Ravi Shastri omits Sourav Ganguly from top Indian captains' list

Shastri is believed to have blamed the Cricket Association of Bengal president for his missing out on the job.

Update: 2017-01-09 19:42 GMT
A file photo of Ravi Shastri (left) and Sourav Ganguly.

New Delhi: Former India captain and team director Ravi Shastri kicked off a storm in a teacup when he hailed Mahendra Singh Dhoni as a “dada captain” at the head of his favourites' list that also included Mansur Ali Khan Pataudi, Ajit Wadekar and Kapil Dev, but not Sourav Ganguly.

Shastri and Ganguly have been at loggerheads since June last year after the former was overlooked in favour of Anil Kumble as head coach of Team India by an advisory committee comprising Ganguly, Sachin Tendulkar and VVS Laxman. Shastri is believed to have blamed the Cricket Association of Bengal president for his missing out on the job.

“If Ravi Shastri feels that Sourav Ganguly was responsible for him not being the India coach, he is living in a fool’s world,” the Bengal Tiger had responded back then. Speaking to a website soon after Dhoni stood down Shastri reportedly said Dhoni was India's best captain of all time. “He (Dhoni) is easily India's most successful captain, by a distance. There is no one even close to him in that regard. The names that follow in that list a fair distance behind are Kapil Dev, who led India to the World Cup in 1983 and because of whom we won the Test series in England in 1986.

“And Ajit (Wadekar) in an era before there was one-day cricket, when we won successive Test series in the West Indies and then England in 1971. And of course, Tiger (Pataudi) for flamboyance. Baaki koi nahi (there is no one else),” Shastri is reported to have said. Interestingly, Shastri didn’t mention Sunil Gavaskar’s name in his list of top Indian captains.

Ganguly — who was nicknamed “Dada” during his time in India colours — in cold numbers emerges as India's second most successful captain of all time behind Dhoni.

In the 49 Tests he led in, India’s win percentage was 42.85 per cent. In 147 ODIs with Ganguly as skipper, it was 53.52 per cent. He led India to the 2003 World Cup final and was almost solely responsible in halting Steve Waugh’s all-conquering Australians in their tracks.

More than anything else, he helmed Indian cricket through its worst phase when match-fixing had all but destroyed its credibility. For all his professionalism and feats on the field, Ravi Shastri cannot lay stake to any such claims.

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