Hyderabad: Born on July 7 in 1981, Mahendra Singh Dhoni's arrival in Indian cricket and his subsequent rise has been a story of unprecedented success, punctuated by the occasional blip. Of all the players of the present generation, it was Dhoni who symbolized the new India well. Aggressive without being brash, successful without being arrogant, and seemingly possessing a Midas touch, Dhoni was the perfect blend of a role-model and pin-up star.
However, Dhoni's 16-year-old international career came to end on August 15, 2020, as he announced retirement from international cricket
Under Dhoni's captaincy, India won the top prize in all formats: the No.1 Test ranking for 18 months starting December 2009, the 50-over World Cup in 2011 and the World Twenty20 on his captaincy debut in 2007.
Not many had heard the name of MS Dhoni until he was 23 when he blasted two centuries in a triangular 50-over tournament for India A in Nairobi in 2004.
India at that time were looking for a wicketkeeper-batsman who could also act as a dasher. An Adam Gilchrist-inspired Dhoni was drafted in 2004 to solve India's wicketkeeper-batsman crisis after the completion of the Rahul Dravid experiment.
His start was anything but legendary - getting out for a duck. It was his fifth outing at home against Pakistan in 2005, where he stroked a blistering 148, making everyone sit up and take notice. Ganguly sacrificed his batting position at number 3 to hand Dhoni a chance to show his potential which the Jharkhand-born grabbed with both hands. A mammoth 183 to chase a high Sri Lankan total later in the year reiterated his value. By the end of 2005, Dhoni donned the all-whites to earn a Test cap against Sri Lanka.
Along the way Dhoni showed leadership skills. With a mature head on his shoulders and an astute and shrewd cricketing mind, Dhoni was recommended by senior players like Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid for captaincy for the T20 team following the senior players opting out of the new tournament.
On his first assignment in the inaugural World T20 in 2007, Dhoni and his team full of youngsters romped to the title in a shock victory bringing about the T20 revolution in India. Dhoni's calm and composed leadership was widely lauded in the cricketing fraternity after India brought the trophy home, earning him the label of ‘Captain Cool’.
He then became the ODI captain after Rahul Dravid relinquished the post, and eventually, ascended to the full-time Test captaincy once Anil Kumble retired.