Gambhir's handling of India's transition raises eyebrows
The ongoing Border-Gavaskar Trophy has been a difficult ride for the side has struggled to get the right combination in the face of an aggressive and highly-driven Australian team
PTI
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It is learnt that Gambhir is not on the same page with most of the players in the team. PHOTO: PTI
Sydney, 1 Jan
As Indian cricket deals with the
fading form of its two stalwarts in captain Rohit Sharma and senior batter
Virat Kohli, head coach Gautam Gambhir and his support staff's role in handling
a team in transition has also come into focus.
The ongoing Border-Gavaskar Trophy
has been a difficult ride for the side has struggled to get the right
combination in the face of an aggressive and highly-driven Australian team. The
visitors will be playing the must-win fifth and final Test here from Friday.
The on-field roller-coaster is
causing some off-field issues as well with murmurs of unrest in the dressing
room beginning to grow.
It is learnt that Gambhir is not on
the same page with most of the players in the team and the communication isn't
as good as it used to be during the time of Ravi Shastri and Rahul Dravid.
Skipper Rohit Sharma has maintained
that he speaks individually to the players about selection issues. But after
Gambhir took charge in July, Rohit, it is said, hasn't actually given clarity
to some of the not-so-junior players about why they were being excluded at
times from the side.
His own poor form hasn't helped
Rohit's cause. But it is also reliably learnt that Gambhir, who is considered a
more assertive person, hasn't earned a lot of confidence from the group of
players, who aren't as old as Kohli or Rohit but are also not rookies like
Harshit Rana or Nitish Reddy. "There is a Test match to be played and then
there is Champions Trophy. If the performance doesn't improve, even Gautam
Gambhir's position wouldn't be safe," a senior BCCI official told PTI on
conditions of anonymity.
Gambhir's equation with the
selection committee is also not particularly clear at this point. There are
players in the team, who are feeling insecure because of his proclivity to
experiment with the playing eleven. In the ongoing BGT, a punt like Nitish
Reddy has worked out brilliantly but the handling of Shubman Gill is still
being debated.
BCCI secretary Jay Shah has now
been elevated to the ICC chief's position and the Board will have his full-time
successor only after 12 January. Once that administrative stability is in
place, the BCCI brass will have some thinking to do.
Till Shah was in-charge of BCCI, he
called the shots. Former India seamer Roger Binny, who is the current president
of the Board, hasn't been seen taking any policy related calls.
But if India's performance is not
drastically better in the Champions Trophy in February-March, Gambhir will
certainly have his wings clipped. "He was never BCCI's first choice (it
was VVS Laxman) and some of the well-known overseas names didn't want to coach
all three formats, so he was a compromise. Obviously, some other compulsions
were also there," the official said.
Gambhir has already been asked a
few tough questions after the 0-3 defeat at home to New Zealand and if the
Border-Gavaskar Trophy is also lost, it can all go downhill for the feisty
former opener from Delhi's Old Rajinder Nagar.
Already there is a school of
thought that Gambhir should only be given charge of the T20 team, a format in
which he has been a successful captain and then mentor for both Kolkata Knight
Riders and Lucknow SuperGiants.
One question that is being asked in
the corridors of power is whether he has been able to offer any solutions to
Virat Kohli with regards to his never-ending dismissals in the outside
off-stump channel? By the look of things, the answer to that seems to be an
emphatic no.
"Gautam, all his life, while
playing in England and Australia, would dab the ball towards slip and gully.
So, he knows exactly what Kohli's problem is. He has seen that as a player (in
2014) and as a commentator and now as a coach. If he knows what is wrong, he
should tell him," a former India great, with the experience of more than
90 Tests, said.
"Support staff" for support staff
The BCCI mandarins are also keeping
a tab on certain other developments about one of the key members of the support
staff, who is being accompanied at all the venues by his personal assistant.
It is leant that the person in
question used to have FOP (Field Of Play) access during the IPL where he would
stride into the playing arena after games in a franchise jersey. In Australia,
his presence in the box dedicated to BCCI members hasn't really been
appreciated, according to a top source.
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