Monday, November 10, 2008

Goodbye Prince of Kolkata, hello Rahul Dravid


Even 20 minutes after his dismissal, Sourav Ganguly could be seen all padded up in the Indian dressing room. There was a bewildered look on his face, a shocked expression in his eye: clearly, this wasn’t the fairytale finish that he had been dreaming of over the last few weeks.

He walked in to bat for the last time at a delicate moment, with the match poised on a sharp edge. Virender Sehwag had given a rousing start to the second innings; but India suddenly lost three wickets and the Test was smacked open. Ganguly looked calm and regal, eager for the grand tryst with his destiny.

He was given a warm welcome, even by the Aussies, and he took guard confidently; Jason Krejza, who had stunned VVS Laxman with a particularly special delivery, wheeled in for his next one. Attacking the same rough outside off (leg for the left-hander), he managed to draw Sourav forward, luring him into the vacant on-side. But the ball suddenly dipped and the bat closed a split-dimension sooner.



Krejza dived forward and accepted the catch triumphantly. Ganguly stood there for a few agonizing seconds, soaking in the cruel irony: a century in his first innings; and a first-ball duck in the last one. Eventually, he had to begin his final journey back to the Indian dressing room.

As he walked away, he looked towards the skies (was it anger, was it gratitude?) and had one last conversation with his God; then, he ran his eyes all around the ground, took in the stunned silence in the stands which was soon replaced by a deafening burst, to freeze the image and sound in his mind forever.

One doesn’t know how long he sat there, with his pads on; but during those 20 minutes or so, India seemed to be losing the plot, almost hurtling towards another numbing last Test defeat. But luckily, Australia soon got caught in the slow overrate whirlpool and could only watch as India clawed back into the game.

In the end, India made 295 to set up an imposing 382-run target. They may or may not drive the final nail into Australia’s arrogance on Monday, but one thing is clear: they can't lose this Test from here; they may have lost something far more important during this series though: the confidence in Rahul Dravid.

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