Ahmedabad:As the cricketing world serenades Team India for their performances altering the global order in the game, behind all the fiery starts, the centuries, the wicket hauls and the unbeaten victories there stands a Wall – an invisible and invincible Wall of Indian cricket, an incredibly private and unassuming man, who has chiselled the 2023 performers with quiet analytics and a reassuring presence in the dressing room. He wants no credit for his contribution to Team India, he seeks no acclaim.
But when they teach school kids about character, about quiet pride, about working out of the limelight, they should put up this man’s photo on the class wall – Rahul Dravid, the solid bat, an unsung captain, a grassroots hunter, a sculptor of India’s bench strength and now the head coach of Team India shaping the fortunes of a unit on roll.
Dravid, who has appeared in press conferences to talk about tactics, strategies, build-ups, the thought behind combinations, the permutations, the 50-over format itself and the brouhaha over pitches, taking on the chirpers in a rare moment of glasnost, is one man who never screams to be heard but people and his players listen to him even if he whispers.
This may be this great man’s first and last 50-over World Cup as Team India head coach but ever since this reluctant teacher of the game took over two years ago, the ethos of Team India’s players and their journeys took a turn towards excellence and thoughtfulness.
Before taking up this high-profile assignment, Dravid was happy hunting down, nurturing and sculpting talent into blooming on the big stage, shaping Team India and under-19 players from the grassroots in the remote corners of the vast pool of nation's talent.
Paying tribute to his master strategist, Captain Rohit Sharma announced the other day that the team will work for the ultimate win and that “we’ve got to do it for him.” If 2011 was informally dedicated by MS Dhoni and his squad to the Great Little Master Sachin Tendulkar who was playing the last World Cup of his long career, this one will be a tribute to the unwatched, unheard-of efforts put in by Dravid.
You never see him laughing or talking animatedly in any huddle or even reacting to a bad or good shot. But cameras zoom him onto the screen with a hint of a smile. Seldom has a smile come visiting his handsome face but one of them was when Kohli cut a grounded four in India’s first and most difficult battle of the tournament, against Australia, a team that prides itself in silencing the crowds when they are travelling.
Sharma acknowledges how crucial Dravid’s contribution to the great Indian run has been in this tournament, but more importantly in the build-up to it in the last two years, Dravid used to watch every single player who is in the team now, analyse his place in the team and assign a role to him in the larger gameplan of matches and clashes with teams of global importance.
“His role has been absolutely massive in terms of getting that clarity, which I keep talking about,” Sharma said in his match eve of the Final battle India launches against Australia at Motera.
Dravid, a man of intense pride and few words, headed a disastrous World Cup in the Caribbean way back in 2007 when Bangladesh sent India packing in the group stages of the tournament, and the picture of the three big ones – Dravid, Tendulkar and Sehwag – looking quietly heartbroken – will remain in memory till the dying day of cricket enthusiasts.