10.10.2008
Finally,
the announcement came at the time and place of his choosing,
when the world was least expecting it. It was just another
Tuesday in Bangalore, a normal, boring afternoon in which
players are expected to utter insipid nothings at a press
conference two days before the match. Sourav Ganguly spoke
about the pitch, the bowlers, the team’s strengths
and weaknesses, and when all mundane questions had been
addressed, he stopped the reporters for a final declaration.
"This
is my last series...Hopefully, I will go out on a winning
note," he said, hurrying away before he could be probed
further, more emotions running through him than his demeanor
revealed.
Eighteen
days before that, sitting in a coffee shop in Chandigarh
— where he had come to play the local J P Atray tournament
to escape the rains in Kolkata — he had calmly talked
about his desire to fight on after being overlooked for
the Irani Cup. "I’ll go, but not like this,"
he had said with a glint in his eyes. "This isn’t
the way it’s going to end."
In
his latest moment of crisis — and there have been
far too many over the last few years — Ganguly was
strong, and determined that when he quit, it would be as
a member of Team India.
Ganguly
has been called many names but has seldom been fully understood.
Lord Snooty. Prince of Kolkata. Divisive Force. God on the
off side. He twirled his shirt at Lord’s and silently
shed tears in Jamaica. He scored 144 in bouncy Brisbane,
and supposedly ran away from a green Nagpur. To the Cricket
world, the real Dada was a mystery.
In
an international career that spanned 16 years, with two
breaks from which he was never expected to recover, no Indian
cricketer has gone through all the gamut of emotions as
often and as publicly.
Last
Wednesday, on the day of his selection for the Australia
Test series, he had told this correspondent: "I don’t
know when I’ll quit. It’s not an easy decision,
but the day is not far away."
Throughout
his career, controversy was Ganguly’s constant companion.
Back in 1992, he was dumped from the team, branded as a
Maharaj who did not like to carry drinks. In 2005, he was
set aside after coach Greg Chappell alleged he wrecked the
dressing-room atmosphere by being manipulative. And even
in 2007, he was accused of putting himself ahead of the
team’s interests by playing for his bat manufacturer
rather than his country. The theories were eventually proved
wrong, but the tag remained attached.
After
the fourth Test at Nagpur, his 113th, India’s famed
middle-order will finally be split after 12 years. Reruns
of Ganguly’s soft touch outside the off stump will
play out on TV channels, and his aura will keep rising in
proportion as time passes. That’s the joy of retirement:
praise lives on, criticism is interred with the bones.
Ganguly
has now taken the pressure off himself, and left the retirement
roadmap for his other illustrious colleagues Anil Kumble,
Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman. The face
of Indian Cricket is set to change over the next year, but
the last has not been heard of any of the five.
A
magic trick is made up of three parts. Ganguly made his
"pledge" in 1996 with a century on Test debut.
He took the "turn" when he returned at the end
of 2006 and emerged as the highest scorer in South Africa.
Now, this Australia series is his final, triumphant bow
— his "prestige."
Courtesy - The Island
|