Cape Times

Kohli’s ‘aura’ could be intimidati­ng

- Stuart Hess

JOHANNESBU­RG: Graeme Smith believes Virat Kohli may need to soften his approach to his teammates, if India are to have success away from home.

Smith, who captained South Africa in 108 Tests, wondered whether Kohli was the best long-term option as India's captain, explaining that Kohli's “aura” could be intimidati­ng to his teammates.

“We all know he's an outstandin­g player, his intensity really benefits his own personal game, he loves that confrontat­ion, that intensity brings the best out of him,” Smith said yesterday.

“Sometimes as a leader you've got to consider how you impact the others in the environmen­t, that's an area of his leadership that he needs to grow. Often his reaction to situations ... that can sometimes impact on your team negatively. We all know how powerful Virat Kohli is in world cricket, in Indian cricket. For him, he's built this aura and for him maybe to find a level where he can connect with all his players, to get to a level where (he) can get the Indian team to be as successful as he is, that's something that he, when I watch him, is grappling with.”

Kohli, who has captained India 34 times, and led them to nine consecutiv­e series wins before they arrived in SA, will face a major test of his leadership credential­s this year with India also set to tour England and Australia. Already they have failed the first of their three foreign tests this year, by losing the series against SA with one game to spare.

“I don't know, when I look at him, if he is a long-term captaincy option for India,” said Smith, who besides playing the most Tests as captain, is also the most successful skipper, with 53 victories.

“At the end of this year, he'd have been away from home for a while, the pressure he'll face, the scrutiny from the press – I know he gets that in India – but if you're away from home and you're struggling for form as a team, I don't (know) if I'd want to burden Virat Kohli with that.”

Given that for now, India don't appear to have any other options as captain, Smith felt that Kohli, needed a “sounding board” in the team, someone who could occasional­ly tell him that he was wrong. “When I look at Virat I think he needs someone who can constructi­vely challenge him and help him grow. He has all the capabiliti­es tactically, he knows his own game, he sets the standard in the field for everyone else. The way he goes about his work, it's almost a case of ‘leading by example',” said Smith.

“There's his emotional side, he gets really fired up and there's how that affects other people

“I think if he had a really constructi­ve person in his environmen­t, who could talk to him, make him think, maybe even challenge him with some different ideas, in a constructi­ve way, not an angry or aggressive way, but make him think, open his eyes to other possibilit­ies, that would make him a really good leader.”

Former Indian skipper Sunil Gavaskar agreed that Kohli could do with someone providing a different perspectiv­e. “I think he's a very good leader,” Gavaskar, who captained India in 47 Tests, said.

“Captains are not just thinking about how they captain in the middle, but on match days and off days, they are always thinking how can they take the team forward. And sometimes in that process, with that thinking – ‘How do I take the team forward?' – you lose sight of simple things … as soon as Virat realises that, he will become a better leader.”

The Indian team trained at the Wanderers yesterday morning, and their coach Ravi Shastri, rather than be disappoint­ed that the series is already decided, sought to accentuate the positives. “I would rather focus on the 20 wickets we've taken, because that has given us a chance in both Tests,” said Shastri.

“We had our moments in both Tests where we looked like the No 1 team. We looked like the No 1 team in overseas conditions. Not many teams look half that when they come to India.”

 ??  ?? VIRAT KOHLI: ‘Intensity brings the best out of him’
VIRAT KOHLI: ‘Intensity brings the best out of him’

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