The Wall in blue
A deep dive into Rahul Dravid's ODI career
Rahul Dravid was the top run getter at the 1999 World Cup • Getty Images
Dravid missed the bus for the 1996 World Cup but he churned out big runs for Karnataka during a title-winning Ranji Trophy campaign that season. A deserved ODI debut came right after the World Cup, and he first hit the high notes in that format later that year in Toronto, finishing the bilateral series against Pakistan as India's highest scorer, with 220 runs at 44.00. The highlight of the tournament was a takedown of the fiery Waqar Younis, whom he hit for 19 runs in an over, going 4, 2, 4, 6, 3, the six coming off a pull shot that was something of a trademark of his batting at the time.
Dravid made his maiden Test hundred on the 1996-97 tour of South Africa, and he carried his form into the ODI tri-series that followed, scoring a brilliant 84 in the final in Durban. That innings is particularly remembered for his mid-pitch war of words with Allan Donald after he hoicked him for a six over long-on. That confrontation isn't part of these highlights, but you can watch his audacious strokeplay here, as India fell narrowly short while chasing a challenging revised target of 251 in 40 overs. Donald called his sledge one of the "worst moments" of his career.
Say the words "Independence Cup" and "Chennai" to any India or Pakistan fan and the first thing they'll remember is Saeed Anwar's majestic 194 - then the highest individual score in ODIs. Less remembered is Dravid's 107 - his maiden ODI hundred - which gave India a fighting chance as they embarked on a daunting chase of 328. Already a mainstay of the Test team, Dravid now seemed locked in as India's ODI No. 3 as well.
Things didn't quite pan out that way, though, as Dravid's ODI career hit a brick wall in 1998, a year in which he averaged 21.76, with a strike rate in the mid-50s. Critics panned his inability to get out of first gear, and he was in and out of the ODI side all year. He seemed set to miss out on the 1999 World Cup, but he turned it around in the nick of time, on his comeback tour of New Zealand. Having scored a century in each innings of the Hamilton Test, he began the ODIs with a chanceless 123 in Taupo.
Dravid had kept wicket in that Taunton game, but only out of necessity, since Nayan Mongia was injured. With batting depth becoming a key issue for India in the early 2000s, however, Dravid turned into something of an allrounder by taking over the big gloves on a regular basis. This allowed India to play a seventh batsman, and they reaped the rewards in their second tournament after they began the experiment, winning the Natwest tri-series in England. In a round-robin match at Lord's, Dravid and Yuvraj Singh put on a match-winning partnership in a chase of 272, after India had slipped from 109 for no loss to 141 for 4. This was Dravid's new role - a guiding presence at No. 5 to bat around youngsters like Yuvraj and Mohammad Kaif.
Dravid took over the captaincy full-time in 2005, and he immediately set about trying to get India to improve as a chasing side. He began with an emphatic series win against Sri Lanka, but South Africa proved a more difficult opponent. Having to win to square the series, Dravid piloted India home on a seaming deck in Mumbai. After the game, he famously said that it felt like India were playing in India again, referring to the previous match in Kolkata where the crowd booed the home team relentlessly for dropping Ganguly.
India dropped Dravid from the ODI set-up in 2007, then brought him out of cold storage for the 2009 Champions Trophy, with Virender Sehwag out injured. Then he was dropped for another two years and had made peace with being a one-format cricketer, only to be called up suddenly on the 2011 tour of England to shore up a team smarting from a 4-0 Test series whitewash. He did his job, as always, signing off with an innings of 69.
Shashank Kishore is a senior sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo