string of failures, something this Indian team
has not yet resorted to. But, knowing Dada,
all that he wants is Indian cricket moving
ahead - with or without him. It may sound a
rather naive statement, but that is what sums
up his praise for Rahul Dravid's newly found
role as skipper. It will be a litmus test for
India on the 25th at Ganguly territory i.e.
Kolkata - which will surely miss its son, but
an Indian victory at the Eden Gardens could
prove a major consolation to Dada's absence.
The old cricket adage of "Its not over
until the last ball is bowled" applies to
Sourav Ganguly's illustrious-yet-now-tainted
career. The ball is in his court, the
Chappellian ball - which has only three words
to say - PERFORM or PERISH.