
Kolkata: Former India skipper Sourav Ganguly
today hailed the way current captain Virat Kohli has come out
in support of an under-fire Mahendra Singh Dhoni in the
twilight of his career.
"He (Kohli) is a fantastic captain. I don't know what he
does inside dressing room or what he does tactically, as I'm
too far away (from the team). I don't know what he speaks in
team meetings but the way he looks after his players is
remarkable," Ganguly said during a book launch here.
"I keep saying about MS Dhoni and what I see of Virat on
MS is fantastic. A champion player (Dhoni) who's probably on
his last leg of his career and Virat coming and saying that
he's my man and I want him to play. You just change a player,"
he added.
A few former India cricketers, including VVS Laxman and
Ajit Agarkar, recently raised questions about Dhoni's T20I
future, creating quite a storm in the country's cricketing
circles.
Kohli, however, has said his friendship with Dhoni has
grown immensely over the years and it's a blessing to have him
in the side.
Ganguly said: "He's top class cricketer, one of the best
India have produced for a long long time. He reaches out, he
handles it well.
"I like Virat Kohli and when I see him on the field, I
sit on my sofa and watch. I've said it many times he's a
champion player. When I see him captaining India, he wants to
win in all conditions. He's very passionate," Ganguly lavished
praise on the current Indian skipper.
Asked about his style of captaincy, Ganguly said:
"Everyone has their own style. You have to allow an individual
to blossom, allow to deliver."
Ganguly said his best legacy was to create the self
belief of winning away matches.
"It's difficult to identify one series. We were 0-1 down
and won 2-1 against Australia was remarkable in 2001," said
the 45-year-old former skipper.
"But I keep saying you always be judged how you do
outside India. Of all our wins, Pakistan was good as well.
It's the belief we had of winning way that's the legacy. After
Dravid took over captaincy, we went to England and won there
in 2007, so it's the belief we can win away," he added.
One of the most memorable wins for India under Ganguly
was the 2002 NatWest final at the Lord's where the former
skipper and Virender Sehwag had a 106-run stand while India
were chasing 326.
Recollecting the famous NatWest final win, Ganguly said
captaincy was about holding back your emotions.
"We had a terrific start and then Ronnie Irani came to
bowl his slow medium bowlers. I told Sehwag 'dont leave at
this stage'," he said.
"Ronnie pitched it up and Sehwag scored a boundary. I
told him to rotate a strike, he scored two more and also swept
another. I finally stopped going at him, he understood that I
as not happy.
"Later he told me 'don't get angry all those balls were
'hittable'. Captaincy is not about being boss, also about
holding back your tempers."
One of the most memorable image from that final was
Ganguly taking off his shirt and and twirling it wildly at the
Lord's Balcony.
"Before that we had lost three finals. A lot of that
expression after the game was a sigh of relief. I just got
carried away," he said.