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Celebrating Rahul Dravid

Posted by Cricinfo - on 11/11/2008

From Gopal Rangachary, India

I can remember July 1st 2006, as clear as it were yesterday. Rahul Dravid after having scored over 40% of India's first innings of 200 on a Jamaica minefield, was compiling an even better half century in the second innings to set up another Indian test match win overseas. A performance largely ignored because it coincided with the Soccer World Cup, and happened past normal people's bed times in India, it was probably the best bad wicket batting by an Indian batsman in 20 years, since Sunny Gavaskar signed off with that tragic 96 at Bangalore against Pakistan. As Cricinfo said “It was like a game happening on 2 pitches, one for Dravid and another for the 21 others (including Lara, Chanderpaul, Sarwan, VVS, Sehwag and co).":

Watching him bat that day, if you had come up to me and said that it would be the last significant contribution Rahul Dravid would make to Indian Test cricket, I would have directed you to the psychiatric department of a much recommended hospital. Further, he was Indian captain then, Ganguly it seemed was gone for ever, Sachin was once again out with injury , and VVS had failed to capitalize on the chance to bat at his beloved No 3 position.

I used to joke that only 2 people in India knew when to quit at the top of their game, Gavaskar and Sonia Gandhi, and was sure Dravid would be an addition to that list. As I write this piece Dravid has played possibly his last Test innings (3 off 14 after a second ball duck to Jason Krezja-). In the 25 test matches since that Jamaica masterpiece he has averaged half his earlier career average of 58, has been dropped from the one day side, and will hopefully go before he is shoved from the Test team.

He has endured misery in the 2007 World Cup and humiliation in the IPL, and gave up the captaincy abruptly to the great benefit of thousands of conspiracy theorists. Well, you know what, I actually blame myself for this. We hear sportsmen are superstitious, but very little has been written about the superstition of sports fans. When I moved into my apartment in Bangalore in August 2002, the first Test match I watched was the Headingley one, where Dravid's masterful 148 led India to victory. The Jamaica Test mentioned earlier was the last match I saw in that apartment.

My new house is nice, but unlucky for Dravid The aim of this piece is not to bemoan his fate , or to urge him to go, but simply to celebrate the greatest match winner (batsman) India has ever produced. Before you sharpen your knives, read the phrase again 'match winner'.

From the start of the Ganguly era through till that Jamaica game in 2006, Dravid averaged 96 runs an innings in the 17 matches India won. It gets better - he averaged 108 in the 7 overseas wins in that period, 111 in the 12 wins under Saurav Ganguly, and played masterpieces such as his double hundreds in Adelaide and Rawalpindi, 2 hundreds in the same game at Calcutta, the 148 on a Headingley green top and that epic partnership with VVS in THAT match in Calcutta in 2001. Just by comparison Sachin averaged 55 in that same period in India wins and 52 in wins under Saurav. Almost every major overseas win in that period seemed to be shaped by Dravid. That doesn't necessarily mean that he was a better batsman than Sachin, simply one whose performances meant more.

I read an article by Salim Yousuf on Gavaskar's epic knock of 96 at Bangalore in 1986. Yousuf was the Pakistani wicketkeeper who scored the second highest score in that match (45 not out) - and he mentioned "I batted despite the pitch, played my natural game and took risks, while Sunny played the perfect game for that pitch." So while a Sachin backed himself to hit Shane Warne over deep mid wicket, even if was bowling leg spinners into the rough from around the wicket, VVS would hit a sharply turning leg break over cover, and follow up with a flick over midwicket from an identical ball, and Saurav would back himself to beat the most populous off side cordon, Dravid would play in a risk free fashion - with a perfect technique.

A Sanjay Bangar watching Dravid at the other end at Headingley, would probably feel that he could try to play the same way as Dravid. However watching Sachin collar a perfectly good ball over extra cover, would probably leave him awestruck. Dravid has the record for the maximum number of 100 partnerships, and it is my theory that a lot of it has to do with the way he bats.

I also felt Dravid was a lucky cricketer. His 233 in Adelaide was backed up by the most unlikely bowling performance from Ajit Agarkar, when he scored 180 at Calcutta in that partnership with VVS, Harbhajan Singh and Sachin Tendulkar bowled the Aussies out in the last session, Kumble won India the Calcutta test against Pakistan, after Dravid had scored hundreds in both innings ( and Dinesh Karthik's 93 too).

In contrast, Tendulkar has often been a tragic hero. An epic 100 at Madras against Pakistan was wasted by India's spineless lower order, when the 4 of them couldn't muster 15 runs between them, and many of his best innings have been lone hands. We have lost more matches than we have won when Sachin has scored a hundred.

As captain, Dravid was probably a disappointment. I thought he would bring his obviously immense cricketing acumen to the captaincy, and his start in one day cricket was encouraging. He was the only captain who knew how to use power plays and super subs- and he was willing to be adaptable - The one day series against Pakistan was won 4-1 without a single over of spin being bowled, for instance.

Funnily though, I have always felt that the conventional wisdom of Dravid's captaincy was completely off the mark. We have often heard that Dravid was a 'weak and defensive' captain. I felt it was his endeavour to be strong and aggressive that actually cost India. Would Saurav Ganguly really have declared when Sachin was on 194? Would a defensive captain have gone in with a 5 man bowling attack and put the England in at Bombay when all India needed was a draw? What about that audacious attempt to steal the Nagpur Test against England at the end? I felt Dravid's biggest failure as a captain was not being able to figure out when to be defensive.

And finally Rahul Dravid, the man. There is so much speculation and guessing we do based on things we see on the field, but you often hear the words 'A perfect gentleman' said about Dravid. I will only go by what I have heard directly, and a couple of things come to mind. Firstly his practice at the end of every series to specifically thank the opposing captains and team, for either their hospitality (or their visit as the case may be), and secondly his reaction to how he felt about being dropped from the one day side early in his career. In an interview with Rajdeep Sardesai he said "A lot of people did come and say to me that I deserved to be in the side, but I knew that I had to improve my all round game."

Unfortunately in inane diatribes about 'New India' , we seem to feel that innate decency conflicts with the willingness to win and determination. Ask the bowlers who tried to get Dravid out in his pomp, whether his was a soft wicket. He may not have been much of a sledger, but the bowlers knew that they were in for a hard grind when Dravid was around.

Dravid will not end his career with the record for the maximum matches, runs, centuries or even catches. His departure will be quiet, overshadowed by Saurav Ganguly and the exultation following the series win. People in Bangalore have never stopped trains or burnt effigies in his support. He may still have the contractual obligation to tolerate the idiosyncrasies of Vijay Mallaya and Ray Jennings. However, he will leave the game as India's greatest match winner with the bat and conclusively proved that good guys don't necessarily finish last.

 
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Posted by: Brendanvio at November 11, 2008 10:37 AM

Rahul Dravid has been a fantastic cricketer. His main fault with his batting, particularly of late, has been his inability (Or unwillingness) to turn over the strike.

Unfortunately his time is probably up, and India have found a suitable candidate to replace him in Murali Vijay, but they should not forget the man who is easily India's greatest ever first drop.

Posted by: Lavanya at November 11, 2008 1:37 PM

well i am die hard fan of rahul dravid and to be very honest hez just short of encouragement and motivation
once the public give him the support tht he deserves thn automatically he'll do well
so i guess nothing's wrong with him
its just tht the wall ius under a maintenance work and will be stronger thn ever for the england series
rock on rahul

Posted by: Avi Singh at November 11, 2008 8:13 PM

Couldn't agree more, Rahul Dravid has been a fine ambassador for Indian cricket and it has been a privilege for a mere mortal like myself to watch this unassuming yet strong character win India Test matches with his technically wonderful style. The world will become a worse place the day that Jammy retires.

Posted by: Kaushik Thinnaneri Ganesan at November 12, 2008 2:30 AM

Succinct. Brilliant. A genuine thank-you.
PS: I'm hoping we have one last hurrah from him.

Posted by: Mahesh at November 12, 2008 6:44 AM

India's greatest match winner ? He has 8 Man of the match awards from 128 tests, of which 4 were drawn test matches! You can call him India's greatest match drawer!

Posted by: kumar at November 13, 2008 3:00 PM

We all look forward Dravid to be in the record books with maximum no. of catches surpass 181 currently held by Mark Waugh. Dravid with 179 is just 2 short of that achievement

Posted by: Madan Gopal at November 13, 2008 8:36 PM

Absolutely wonderful write-up. However,I would like to add the fact that he has never got the praise he has deserved. For example,we won a series under Rahul's captaincy in England after 21 years and what did he face?. Why did he not enforce the follow-on? The gentleman he is,you hardly get to hear or read how he feels about all these. Even when Mallya went ballistic, you never heard a whisper from Dravid. All I can say is that we are blessed to have a cricketer and a humanbeing like Jammy. Let us celebrate his cricket,personality as long as he lasts. I still feel, he will have a fabulous series against England and sign off on a high. He is and he will be India's greatest matchwinner

Posted by: Chandra at December 24, 2008 10:14 AM

Good write-up. It is fact & true that Dravid is a most dedicated & selfless cricketer just played cricket without fus or politics. He will be remebered as 'nice guy' and 'gentlemen cricketer' for ever. He shown his angry, gritty, dissopintment thru his batting and building-up partnerships, scoring runs when India needed and contributed well in Indias wins or Draw. His only week points is he never complained. I feel the present people doesn't want silent players!!!!

Posted by: deekay at April 10, 2009 3:04 AM

@Mahesh

When Dravid scored 180 at the Eden, he wasn't awarded the Man of the Match because Laxman scored 281. This doesn't mean that Dravid's effort wasn't a match-winning innings.

He played numerous knocks just like the Eden one... all in winning causes where he was much more a bit player or a "match-drawer". You nonchalantly discredit Dravid simply because several of these knocks were overshadowed by other outstanding performances.

Posted by: vibh_ch at July 22, 2009 11:18 AM

Great article.Dravid is among the greatest No.3 batsman the game has known.Imagine a player of his calibre keeping the wickets in 70-odd ODIs and open with Viru,both of which were to accomodate others in the team.His is a major contribution in changing the face of Indian cricket and turn it into such a potent force today be it any format,anywhere in the world.It surely is for the better of Indian cricket.Indian cricket could have suffered if he had not held the batting together when hardly any of the 30-odd openers tried settled in the team.He has set an example by coming back in ODIs and scoring 10000 runs,when he was deemed ODI-misfit.Hope every generation of Indian cricket can find such a man,one of dignity,unflappable commitment,dedication to the team`s cause and at large for a nation`s claim to be a great sporting nation.

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