This week last year: Ganguly, Kumble, Dravid in England, more losses than gains?
A look back at how beneficial the stints of Sourav Ganguly, Anil Kumble and Rahul Dravid in English County Cricket was.
Anand Vasu
11-May-2001
It was this week last year that three Indian musketeers began their
campaign in England for various counties. Sourav Ganguly, the Indian
captain, was plying his wares for Lancashire, Rahul Dravid was batting for
Kent and Anil Kumble was bamboozling batsmen with leg breaks for
Leicestershire. The Karnataka leg spinner had previously played for
Northamptonshire but Ganguly and Dravid were making their debuts in
English domestic cricket.
At the same time, it was not all smooth sailing for the trio. Just before
they left for England, both Dravid and Kumble opted out of a crucial Ranji
Trophy semi-final clash against Hyderabad. As it turned out, that proved to
be costly for Karnataka, who were edged out by the superior batting of a
VVS Laxman-inspired Hyderabad.
As a result of commitments to county cricket in England, the trio missed
out on yet another important fixture of the Board of Control for Cricket in
India. With India due to travel to Bangladesh for the Asia Cup featuring
India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, the preparatory camp for the
tourney was underway. Although it would be far fetched to say that this
had a dramatic effect on the way India prepared, it must be remembered that
India lost quite badly at Dhaka.
The county stint too proved to be less productive than people initially
envisaged it for at least one of the threesome. Ganguly, playing for
Lancashire, found that it was no stroll in the park. High scores often
eluded the southpaw and the going was tough. With the ball swinging and
seaming around, Ganguly could not simply hit his way out of a bad patch as
he may have done in the subcontinent. Add to this the run out trouble
Ganguly had and there was a disaster waiting to happen. When teammates
alleged that the Indian skipper was a bit of a 'spoilt' cricketer, driving
on his own
to venues and not taking the team bus, and extended the assessments to
similar infringements, things
came to a boil. On one occasion, when Ganguly scored a ton, there was
reportedly no one at the Lancashire balcony to cheer him on.
For Kumble too, the second stint at county cricket might just have
been a counter productive one in the long run. The 630.5 overs that he
bowled would certainly have hastened, if not caused, the rotator cuff
shoulder injury that has kept Kumble out of international cricket for more
than one series now. The doctor's diagnosis on the injury is that he has
clearly sustained too
much wear and tear.
So, with the benefit of hindsight, one might just be cheeky enough to
suggest that a couple of key Indian cricketers' experiment in playing
county cricket in 2000 was an eminently avoidable one.