Differing strokes
I'm a little nonplussed with this Ganguly affair, mainly concerning the various reactions. For long, the wishlist of Indian fans has been for the Indian Board to be more Australian-like. The Aussies showed no compunctions in dropping the likes of Healy or Mark Waugh (please correct me if I am wrong) when they felt their time was over and even denying them fond farewells at home. I think Steve Waugh got away with it because he'd made it clear he was going to retire.In SCG's case, he is not going to retire (frankly, he is just 32 or 33 and surely he would feel he has a couple of years left), so I don't think what Gaurav suggests Dravid should have done in his post was feasible or even required (more on this post later).
If you want a professional board, you need to be able to take and swallow such "harsh" decisions - atleast in this case, there is a sufficient cricketing case rather than the lows of Noel David in the past. Whether this is any indication of a more professional selection committee, I don't know, but Test players have been dropped after doing much better in the past and it wasn't as if Ganguly was on top of the world.If you want a kinder board based on what a player has achieved in the past, then you need to devise severance/VRS packages and have a broad and kind HR policy :-)
Coming to Gaurav's post, I'm not very sure about Dravid being likened to Brutus. Let's examine the comments made by Dravid and Chappell. Their response to each question about Ganguly would have been (and was) examined under a microscope, perhaps even run through a voice processor for subtle tonal inflections! You expect the Indian captain (known for his political correctness) to say anything less than what he said about Ganguly's contributions in the match? Upto you to decide whether he was speaking the truth or willfully misleading everyone - he never said something on the lines of "oh, what a genius and how we missed him and if he hadn't been there, we'd have never won", did he? Also if Chappell says SCG is a "mentor", that thought should still hold in a professional setup - after all even if India's most successful captain is no longer among the top 6 batsmen in the team, he has a lot to offer off the field. Does he have to be in the playing 11 to provide these inputs? (could he have been in the 14? it's a call on how he'd respond to being in the squad without being in the 11 - perhaps they had just needed to leave him in the 14 and add another opener). At the same time, consider a selection meeting where Dravid is asked: who would you prefer, Ganguly or Yuvraj at 6? If his reply was Yuvraj, does that make him a Brutus-like figure. I think not. If Dravid had said "oh Ganguly made no worthwhile contribution in the Test", he'd have been crucified too. I don't think anyone is saying Yuvraj is the next Bradman, but it's a question of available resources and investments, ain't it? Instead of focussing on sorting out the opening problems, off we go on a tangent.
Whether Jaffar is the best option or not, I don't know - I haven't been following domestic cricket to that extent. The vacancy was in the opening slot, especially if you want to take 3 openers on a tour. But do you also want the Yuvrajs & Kaifs to get a run - of course. IMO too, Kaif could be a better Test player than Yuvraj, but so far Yuvraj has been preferred and I'm glad they haven't made an abrupt change. I don't understand what Gaurav and others mean by Ganguly having been denied a dignified exit - how do you decide this and how exactly do you ease a player out (who is not yet contemplating retirement)? Do you want to take him down in degrees?
Secondly, Gaurav wants Dravid to take a saner stand. He feels Dravid should have spoken his mind. But if the captain had spoken aloud and said "I don't want Ganguly at the cost of so and so player", he's a Brutus-like figure. If he'd said "Let's give him an honourable exit", then people would have been happier, but I think that would have shamed Ganguly more - being treated like an old family retainer people are too polite to speak the truth to. Let's cast our mind back to that famous declaration at 196* (at Multan, was it?). Dravid has shown this ruthless streak before and similarly caused a split in opinions. I refuse to believe yet that Dravid is anything less than a professional and like many of us who work in a professional setup, we must accept that such decisions have to be accepted without too much mollycoddling, for it's always going to come down to a question of subjective degrees. What does a phrase like "forced out" mean? Unless if a Test player voluntarily steps down (like one of those English captains once did - was it Mike Denness) or retires (like SRW), any player has to be "forced out" or "dropped" or "rested" depending on what turn of phrase catches your fancy. Why would it be any other way? Decorated Generals hopefully also need to know when their time is up - this general still feels (and why shouldn't he?) that he still has it in him. It's not time to make him a Field Marshal yet, is it? We need something like what they do in Britain to the annoying politicans - bump them up to the House of Lords! :-)
I guess my point is this: like most other people, I continue to be a Dravid fan, but unlike some of them, I don't want to be cynical of his motives.
10 comments:
I guess Kapil Dev is one of the examples being "eased" out. Ganguly should have been offered the same with a shorter time frame.
It is not always important to "pack' some one out. If that hasn't been done in past, that also does not means it should not be done so in future.
Why just creat an unwanted confusion and treat a senior player with utter disregard?
Why was he taken for this tour at all?
I think this could have been better handled by everyone of them. Tommorrow, if Sachin is meted such treatment, we can't say it's ok just because it has been happening before.
There are always better method around.
So far, Dravid has proved to be a good captaining purely based on on field performance. Off field, difficult to know. Though, some might argue that off field shows on field. My point is that Ganguly should have been given a longer run. Perhaps a series more. And then it was fair to drop him if he doesn't perform. That would have been professionalism. Rest is just personal taste.
A 'dignifed exit' will always be at the cost of the team.We have no idea of the tensions and confusion all this selection dramas lead to - read Out of My Comfort Zone for a frank account of the same.We also come to know of the 'professionalism' of the ACB.All this drama over his sacking is uncalled for.He was clearly in good form in Delhi. But he was dropped.It was based on some thinking/logic/politics by the selectors.At this stage,there is no other option but to go along with this .There have been such political decisions in the past and some of them have been very successful - remember the 1996 tour to England??
And Multan was 194*.
Another thing - There has been lot of criticism over politicians and parliament getting involved in this debate. If you consider that they haven't been doing much lately, it is not such a good idea but the importance that cricket has in the lives of Indians,I don't think it is 'wrong' on the part of the leaders to get into this 'left',right and centre.
Also - people have been questioning the cricketing merit of Sharad Pawar.The BCCI president doesn't need to be a Bradman - he needs to be an administrator of Saheb's class,efficiency and stature.The Selection committee is the one which should be loaded with cricketing statistics - and a keeper is always the one who has the best view of the game.Considering our structure, the selection committee has always done a fair job.Every selector in this world is criticised.It is a thankless job.More so in India.
Here is what I think
http://e-kid.blogspot.com/2005/12/gangulys-exclusion-from-3rd-test.html
Sorry, was busy the last few days so noticed this post only today.
It is not my point that Ganguly deserves to be in the team. I find it bizarre that they took him for the first two tests and then dropped him. Dalmiya had already lost.....what was the point in picking him at all?
Once they picked him up, they should have let him stay for the whole series unless he batted really badly.
You misunderstand my Brutus-ing of Dravid. I am not questioning his motives or calling him petty. I genuinely admire Dravid. And I don't think Brutus was an evil man either. But the fact remains that though so many men stabbed Caesar, the world remembers Brutus as having killed him. So it was bad politics, bad strategy on his part.
A few years later folks won't remember More or Pawar. They will say Dravid dropped Ganguly. Remember, even now, Gavaskar gets blamed for Kapil missing that test. No one remembers who the selectors were.
I just think Dravid should have been more assertive, either in the beginning and not let Ganguly be picked......or now and dropped him after the series, or a failure.
Plus the fact remains, if the dude is making runs and seems in decent form, why drop him?
People keep talking about Healy, Waugh, etc. I think I have made this point before. The dropping of those guys, or even Martyn, Clarke etc was truly professional, because there were Hodges and Husseys making bucketfuls of runs in domestic cricket and whenever they were given the chance. I don't see any such rightful contender now.
Yuvraj, if anything, is a lesser batsman at least on Indian tracks facing the Lankans.
Lest my above comment seem contradictory when i say "i dont say he deserves to be in the team" and "why drop him", I mean that i think Ganguly should now be judged on form rather than class. Drop him when he hits a rough patch. But dropping him at such a time? Bad cricket AND bad politics.
Let's cast our mind back to that famous declaration at 196* (at Multan, was it?). Dravid has shown this ruthless streak before .............. ruthless selfishness.......
i fail to see how people can honestly believe that dravid declared on 194 in multan with the sole intention of hurting sachin
I have to laugh at Bruno's comment. Nobody remembers the fact that Sachin was dragging things along, and doing nothing to up the rate. "Team above self" is Dravid's mantra. And if that is "selfishness", then hyper-selfish is what he is. :)
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