Wednesday, December 20, 2006

My Second Coming Too..

Raving about Saurav Ganguly's determination and grit does not stop me from apologizing to my readers for the lack of substance that was visible on the blog. I was handling some major professional and academic assignments that did not make it easy for me to slot in time to write on the topics. I am sure, in the coming days and weeks - the blog shall see a splurge of articles on various issues, largely concerning Asian cricket.

Cheers,
Venkat Ananth

The Rebirth - Ganguly's Second Coming !

This time last year, the sacked Indian captain Saurav Ganguly was yet to recover from the saga that perhaps stunned Indian cricket - his sacking. Speculations were rife over his future and instead of gearing himself for his cricketing assignments, the man was facing mordacious balderdash from the Indian media. Sympathy surrounded him and even his daughter couldn't refrain herself from questioning his non-presence in Team India. Somewhere, the prowess conflicted itself with the hunger and things did not work his way. Time decided to move on and so did Indian cricket. Change did it for him, perhaps.

Today, life has indeed come a full circle for Dada. Change did it for him, again. The selection committee's decision to include him for the South African tour did raise many eyebrows but having seen the first Test, Dilip Vengsarkar was spot on ! There were shades of freshness in the way he went about his business, having seen the dynamics of what Team India missed due to his absence. There was a certain method, largely unassociated with the Ganguly game. The pair of eyes were lensed with a never-before determination and application followed. The flamboyance took a back-seat and all that he'd learned or unlearned in the past 10 months was put into practice. To be on the franker side of the divide, I was quite skeptical of Ganguly's selection, let alone inclusion. But thanks to a string of big scores for both Bengal and East Zone, he put himself on the selector's notepad, and then it was a mere formality. This was the Ganguly I was expecting, not the one who lived on his past laurels or political proximity or for that matter the captain's job ! The difference is the mental psyche with which he approached the game. For a world-class player who was on the wane, talent was never going to be an issue. If any, how he took the setback in his stride and worked his way in shows the mental effort on the part of Saurav. For people who feel that Ganguly's selection is the biggest slap on Chappell's face or ego, think again. In hindsight, such tough decisions could define Indian cricket.

I for one recall a newspaper report, highly Kolkattan by nature, talking about how Dada used his privileged club membership at East Bengal during these beleaguered times to return as a fully fit cricketer. However degraded the Indian football league maybe, the emphasis on fitness in football is n-times more than what these cricketers go through. Injuries formed another cloud in his sky, with claims of "tennis-elbow", but he saw it with the straight face of the bat and proved himself all over again. During his pre-sacking days, merit distanced itself from the man and there was an environment of change that he found uncomfortable dealing with. The coaching staff, the administration and even the functioning styles of these two entities was something he could not handle, and as Chappell says, "We felt that a time off from cricket was the best thing for him." Even during the county stint at Northamptonshire, under Kepler Wessels, Saurav did not exactly set the County circuit on fire, but at least ensured that he resorted to better regimens of fitness and emerged a much focused cricketer. To be honest, I don't think Saurav would have learned more in his 10 years of International cricket than this 10 months in virtual hibernation.

As a cynic, I made this statement not so long ago to my friend "You do not make comebacks at 33", but Ganguly proved me wrong. If his contributions start gaining more meaning within the setup, it won't be before long that he would have booked his ticket to the Caribbean. For now, the passion seems to be back, the hunger for success is well on its way up the graph and the desire to claim this re-birth with both hands on an all-time high. Cynically speaking, Saurav has proved no one wrong, including Greg Chappell but proved him right. I am sure his colleagues Zaheer Khan and VVS Laxman will agree. Scores of 51* and 25 will remain longer in public memory than some his earlier knocks. After all, along with Team India, it was Saurav's grit, patience and determination that won the first Test.