The Asian Age

Clash of the cricketing giants

WHO WILL WIN THIS MATCH? IN ALL LIKELIHOOD, CAPTAIN VIRAT KOHLI WILL GET HIS WAY

- C. SANTHOSH KUMAR AND BIPIN DANI

Team India is in a fix: Captain Virat Kohli and coach Anil Kumble are having problems. People in the know say it’s an ego clash between the two and unless BCCI interventi­on is able to cement their difference­s, Kumble is on his way out.

“When it comes to coachcapta­in conflicts in India, it will always be the skipper who comes out trumps. In this case, Kohli clearly enjoys more support from the Board — He’s the glamourous poster boy of Indian cricket! I don’t see Kumble getting any support here and the clear indication was the public announceme­nt for the post of new coach,” said a former Indian player on condition of anonymity.

Kohli comes from the Dhoni school of thought, whose first rule is ‘the captain is always right’. Everyone else is secondary to the plot even if 10 more men are needed to make a full team. Both Kumble and Kohli differ on work ethics. The coach likes to see everyone train hard to the point of exhaustion while the captain likes his players to be fresh on the field. Kumble is a hard taskmaster, wants to be recognised as the reason for India’s consistent success. But Kohli knows that his men have done the trick at each turn, even if the cricket was mostly at home where Team India has the distinct advantage. Fitness is a coaching obsession and it has helped Team India. Kohli, himself a fitness maniac, would, as captain, still demand flexible players rather than stiffened by over-training. The coaches love the preparatio­n, nets and the drills. Captains love the heat of battle, on the field. These are basic difference­s. The ego clash may run deeper. It may have to do with the basic question of who is responsibl­e for the performanc­es — the players or the support staff. Kohli knows it is the player who has to deliver. The former player also recalled how a young Kohli influenced a change of coach in Royal Challenger­s Bangalore and brought in Daniel Vettori in place of Ray Jennings who is considered a tough taskmaster. The South African, Jennings, had even said, “Kohli is a very talented kid but sometimes thinks he is better than the game.” The feud between Greg Chappell and Sourav Ganguly turned ugly because the Indian team had many power centres then. “Chappell had already created a rift in the team. And, since the BCCI had back-up options for the captaincy then in Rahul Dravid and Anil Kumble, it took time for Ganguly to muster the support he needed,” added the former player.

ADVANTAGE KOHLI

Kohli’s biggest advantage is not having second rung leaders in the team. Ajinkya Rahane was stand-in skipper when Kohli was injured, ahead of the final Test against Australia, but the Mumbai cricketer’s form has been oscillatin­g and his very own spot lies in danger. Though all-rounder R. Ashwin has time and again expressed his desire to lead the team, the management has never considered him as leader material. A clash of perception­s is seen as the captain believes it is the players’ talent and performanc­e that is bringing victories while coach Kumble must think he has contribute­d by looking after all the components of the team while the stars shine on their own. A similar situation had come about when Mahendra Singh Dhoni claimed the credit for Team India’s win in the 2011 World Cup while at least some players in his line-up like Gautam Gambhir made it a point to say how so many had contribute­d to the win. Who gave Gambhir much of a hearing then when Dhoni was Mr Success and Sachin was the Team Mascot to whom the win was dedicated? What we are seeing now is a replay of a basic ego clash in which the captain would want all the accolades for the team’s performanc­e. Whether Kohli is right or not, the wind blows in his favour. Coaches are expendable, captains are more difficult to get rid of.

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