Mahendra Singh Dhoni, the swashbuckling player who excelled like none other on the cricket field
Special Correspondent (Mumbai): Mahendra Singh Dhoni, the swashbuckling player who excelled like none other on the cricket field. Having played in 350 ODIs, 90 Tests and 98 T20Is, Dhoni has not just been the best captain for the Men in Blue but is also one of the leading run-scorers in ODIs with more than 10,700 runs in his kitty at an average of 50.58.
Mahendra Singh Dhoni, the marauding wicketkeeper-batsman rated as one of the best finishers in One Day Internationals, has played his final match in a World Cup. His last innings, where he scored 50 runs off 72 balls, ended in a run-out and saw India getting bundled out of the ICC World Cup 2019, a tournament where they were the top favorites.
Dhoni holds the record of most wins by an Indian captain in all three formats of the game – Tests, One Day Internationals and Twenty20. He also became the first Indian captain to win all three ICC limited-overs trophies – World Cup, Champions Trophy and the World Twenty20.
Mahendra Singh Dhoni, the marauding wicketkeeper-batsman rated as one of the best finishers in One Day Internationals, has played his final match in a World Cup. His last innings, where he scored 50 runs off 72 balls, ended in a run-out and saw India getting bundled out of the ICC World Cup 2019, a tournament where they were the top favorites.
Dhoni holds the record of most wins by an Indian captain in all three formats of the game – Tests, One Day Internationals and Twenty20. He also became the first Indian captain to win all three ICC limited-overs trophies – World Cup, Champions Trophy and the World Twenty20.
Having played in 350 ODIs, 90 Tests and 98 T20Is, Dhoni has not just been the best captain for the Men in Blue but is also one of the leading run-scorers in ODIs with more than 10,700 runs in his kitty at an average of 50.58.
His most remarkable achievement as a captain was in 2011 when the Men in Blue lifted the ICC World Cup trophy under Dhoni’s captaincy after a gap of 28 years. It was a finishing shot from Dhoni’s bat that registered India’s victory in the biggest cricketing extravaganza.
Dhoni’s style and charm were on display once again later that year when India chased a target of 299 against Sri Lanka in Jaipur on October 31, 2005. He decimated the Sri Lankan bowling attack to score an unbeatable 183 off 145 balls.
But this was just the beginning, as Dhoni was slated to get even bigger. In 2007, the hard-hitting batsman was named the captain of the Men in Blue. His first assignment as the skipper was the ICC Twenty20 World Cup in 2007 where India became the champions.
However, in the run-up to the ICC World Cup 2019 and even during the tournament, questions were raised by many on his fitness level. Age has not been on his side and the last couple of years have seen the once buccaneering player failing to bring his old form to the pitch.
But this does not discount the fact that the “Captain Cool” has been, for over a decade, one of the most dependable players in the side. His batting prowess, agility behind the stumps and cricketing strategy have come to the rescue of the team in the most difficult of circumstances, even when he did not don the captain’s hat.
On November 1, 2011, the Indian Territorial Army conferred the honorary rank of Lieutenant Colonel to Dhoni.