Ganguly is too good a player to be counted out
Santhosh S - 5 June 2001
The Indian captain has been giving interviews to the media claiming
how stronger he has emerged after the India-Australia Test series. All
credit to him; in spite of all the pressures on and off the field,
Sourav Ganguly has emerged as a tough leader of men, even making
Steve Waugh talk about it.
As a player Ganguly has a handful of problems to deal with. Lately he
has become the weak link in the strong middle-order batting lineup.
Fast bowlers around the world would reckon they have a good chance
of dismissing him with a quick rising delivery. Ganguly has had
time to work on his technical faults in the last two months, which
also includes the training camp in Bangalore.
Ganguly's record at home this season speaks for itself. In five Test
matches on batting friendly tracks, he has scored a mere 228 runs at
a dismal average of 28.50. England's Nasser Hussain is the other captain who has had a rather similar wretched run with the bat in the near past. With international cricket being played at its competitive best these days, Ganguly just cannot afford to fail with the bat.
Given the fact that the players have asked for a contract of sorts and
that the BCCI President has promised a graded system of payment, any
captain should be 'value for money'. Ganguly has had a meteoric rise
in Indian cricket ever since he scored back-to-back hundreds against
England in his first two Test matches. Now that VVS Laxman has
delivered the goods that he has been promising for so many years, the
Indian middle order is rather heavy with the likes of Sachin
Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid around.
The selectors have made Ganguly's life easier by suggesting that the
'standing in' man of Indian cricket, Rahul Dravid would open the
innings if required. One wonders the wisdom of having Dravid being the
standby wicket keeper and even the standby opener. Surely there must
be an efficient way to deal with the situation. After all, Indians
have a professional coach in John Wright and one expects the best from
the team management.
The onus is on Ganguly to score runs heavily in Zimbabwe and lead
India to a Test series win abroad in more than seven years. His record
against Zimbabwe is not heartening either. In the run up to the Test
series, Ganguly has had moderate success with the bat as other leading
batsmen went on a leather hunt and scored hundreds. A half-century
against the CFX Academy is all he has to take with him into the
first Test match. Only time would tell whether Ganguly would
emerge successful in his bid to redeem his personal glory and that of
Indian cricket; he is just too good a player to be counted out.
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