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India seeks bright future as stars wane
The very thought of Sachin Tendulkar and his contemporaries being shown the exit door would have been dismissed a year ago, but the majority of the Indian cricket fans are now convinced that the 'golden generation' should make way for new blood.
After a decade-and-a-half of blind worship, fans believe their demigods have been rendered immobile by feet of clay and are ready to thank them for the memories and move on.
The last time Tendulkar featured in a newspaper poll was when readers were asked who should be the first sportsperson to receive India's highest civilian award, a Bharat Ratna.
As India succumbed to their second straight overseas whitewash in Australia, a newspaper carried a poll this weekend in which more than 36 percent opined the 38-year-old 'Little Master' should hang up his bat.
Quite a significant percentage, considering the man in question has virtually been the sacred cow of Indian cricket since his first Test century in 1990.
The results were even worse for the two stalwarts Tendulkar sits sandwiched between in the batting order.
More than 58 percent favoured 39-year-old Rahul Dravid's immediate departure while 82.6 percent would prefer not to see VVS Laxman (38) in India colours again.
"Age is conspiring against them," former Test player Ravi Shastri wrote in a column that appeared in Sunday's Times of India newspaper.
"A bad series or two at the start of your career is almost a given. A series or two at the end is a catastrophe. Everyone is in an unforgiving mood."
From India's perspective, the Australia tour was a disaster, where anything that could go possibly wrong invariably did.
The biggest letdown was the vaunted batting order where Tendulkar, Dravid and Laxman - who have more than 37,500 Test runs between them - made a collective contribution of 636 runs in the four-Test series.
Dravid, who alone had scored 619 in the drawn 2003-04 series, managed just 194 runs at an average of fewer than 25 per innings.
His legendary defence, that earned him the moniker of "The Wall", was breached seven times in eight innings, including by a Peter Siddle no-ball in Melbourne.
TIMID SELECTORS
Some other hard-earned reputations were also sullied. Laxman was a pale imitation of the batsman who has been Australia's nemesis for so long and scratched around for his 155 runs from eight innings to finish with an embarrassing sub-20 average.
Only Tendulkar averaged 35-plus in the series and regularly middled the ball, but his desperate bid for a 100th international century seems to have become a millstone around the neck of cricket's most prolific batsman.
Almost inevitably, India hurtled from one defeat to another and many believe the humiliation could have been easily averted had the selectors shrugged off their timidity and took a long-term view of things.
"I can understand the fans being in awe of big names. But sometimes the selectors and officials are also too much in awe of the big names and that's why not able to take tough decisions," former Test player Sanjay Manjrekar said.
His views were echoed by former Australia captain Ian Chappell, who recommended a thorough review of Indian cricket.
"The star system is well and truly ingrained in the Indian team and things won't improve, certainly not on the overseas Test match front, until this is changed," Chappell wrote in a column.
"India is currently a side full of individually bright stars and it needs to become a group of cricketers who perform as a team. It doesn't help when a number of those individually bright stars are playing for their own survival.
"... the star players have held sway for too long and surely eight successive losses, some of them total capitulation, is confirmation that the system is not working," Chappell added.
To make it work again, the Indian cricket board has no other choice but to confront the transitional crisis they have been avoiding for too long and their task has been made easier by the fact they finally have the country's fans on the same page.
Keywords:Sachin Tendulkar , Indian cricket fans ,golden generation,blind worship, fans, sportsperson , India's highest civilian award,Bharat Ratna,Little Master, Indian cricket ,Rahul Dravid,VVS Laxman ,Test player Ravi Shastri , Sunday's Times , India newspaper,Peter Siddle, Melbourne, international century , Sanjay Manjrekar ,Australia captain ,Ian Chappell.
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