HomeNewsCricketDoes Dhoni as mentor signal the beginning of the end to Kohli's captaincy?

Does Dhoni as mentor signal the beginning of the end to Kohli's captaincy?

Dhoni will be part of the India T20 World Cup side as mentor. The move has been seen by many as a prelude to the change of guard in Team India's captaincy.

September 14, 2021 / 11:59 IST
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Virat Kohli
Virat Kohli

So finally, it is happening. The beginning of what looks like a change of guard in the captaincy of the Indian cricket team. Failure to win a single major trophy despite having the best Indian squad ever across formats, has started to bear down on Virat Kohli, prompting BCCI secretary Jay Shah to signal a change. It was Shah who convinced former India captain Dhoni to come on board as mentor for the upcoming T20 World Cup and Kohli could see the writing on the wall. For Kohli, it is a ‘head you win, tail I lose’ kind of scenario. If India manages to win the T20 World Cup, much of the credit will go to Dhoni. If India lose, Kohli would face the full brunt of it. Kohli also knows that Rohit Sharma as white-ball captain can’t be asked to wait forever and the top BCCI officials have already indicated that subtly by bringing in Dhoni who is supposed to look after the strategic part of the team management so that Kohli can entirely focus on his batting.

Neither a bad move nor a political one

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Not that it is a bad move nor a political one which will affect Kohli’s unquestioned authority in team India’s crucial decision-making. In fact, the move by BCCI secretary can be termed as masterstroke since it looks like a win-win situation for all the stakeholders of Indian cricket which includes Kohli, the current captain, Rohit, the future white ball captain and the BCCI which gets a much-needed stop-gap arrangement in Rohit so that they can groom the likes of either KL Rahul or Rishabh Pant for all-format captaincy options in future. Reportedly, (if reliable sources are to be believed) Kohli has finally made up his mind to relinquish the white-ball captaincy so that he could focus on Test captaincy alone and work more on his batting. Since November 2019 (his last international hundred against Bangladesh), Kohli hasn’t scored a ton across the formats. Not only that, his batting numbers have taken a severe blow in this phase which consists of 12 Tests and 15 ODIs (Test average has been around 26 while his career average is 51, ODI average has come down to 43 while his career average is nearly 60) but his batting in T20Is is unaffected. In fact, his average (64) and strike rate (153) has never been better.

Rohit Sharma can’t be overlooked forever