Never have the course of two cricketers run parallel in a manner as remarkable as in the case of Sourav Chandidas Ganguly and Rahul Sharad Dravid. With Ganguly recently retired and if things don't improve much, Dravid very likely to follow in his footsteps, this is a good time to reflect on their respective careers, both remarkable in their own right, but making even more fascinating a study when viewed in contrast with each other, something on the lines of the plot of many Jeffrey Archer novels.
Their rise to the Indian team prior to their Lords debut ran parallel. Dravid served out an extended apprenticeship in the domestic circuit as Karnataka's mainstay evoking frequent comparisons from the local press to G R Vishwanath and Brajesh Patel. Ganguly, on the other hand was never a major run machine in domestic cricket like Dravid and Laxman and came into his own on the international stage only. Unlike Dravid again, who was serious about cricket from his schooldays, Ganguly simply came from a family of club cricketers and took to the game seriously only after he was selected for the disastrous tour of Australia in 1992. The tour started Ganguly's brush with controversy as talk of his refusal to carry drinks surrounded him. He remained controversial for his entire career winning more foes than friends in the international circuit, was hugely unpopular in his county stints and incurred the wrath of match referees more than any other captain in living memory.
Off the field too, Ganguly was the more dashing, eloping with his childhood sweetheart in the face of family opposition and his much publicized affair with Nagma. Dravid, throughout remained the committed, model cricketer, universally liked, diligent to a fault and correct to the extent of being boring.
There was a time when the face of the Indian batting was always that of a 'Bombayite'. Right from Vijay Merchant to Dilip Sardesai or Sunil Gavaskar to Sachin Tendulkar to the much hyped Rohit Sharma, the city of Bombay has always staked a claim to the premier batsmen of any generation. The strength of the Bombay faction in the BCCI has always been paramount and has dominated the scene of Indian cricket, both on and off the field. Dravid and Ganguly were not only significant actors who were instrumental in breaking through the dominance of this clique and giving the Indian team a non-parochial face for the first time, they were themselves the most important part of it. That they replaced Vinod Kambli and Sanjay Manjrekar, two Bombay lads who were supposed to be the mainstay of our batting along with Sachin makes this all the more remarkable. Their Lord's debut was not the ideal platform for a youngster looking to ease into the team. On a fast, swinging track they came together with India in a spot of bother. They could not have been more dissimilar in style. Ganguly, later to be described by his partner at the other end as next only to God on the offside kept easing the ball through the point and cover regions. Dravid, then a predominantly leg side player relied more on playing off his pads. Ganguly, as we all know scored a century on debut and Dravid made 95.
In the next Test Ganguly scored yet another ton and Dravid missed out yet again being dismissed on 88. This was to be a reflection of things to come as they grew into two of India's premier batsmen. While Ganguly was the leading run scorer in ODIs till the turn of the century even beating Sachin for four out of five seasons, Dravid established himself as rock solid Test batsmen. It was also to be Dravid's fate for a large part of his career to be a pretty bridesmaid who gave numerous sterling performances only to be overshadowed by Ganguly or Tendulkar. The script continued into the new century when Ganguly was appointed captain and Dravid his deputy.
The Kolkata Test in 2001 was, in a sense the turning point in many ways for both, for Ganguly as a captain and for Dravid as a batsman. Hitting his way out of a slump in the most dramatic of matches must have given Dravid a lot of confidence as his star soared thereafter and he gradually came out of the shadows of his distinguished peers to become India most valuable player for the next half of a decade. He scored runs all over the world, adapted perfectly to the one-day set up, filled in as a wicket keeper when required and was a great support of his captain. For Ganguly, this was the beginning of the golden period as a captain. He had the uncanny ability as a captain to back match winning performers and get the best of them. Many believe that had Ganguly not been made the captain, he would have achieved a lot more as batsman. It is possible, for the biggest problem with Ganguly's batting was that it did not develop after a point. While Dravid and Sachin have constantly evolved as batsmen, made various adjustments to their game; Ganguly, once he has been sorted out, never managed to overcome his deficiencies.
It is universally believed that Dravid was a clearly inferior captain to Ganguly. I am not entirely sure. Ganguly introduced a lot of self-belief in his team and helped us get over out timid chokers tag and that was what we needed then. But, he was never a great tactician. He was easily rattled as a captain and many a times let the momentum slip through out of a lack of imaginative captaincy. Dravid, was a much more collected man on the field. His captaincy on the field always has more of method to it than Ganguly's who was tactically always on the whimsical side especially with respect to his handling of spinners and part-time bowlers. But what Ganguly lacked in on-field tactics, he more than made up through the way his communicated with his players and allowed them to flourish. Dravid tended more to lead by example through his own performances and commitment but despite the bulk of his runs never really had the aura of a leader.
While Ganguly left on high, scoring significant runs against the top team in the world in his farewell series, Dravid has so far doggedly stuck around in the midst of calls for his head. In the past month, many a sports journalists have made a living out of stories on the lines of 'the Wall crumbling'. His century at Mohali notwithstanding, despite being full of character and a testimony to his tenacity, I have a feeling Dravid will not have a swan song to end his career. If there is one thing that he has lacked in his otherwise illustrious career, it is the sense of timing that his longtime colleague and onetime co-debutante always had.
Posted by: Kaushik Lakshman at December 29, 2008 1:00 PM
Just because Ganguly has retired, that does not mean that Dravid too has to do the same. He did after all come out from a disastrous form slump to score a century at Mohali. Remember even though he has been out of form he played some of the most crucial knocks such as one in Perth.
The NZ tour will probably decide Dravid's career length.
Ganguly as a captain invoked the winning mentality in the indians. He was great as captain. But Dravid too was not all that bad. We hold the record of 16 consecutive successful chases in ODIs under his leaderdhip besides winning series in Pakistan(as acting captain),WI & England
Probably it is the 2007 world cup campaign that caused many to believe that he is one of the worst captains we have produced. inspite of these long awaited test series victories.
Ganguly & Sachin have no doubt been tremendous in ODI cricket but even Dravid has not lagged far behind. He was after all the Leading run scorer of 1999 WC.
Posted by: Kaushik Lakshman at December 29, 2008 1:03 PM
contd....
Ganguly's phenomenal test record as captain wud never have come about without Dravid's immense contributions. Both were equally indispensable,not only to the indian team but also to each other.
Posted by: Shivi Krishna at December 29, 2008 7:06 PM
Lovely Piece!
I bet every follower of this beautiful game would have some opinion on these greats.
But for me, its always the emotion and passion that both evoke in cricket lovers world over, thats special.
I am not sure if history would be kind to them and overlook their frailties, however, they would forever be remembered as men who wielded magic with their willows.
Posted by: Looch at December 29, 2008 11:08 PM
Ganguly was a good bat, never a great one, especially if you compare him to a mighty player like Dravid.
Posted by: Aditya at December 30, 2008 7:03 AM
The role of the captain is overrated by everyone. True, Saurav did a lot for Indian cricket as a captain, but he had the advantage of a team on a high, with everyone performing well. Dhoni has the same advantage. Look at Ricky Ponting: until recently he was touted as one of Australia's best...look what's happened now, and not a lot of it is his fault.
Posted by: JK at December 31, 2008 12:02 AM
Very nice write up. Agree with you that the NZ tour will pretty much decide Dravid's future. I hope he will go there because it is one of those places where most Indian batsmen tend to underachieve. We definitely need Dravid's stability in NZ. I also agree w/ Looch above that Dravid was a far greater batsman In fact I would say that Dravid is surpassed only by gavaskar and tendulkar in the pantheon of Indian greats...
Posted by: bjk at December 31, 2008 12:58 PM
Well, a captain is as good as his players. Captaincy in cricket I guess is overrated. Ganguly might have been a very good captain but remember some players perdormed extremely well during Ganguly's golden run as captian Drvaid being one among them. Unfortunately, the same players were not doing well when Dravid was the captain. Dravid backed Sehwag to the hilt but still Sehwag failed under him. Sometimes its about luck too which Dravid has often not had.
Posted by: Ashwin Sohani at December 31, 2008 4:34 PM
very well written article....
I hope they let you write a blog on the site...
Posted by: Rohith Reddy at January 1, 2009 4:04 AM
Excellent article! I agree with Kaushik about Saurav's n Rahul's captaincy..Every player in d team was in bad form during WC07..team lost and Rahul had to face the criticism... I think same thing happened under Sachin's captaincy too... No individual performances to speak at all..Under Saurav' captaincy whenever team is in trouble someone has rised their hand took the team out of trouble..dono if it is Saurav's luck or his ability to inspire the players...
Posted by: Vatsa at January 1, 2009 6:20 AM
Very nice and balanced piece, albeit on the positive side for both of India's top players in recent years. The portion on captaincy is also spot on.
Posted by: Manas at January 1, 2009 8:21 AM
a very well written blog about the 2 giants of indian cricket who are as different a chalk and cheese
Posted by: Chitrabhau Dasgupta at January 1, 2009 11:48 AM
Well guys i am not too entirely sure whether this piece is beautiful or excellant as this leads to many debates we can have. I just want a clarification about what u call much publicisized affair with Nagma which is ridiculous. He is one of the greatest family man inian cricket has ever had. U guys are so unsencitive. Man his chld is growing up .What can she think when she reads a lie about his father. I am pleading that please dont turnish the images of our heroes. And his tactical acumen, well i willnever forget how he changed side for Harbhajan in kolkata, 2001 from indian umpire's side by bowling a single over from reverse side.
Posted by: Mina Anand at January 3, 2009 9:56 AM
The one is an elegant ‘Southpaw’
The other a ‘right’-thinking cricketer
One can blast the opposition left,right and center!
The other can last till the opposition gives up
One wears his heart on his sleeve
The other has tricks up his sleeve
One is ‘in-your-face’
The other– ‘poker-faced’
One can be caught off-guard
The other always takes guard
One is late for the toss (the Aussies deserve it!)
The other doesn’t easily “go for a toss”
One is in and out of ‘jams’ (not of his own making)
The other is ‘jammy’(but seldom on a ‘sticky’ wicket)
One is a born leader
The other a leading Number Three
One is known to ‘lose his shirt’
The other– keeps it on !
One is ‘God’ of the off-side’
The other– ‘devilishly’ difficult to dislodge
One dances down the pitch –hits you for a six
The other rock-solid at the crease–seldom in a fix
The one– had his back to the wall(pushed by circumstances)
The other is‘The Wall’
Both stand tall. Both are their own men.
Posted by: umar at January 11, 2009 5:28 PM
well i believe that it was saurav who changed the face of indian cricket.it is true that the captain is as good as his team but only stalwarts he started his team with was that of tendulkar and dravid.the current indian team owns its roots to saurav ganguly. be it sehwag or yuvraj, irfan or zaheer all of them came up due to his backing. he made indians believe that they can can win anywhere whatever may be the opposition.imagine india before 2000 and after 2000 .one can see two faces of same team.currently dhoni is carrying the same confidence to next level. donot imagine india now imagine it in 1999 after the matchfixing
mess .saurav organised a disbanded army.although dravid has always been a better player but ganguly is best captain india had after kapil dev
Posted by: Nitin at January 21, 2009 6:52 PM
mate were u sleeping when Dravid was captain? He made sure he made all the wrong decisions even at the toss. What use is a captain who cant choose whether to bat or bowl at the toss? No doubt Dravid is a great cricketer but Ganguly is the better captain.
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