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 Captain of the decade: Sourav Ganguly
		
		
				
					
					
				
				
					
				
		
			
				
					
No conversation about this decade of Indian cricket is complete  without a suitable amount of time being spent on debating the phenomenon  who brought about the push-pull tactics to the fore. From being pushed  around through the use of verbal tactics to being pulled into a trap,  Indian cricket’s greatest transformation this decade was the  fearlessness with which they approached their opponents and managed to  get under their skin. 
From a players’ skipper to the peoples’ skipper, Sourav Ganguly made  the transition from being the outsider within his team to finding a  place in Indian cricketing folklore. Having established his credentials  as a player, Ganguly took on the ominous task of leading the national  team with the agenda of showing the world that Indian cricket was tough,  intuitive and uncompromising.
 In 2000, when Ganguly took over as skipper, he inherited Indian  cricket in the midst of confusion and a crisis that was triggered by the  match-fixing controversy. There was no clarity of thought, no plan, and  no actionable ideas. It was time to bring about a change.
 
Come 2001 and Ganguly played the role of a shrewd tactician to  perfection. Australia, having won 15 Tests in a row, came to win over –  what skipper Steve Waugh termed as – the ‘final frontier’. Australia had  not won a series in India since 1969. In the world of international  cricket, they were the undisputed rulers of the game, a team that had  conquered every cricketing pitch. And now India was the prize.
 
The new leader though laid out a different agenda. ‘Waugh can forget  about the numbers 16, 17 and 18,’ Ganguly said. Never before had an  Indian captain displayed such guts prior to the start of any series, let  alone against Australia. But of course Ganguly was different. He could  say and do the unexpected. He was unusual and unconventional.
 
Australia hammered India in the first Test at Mumbai to win it within  three days; and then had them on the mat in Kolkata before VVS Laxman  and Rahul Dravid turned on the magic on day four and that young spinner  Harbhajan Singh came to the party on day five. Sachin Tendulkar roared  back in form in the third Test at Chennai and Harbhajan won the  ‘Turbanator’ sobriquet.
 
Ganguly had cemented his place as Team India’s undisputed leader with  the defence of the final frontier. The message sent out was loud and  clear: this land belongs to us; you can’t take it over.
 
India had found a new cult figure; a folk hero about whom tales would  abound and be passed from one generation to another. Tales about how he  made Steve Waugh wait for the toss. An act that according to a  celebrated cricket writer of our times ‘started as a misjudgment and  became an amusement that turned into a strategy’.
 
In 2002, the bare-chested Ganguly stunt on the Lord’s balcony was to  become the defining moment of his captaincy. There was no place for  decorum and norms. It did not matter it was the Lord’s – the holiest of  cricketing holies. It was India’s first one-day tournament victory after  having lost nine in a row, six of them under Ganguly.
 
Over the next year-and-a-half Ganguly and Team India climbed the  heights and celebrations of its success reached a crescendo with the  spectacular show at the 2003 Cricket World Cup in South Africa. An  appearance in the final had come after 20 years and Ganguly was the  toast of the nation. Finally, he was being mentioned in the same breath  as legends like Kapil Dev and Sunil Gavaskar. I don’t think it mattered  much to Ganguly as much as it mattered to the people. He did what he had  to do, the rest just fell into place.
 
Ganguly though understood the value of gestures and the importance of  appearances. He had an eye for picking and nurturing talent, backing  them to the brink and leading by example in the critical hour. What else  can explain Yuvraj Singh’s comment on his first comeback when he said  ‘I can die for this captain’.
 
If the Lord’s balcony show was a defining moment in his captaincy,  Ganguly’s century in the first Test at The Gabba in the 2003-04 tour of  Australia was, according to me, the highest moment of his playing career  and one that set the tone for the series. The Aussies paid the price of  under-estimating the skipper. They threw all that they had, bounced  him, tested him, but Ganguly stood there, scoring an invaluable 144. It  was this performance that confirmed once and for all that the man could  not be shaken. He was the rock.
 
More glory was in store after Australia. Victory in Pakistan was  another peak conquered, but unfortunately it was the peak of a slippery  slope. The beginning of the end came soon after India lost the home  series to Australia at Nagpur and then his loss of personal form  coincided with India’s insipid ODI performance. His differences with  Greg Chappell were leaked into public domain and the career of a  formidable Indian captain was in jeopardy. Ganguly struggled with his  form and his fitness levels, and there was a clear desperation to hold  on to his job.
 But he was not one to be defeated. He capped a fairytale comeback  with the South Africa series and went on to put on some superlative  displays in England and then in the home series against Pakistan. But  the end seemed to be imminent. And finally on October 7, 2008 – two days  prior to the start of the first Test against Australia – Ganguly told a  press conference that this series would be his last. As I listened to  the news and filed it for my website, I ran a movie-clip of Ganguly’s  decade in my head. But there was one certainty now. There was no chance  of losing his place. He had timed his departure in the same manner he  used to time the ball on the off-side – cleanly and sweetly.
 
Taken as a whole, Ganguly’s contribution has been more than a  triumph. As a player, he was prepared to take on challenges. As a  captain, he was prepared to stand up for his players. As a man, he  earned his stripes. He was neither the saint nor the devil. But he  served Indian cricket with distinction and left a legacy for other  skippers to follow.
Keywords:Sourav Ganguly , sports news, daily news, today sports news, hot news
				
			 
			
		 
			
				
			
				
			
			
			
		 
	 
	
	
 
		
		
		
	
 
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
	
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