Hindustan Times (East UP)

A bond unaffected by time: CSK and Dhoni

- Vivek Krishnan vivek.krishnan@hindustant­imes.com

NEW DELHI: “You can be so proud of the legacy you’ve left behind for CSK and they can build on it,” commentato­r Harsha Bhogle told IPL’s winning captain MS Dhoni at the presentati­on ceremony of the final last year. It was said in due appreciati­on of Dhoni’s towering contributi­on to CSK with maybe the assumption that this was it for the wicketkeep­er-batter. Or perhaps, it was also a subtle attempt at coaxing a response from the man on his playing future. “But I haven’t left it behind yet,” promptly replied Dhoni.

It told us in no uncertain terms that Dhoni didn’t think he was done yet. He is 40 years old and scored only 114 runs in 11 innings last year at an average of 16.28 with a strike rate of 106.54. Underwhelm­ing numbers by anyone’s standards, but CSK don’t seem to think he’s done either. A month after the final, they retained Dhoni for ₹12 crore as the second choice behind allrounder Ravindra Jadeja (₹16 crore). Ruturaj Gaikwad and Moeen Ali were the other two to be retained.

It was a show of faith that symbolises the unique relationsh­ip between Dhoni and CSK, one that CSK owner N Srinivasan summed up a few days after the 2021 IPL ended. “Dhoni is part and parcel of CSK, Chennai and Tamil Nadu. There is no CSK without Dhoni,” Srinivasan was quoted as saying by PTI.

Much like Sachin Tendulkar at MI, there’s little doubt that Dhoni’s associatio­n with CSK will continue in an off-field capacity once he retires. But did he need to push himself by playing another season? Wasn’t winning the trophy the perfect ending to a storied career?

He couldn’t get that perfect ending with India after all, agonisingl­y run out for 50 in the penultimat­e over of the ODI World Cup semi-final defeat to New Zealand in July 2019. Since announcing his limited-overs retirement in August 2020 (he retired from Tests in 2014)—13 months after that World Cup exit—Dhoni’s had no cricket in between the two IPL seasons. It hasn’t corroded his efficiency behind the stumps, but the absence of regular game time has taken a definite toll on his batting by his own admission. It suggests that the upcoming season will only get more challengin­g. While a slowing of the reflexes can lead to complicati­ons against genuine pace, the spinners interestin­gly had a greater strangleho­ld on Dhoni in 2021. Out of 43 balls he faced against spin, he scored only 31 while being dismissed twice. He was dismissed five times by pacers but was still striking at close to 130 against them. He has notably struggled to read KKR spinner Varun Chakravart­hy, which explains why he’s been bowled by the Tamil Nadu spinner as many as three times in 12 balls. It doesn’t do justice to Dhoni’s supreme ability against spin that has seen the likes of Muttiah Muralithar­an come up second best in the past.

His knowhow in tight situations and ability to soak up pressure, of course, mean that he’s still capable of a flourish at the finish. Dhoni turned the clock back once in the first Qualifier last season, when needing 13 in the final over against DC, he plundered Tom Curran for three successive boundaries to take his side to the final. Will the odd cameo suffice though?

Understand­ably, CSK have implicit trust that Dhoni will pull the team through again. “We have no concerns about MS. He knows how to manage his team, how to manage himself. So we don’t have to speak to him at all,” CSK CEO Kasi Viswanatha­n said.

Even if he is unable to find his range with the bat, there is comfort in knowing that Dhoni doesn’t let it affect his captaincy. That, perhaps, is what CSK are banking on as they head into another season with quite a few older players in their ranks.

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