Team rallies behind Ganguly
Ashish Shukla
The demand for Sourav Ganguly's head is steadily increasing with every failure of the Indian
skipper but the team is solidly standing by him.
After Ganguly was dismissed for just two in Sunday's
triangular one-day series match against Zimbabwe, Melbourne
Radio rang up team manager Chetan Chauhan to know why the
stylish left-hander should not be asked to sit out and sort
out his batting blues rather than be a liability to the team.
"I have a lot of time for him," was Chauhan's cryptic
reply which put an end to the issue.
A desperate Ganguly also sought to draw solace from his
opening partner Sachin Tendulkar's clean chit to his batting
technique.
"He (Tendulkar) has assured me that my technique is
okay and I should not worry on that count," the skipper said,
while putting up a brave face amidst continued failures.
"I know the runs would come shortly. I can feel it from
inside," said Ganguly, who has led India to five wins in eight
Tests.
But that has not prevented the critics from raising the
shrill over his inability to get the runs. The website of the
company telecasting the series is flooded with hate mails for
Ganguly and questions on his form and captaincy are appearing
on the ballot boxes of various other sites.
The pressure is telling on the captain, who is not leaving
any stone unturned in his efforts to get back to his scoring
ways. He is having an extra session in the nets and is usually
on the ground an hour before the team arrives for practice.
This, from a man who usually does not like to bat much at
the nets.
"I do not quite like batting in the nets but if that
is the answer (to my bad form), so be it," he said.
In the matches too, he has tried various methods to break
the shell. He briefly toyed with the idea of going on the
attack to shrug off his poor form but discarded it quickly
after it failed to click, and he did not want to be seen as an
irresponsible batsman.
He did not duck his responsibility even when he had to
face the new ball on the crucial fourth morning of the Harare
Test though it ended in an yet another failure.
But its not the efforts but the figures alongside his name
on the scoreboard that count and Ganguly needs to get that as
quickly as possible to silence his critics.
In Sunday's match, he took two wickets while bowling
and thought that finally his time with the bat too might have arrived. Alas, that did not happen and Ganguly had to be
satisfied with his bowling contribution only.
His deputy Rahul Dravid answered his detractors in style
when he scored a brilliant 181 in that epic match-winning
association with V V S Laxman in the second Test against
Australia in Calcutta, and Ganguly knows he will have to come
up with a similar effort to turn his fortunes around.
But till that happens, his - and his fans' - agonies will
continue to haunt him.
Mail Cricket Editor