Friday, February 24, 2006

I L S G ( I Love Saurav Ganguly)

I am not first person to write about Ganguly and certainly not last. At the same time, I am not in majority when I say that I love Ganguly but I won’t be in the minority either. Strange as it may sound but I believe that Ganugly saga is a test of Indian mentality, questioning their abhorrence towards brashness, aggressiveness and their timidity. It will show who do we, as Indians, want to be in the future?

Love him or hate him, one has to agree that Ganguly was a great one-day player and certainly a great captain. His record in one-days is unbeatable and his commitment towards his team is unquestionable. I am kind of biased towards lefty batsmen. That is why I like Lara more than Tendulkar and for me the joy of watching Ganguly rampaging through oppositions bowling line-up is incomparable.

May be I am reading too much between the lines but the brashness, arrogance and aggressiveness of Ganguly certainly mirrors the youth spirit. His naked shirt waving stint in England, best possible answer to the country that whines like a new born baby when then come to India. His ‘waiting’ tactics against Steve Waugh and Co. is a best possible to Australians who sledge against us because they feel being Australians makes them superior to us. Such examples are numerous and his captaincy record certainly proves that this arrogance backed with professionalism lead India to dizzying heights, comparable to 1983 Indian team. For me the best part of his captainship was his unwavering support to his team mates. If it were not Ganguly then Mr. Dravid was well on his way out in 2000. Same thing applies to Harbhajan Singh too. Because of Ganguly, we have such a array of young talent in the team. He bought and nurtured players like Yuvraj Singh, Virendra Sehwag, Harbhajan Singh, Mohammad Kaif, Mahendra Dhoni, Irfan Pathan and the list just goes on. When they came to team they felt that someone is looking out for them and ready to support them come high and low. Such camaraderie and unity rare in India team in recent past certainly helped team in winning against everyone and virtually everywhere.

But, Ganugly is not related to Cricket only. Cricket is the biggest sport in India and though, national game of India is Hockey, the sheer number of Cricket players in domestic circuit are probably more than Hockey fans. So, captain of Indian Cricket team is more than the leader of 11 gentleman playing on the field, he is more than just a good cricketer, he is more of leading Indian youth aspiration. He has to win every time because he is leading Indian pride. Indian youth carries emotions on their wrist. They are talking about world domination. And even though China is giving stiff competition and the ‘colossus’ US is still very much on the stage, the amazing success of IT sector seems to be cementing the belief that 21st century belongs to India. But, this confidence is completely absent in Indian political class as they are too busy in filling their bank accounts and perhaps, saving their ass. So, whether one likes cricket or not, it is the most gentlemanly way for Indian youth to express themselves and perhaps, get the feeling of superiority.

I don’t want to imply that Ganguly was unblemished. I don’t want to say that he should be in the team if he was performing badly. But the treatment given to him when he was still successful in his captaincy is certainly not a good precedence of treating our heroes. We need heroes. We need honest, hard working and perhaps, a bit cocky people to lead us. We definitely need integrity and talent but not the timidity of Dravid. Dravid is certainly a great player and my prove to be good captain in the future too but he seems to be carry colonial burden and as Gavaskar said earlier, as long as we carry this colonial burden we won’t be winners.

P.S. "What had upset Ganguly most was Chappell's comments in the interview given to the newspaper that the Kolkata stalwart wanted to cling on to the India captaincy for financial reasons."

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ganguli is a kid .

One in the crowd said...

I guess a few facts need to be revisited...

'Mr. Dravid' is definitely not timid...just because he doesn't rave or rant like Saurav, he doesn't become timid...he is one of the gutsiest players in modern day cricket...secondly, why do you forget that Dravid's consent to keep wickets was crucial to Ganguly's strategy...

And hello, Ganguly nurtured Dhoni?? Probably you're talking of another game here...had Ganguly been around, Dravid would have been still keeping wickets and we wouldn't have had a regular keeper...

I agree he is a hero but he could have done better than being a grumpy loser...if he ganged up with Dalmiya to have his way, it was just a matter of time before he faced the music himself...

I am surprised Chinmay coz unlike all your earlier posts, this one is ill researched and opinionated.

Chinmay 'भारद्वाज' said...

May be I was too harsh in saying that Dravid is timid. He is certainly a good cricketer. Plus his wife is from my hometown. So he is our Jamai-raja! Anyways.
May be I am kind of biased towards Ganguly too. But, I sincerely believe that Ganguly nurtured the current crop of youngsters. All this hoopla of having young side, one has to remember that half the team is young. Ganguly experimented with lot of youngsters. Only way he could accommodate Dravid in 2000 was giving him wicketkeeper position. He did it. Then if one remembers then we had bunch of wicketkeepers since then, to name few, Saba Karim, Parthiv Patel, Sameer Dighe, MSK Prasad etc. Dhoni’s wicket-keeping is not exactly of great standards either. He is miles away from Gilchrist. He is a great batsman but if he fumbles up few more catches and fails as a batsman in the future, he is out of the team. Similarly, Pathan took 10 wickets in one innings against Bangladesh and he was immediately flown to Australia only on Dadas behalf. No wonder, during the tests in Pakistan, he went to take Dadas advice when he wasn’t getting any wickets. The result, Dada is thrown out of team next day.
Again, I am not saying that he should be kept in the team on past laurels but the way he is being treated by BCCI, Chappell and Dravid makes me wonder if Indians know how to handle their heroes or they only know back-stabbing. Even Azaruddin was not treated this shabbily. Even though he literally was a traitor.

(A journalist recalls being phoned by Ganguly to watch a youngster in a first-class game that was being televised. "Aap is ladke ko dekho. Badaa khilaadi hoga yeh. Mujhe khilaana hai. (Watch this boy. He is going to be a big player. I want to pick him right away.)" A few months on, Mahendra Singh Dhoni smashed 148 against Pakistan from No. 3.)
(http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/cricinfomagazine/content/current/story/236016.html)