It
was a disappointing day for all fans of Indian
cricket, as the
MA
Chidambaram stadium in Chennai turned into a
watershed, quite literally. But, some off
the field action, would surely have brought
smiles to many an Indian fan, with Rahul
Dravid being appointed the captain for the
Test Series against Sri Lanka starting early
next month. Having won the confidence of many
including the selectors after successfully
leading India to a near-whitewash in the one-dayers,
Dravid now has the responsibility to accept
the baton from Sourav Ganguly and push India
into an even better Test-playing nation.
A question that arises from this rather
forward looking move is - "What new will
Dravid bring into this team ?". The answer
is quite simple. While the approach of the
side could be the same, as it was under
Ganguly - aggressive, mentally tough and
professional, the dimension Dravid-Chappell
combine will add could be ruthlessness mixed
with control. Having been there, seen it and
done it for a few matches, Dravid, being an
astute student of the game would have realized
that with captaincy comes a great deal of
expectations, internally, within the team and
externally, goes without saying - the cricket
frenzy public of the country. He announced
himself with a tough decision that virtually
shocked the nation - declaring the innings
when
Tendulkar was approaching his double-ton at
Multan in 2004. But reading into the
positives of it, it just goes to show that for
Dravid, an individual is just a mere part of
the eleven, and has to bind within the
framework of the team-strategies. Such tough
decisions could be match-winning ones, for all
we know. It was time, Indian cricket stopped
getting emotional with their decision making
and looked at the bigger picture i.e. the
team's interest.
At
this very moment, it is important to pay
rich tribute to Sourav Ganguly's stint as the
national skipper, where India looked like
a side that meant business. Although it may
not be the end of Ganguly as a player, one
perhaps felt that he was past his prime as a
captain. Steve Waugh's idealist view of "a
captain should be given a shelf-life for not
more than four years" showed on Ganguly.
The team's potential and results clearly
overshadowed his own individual performances
and reached to a degree of frustration both
with the selectors and the public. His legacy
as India's most successful skipper might have
some high growth points to say, like the home
series win against Australia in 2001, the tour
to Australia and Pakistan in 2003-04, the tour
to England in 2002, but where the graph goes
down is India lacked that killer instinct to
finish games all at once. The Zimbabwean tour
comes to mind, where they batted themselves
out of the game in Harare and also the West
Indies tour, where they surrendered rather
meekly. The team seemed to have possessed a
lot of character during his reign. Some ghosts
that have continued to haunt Team India during
Ganguly's tenure were the controversies. Be it
his own 'cowardly' attitude at
Nagpur in 2004 or the outrageous tour of
South Africa in 2001, his personality, many a
time unintentionally ensured that the team was
constantly at tryst with conflict, both
internally and externally. For all one might
feel, it was not that
century against Zimbabwe, but the Chappell
controversy that sealed his fate. I may be
overly-critical of Ganguly - the player, but
as a leader, he was outstanding. Even though
he was a non-performing liability to the team
as a player, he ensured that his leadership
was a pure asset. As he finally gears up to
return as a player, he has not only passed on
the captain's armband to his former deputy,
Rahul Dravid, but also a rich legacy of
success, of a team that stood up and made
themselves a part of every contest.
Which school of captaincy will Dravid belong
to ? Whatever little I have seen of him,
Dravid will ensure that India don't miss the
Dadagiri. He might come across as someone, who
seems friendly, as emotionless as a Roger
Federer, but deep down within himself, lies a
professional, a thorough one. Dravid will
surely take the positives of his ex-boss and
try to merge them with his own fresh ideas he
has in store. Another aspect of Dravid that
will be worth a notice will be that he would
lead from the front. Captaincy would be just
another responsibility for him over his
already heavy shoulders, but knowing Dravid
and having interacted with him, it shouldn't
ruffle him much. For now, life seems rosier
than ever under Dravid and Chappell. It will
be interesting to see if they can help India
secure a good enough series win against the
visitors. As of now, lets just learn to move
on and usher the Dravidian era of Indian
cricket.