Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

CSK’s unique path to regular success

Setting roles, spotting and grooming youngsters and defining goals have worked well for the five-time winners

- Rasesh Mandani rasesh.mandani@htlive.com

Chennai Super Kings are now, in terms of winning percentage, the IPL’s most successful team. The Mumbai Indians have won the trophy five times as well, but that’s in sixteen attempts. CSK, on the other hand, have done it in fourteen. Perhaps even more amazing is how they have managed to reach the playoffs 12 times in these 14 seasons. In a format as volatile as T20 cricket, this consistenc­y speaks volumes about the process that is behind their every move. It isn’t random, it isn’t luck. It’s more.

So, what is CSK’s winning formula? Can there be a uniform template in a franchise competitio­n in cricket, where the shift from internatio­nal to a club-focused calendar, for good or bad, is still a work in progress?

In IPL’s case, it’s even more complex. A megaauctio­n comes every four years, garners tele- vision eyeballs but disbands squads. “It’s a bit of a harrowing experience,” CSK head coach Stephen Fleming said after their fifth title. “…to have great relationsh­ips, cut them and rebuild.”

Fleming gave an example of the heartache it caused them to lose a player of Faf du Plessis’ caliber in the auction. “We tried to pick players who we felt could replicate the skills sets that we wanted and how we want them to play,” he explained.

That’s how Devon Conway and Ruturaj Gaikwad — their starts left the biggest impact of all opening pairs in the season – came together. Gaikwad is 26 and tipped to become an India regular. Conway 31, is by no means a young recruit. Outwardly looking for a young crop has never been CSK’s recruitmen­t template. Nor have they fallen for the pressures of picking players from a catchment area to expand their fan base.

Which team wouldn’t like to have the fearlessne­ss of youth in an aggressive format like T20, one may argue? KKR tried it in 2018, picking India’s U19 World Cup stars — Shubman Gill, Shivam Mavi and Kamlesh Nagarkotti. None of them play in purple anymore. MI invests a lot in youth. Some players blossom, sooner than others; Tilak Varma and Nehal Wadhera look good to stay the course. But will MI be able to retain them or win them back in the 2026 mega auction?

CSK have their own academies and the local TNPL league is a great source for scouting. But on the auction table, they remain pragmatic. It didn’t deter them from recruiting a 34-year-old Ajinkya Rahane or a 29-year-old India discard Shivam Dube who was known to be a soft target against the short ball. Once the players are picked up, it’s Fleming and captain MS Dhoni’s job to allot them roles and harness their true potential. “My understand­ing is that (with Rahane) we got rid of the tag that you are the guy that we bat around. That may have hung around his mind too much and didn’t allow him to be the player he can be,” said Fleming. “Once it was gone, when I turned up halfway through the pre-season training, I saw a guy who was in magnificen­t form.”

In his 15th season, Rahane found his true T20 calling; his 326 runs came at a strike rate of 172.

Dube, another Mumbai boy has always had long levers and natural power-hitting ability. But the lefthander’s transition from domestic to IPL and T2OIs proved to be challengin­g. He didn’t always have an answer to the short ball. Some technical and mental notes from the coolest brains in the business later, Dube proved to be the middle-overs enforcer – against pace and spin in equal measure, this season. With Deepak Chahar, their ₹14 crore recruit’s injury-prone status, bowling was always going to be the most challengin­g. “There was a lot of media around player workloads for us. Some players when they arrived were quite broken,” Fleming said alluding to Chahar. “It was about patching them up.”

In baby Malinga, Matheesha Pathirana, and value buy Tushar Deshpande, they found the pacers to supplement their leading spinners. Pathirana was exclusivel­y used as an X factor against weaker matchups and introduced in the second half of the innings and a lot at the death.

Deshpande was encouraged to use his years of domestic experience and go for wickets, even if he was expensive. “With DJ (bowling coach Bravo) alongside, all the plans were clear,” said Deshpande.

Giving players a well-defined role in a team sport makes perfect sense in theory. However, not all teams are able to put it into practice. CSK did it well even in their 2010 and 2011 winning seasons, when T20 wasn’t being played on such a sharp edge. Suresh Raina’s bold batting at No 3 was a prime example. “MS Dhoni instilled in me the freedom to express myself and play fearlessly,” Raina, now working as a Jio Cinema commentato­r said. “I vividly remember one match where we were chasing a daunting total. One look at the calmness in Dhoni’s eyes and it instantly dissolved my nerves.”

The most remarkable CSK campaign was that of 2018 where they returned after a two-year suspension, picked a team of wise-old athletes, mocked as the Dad’s Army and beat everyone else to the title.

Then, it was Shane Watson. The Australian battling niggles and form, came good in the final with a match-winning hundred. In 2023, it was Ambati Rayudu, playing the final match of his career.

The 37-year-old had played a limited part in the season as an Impact substitute. In the final, his 6-4-6 against the wily Mohit Sharma in their run chase swung the momentum of the final in CSK’s favour. All these moments, however, mask how CSK truly manages to make all these players feel like they belong. Many clubs talk about being a family but few demonstrat­e it as well as CSK. They truly win together and lose together. And they embrace both with the same calm that their skipper so naturally exudes.

Dhoni is the leader but the others believe in not just him but also in the team philosophy. And it all seems to magically add up.

250 IPL matches is a tribute to MS Dhoni’s fitness. He is called Thala by the whole of Chennai and Tamil Nadu. The love and adulation a guy from Jharkhand receives down south from fans of CSK is testimony to the greatness of this cricketer. — Ravi Shastri

The emotion Mohit Sharma must be going through ..... But what an impact he has made? It was once in a lifetime performanc­e from him in this season, he should be proud of what he has achieved. — Irfan Pathan

MS Dhoni will come back next year. The expectatio­ns are going to be high from CSK next year and this team knows pretty well how to handle that pressure of expectatio­ns — Harbhajan Singh

 ?? BCCI ?? Chennai Super Kings players celebrate with the IPL trophy after beating defending champions Gujarat Titans in the final in Ahmedabad.
BCCI Chennai Super Kings players celebrate with the IPL trophy after beating defending champions Gujarat Titans in the final in Ahmedabad.

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