Thursday, March 8, 2012

Dravid likely to retire on Friday


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Dravid likely to retire on Friday

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Rahul Dravid pulls off a shot from the textbook, England v India, 1st Test, Lord's, 3rd day, July 23, 2011
On Friday, Rahul Dravid is likely to retire after 16 years in international cricket © Getty Images 
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Players/Officials: Rahul Dravid
Teams: India
Rahul Dravid is likely to announce his retirement on Friday. Dravid, 39, has called a press conference in Bangalore that will also be attended by N Srinivasan, the BCCI president.
Dravid is set to be the first of India's senior-most cricketers - including Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman - to quit the game after a season of speculation surrounding their future. His decision follows a poor tour of Australia but he enjoyed a prolific run through 2011, scoring five centuries - including four in the Caribbean and England. However, he is set to captain Rajasthan Royals in the upcoming IPL season.
This will bring the curtains down on a career that, since his 95 on debut at Lord's in 1996, established Dravid as one of the greatest players of his generation and among the most accomplished ever. He will finish with 13,288 Test runs - behind only Tendulkar - in 164 matches, with 36 hundreds at an average of 52.31. His ODI career, which effectively ended in 2008 with a brief reprisal in 2011, was scarcely less successful - it yielded more than 10,000 runs and 12 centuries. He also has 210 catches, a Test record, in addition to 196 catches in ODIs.
Behind the statistics, he will be remembered as the consummate team player, moving around in the batting order to suit the team's requirements and keeping wickets when necessary - most strikingly in ODIs, when his double role gave the team balance on its way to the World Cup final in 2003. His remarkable fitness allowed him to play 93 consecutive Tests from his debut to December 2005.
Dravid captained in 25 Tests, of which India won eight and lost six. Under his leadership India cemented a newly won reputation for being good travellers, winning Test series in Pakistan in 2003-04 - he captained in two out of three Tests - West Indies in 2006 and in England in 2007.
He will be remembered as one of the last classical Test match batsmen, renowned for his technique and a willingness to bat through difficult circumstances - and over prolonged periods - yet able to stroke the ball around when the mood struck him. He was the anchor of India's famous middle-order, keeping the innings together while the strokeplayers - Tendulkar, Laxman and Ganguly - played a more attacking role. He appeared to especially flourish in partnership with Laxman, never more so than in the Eden Gardens Test of 2001.
His batting qualities and efforts were often overshadowed by the flair of his team-mates yet they were brought into sharp focus over the past year with India's Test team struggling through a period of transition. Dravid showed his class on the tour to England in 2011. In a series in which India were completely outplayed and none of their other batsmen scored more than 275 runs in the Tests, Dravid amassed 461, including three hundreds, two of them when opening the innings against a high-quality pace attack. However, that was followed by a poor series in Australia, which reopened the debate about his retirement.

1 comment:

  1. Absolutely! Dravid was one of the reasons for my watching cricket - which now has become the game for hunters. With his exit, international cricket will fast lose it's 'Gentleman's Game' tag. One can do a great service by NOT comparing him with the likes of Gavaskar, Tendulkar, Ganguly etc., for he played for the game and never for self. Great Innings from India's greatest batsman & world cricket's most respected gentleman comes to an end. He can never retire from the memory of true cricket lovers all over the world. Well Left Sir!

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