Former India
captain Rahul Dravid has said that of the three formats of
the game,ODI cricket at present was largely irrelevant and
struggling to survive and consequently there should be more tournaments like
Champions Trophy or worldcup to give it a proper context.
I think one-day cricket
is seriously struggling. One-day cricket, without a context, is struggling.
One-day cricket, if you look at it from the point of view of Champions Trophy
or the World Cup, is relevant, he said at an interactive session after delivering
the 6th Dilip Sardesai Memorial Lecture in Mumbai.
I think all the other one-day cricket should actually be
driven towards playing Champions Trophy and World Cup. I think there are
meaningless one-day games and too many one day games can actually be a problem.
So, that is something that can be cut off and people can play
less one-day (bilateral) cricket and more ODI tournaments.
When you have three formats of the game and playing 10 months
a year and playing different tournaments, it is going to be harder and harder
on players to manage the workload," the 41-year-old cricketer said.
Speaking about the proliferation of illegal bowling actions
with highly successful Pakistan off-spinner Saeed Ajmal having recently banned
for it, Dravid said 'chucking' was not a crime but a technical fault that can
be corrected.
The ICC has a rule in place. When they reviewed a lot of old
film footage they actually found that having that elbow bent at 15 degrees was
actually pretty normal. That is what everyone was doing. Glenn McGrath had a
slight bend in his elbow but up to 15 degrees, so he was not chucking. They
have a system in place.
What I am really glad about is that they are enforcing it
strictly and they are reviewing it. I give them the benefit of doubt. The ICC
is being more vigilant and they are not saying that once you have cleared in
2009, you can't be checked again. So they have got to keep monitoring it and
watching it closely and if bowlers develop different kinds of deliveries, then
why not have them checked?
Personally I don't think you should see chucking as a
crime. I think it is just a technical fault that people have and view it like
that. You have a technical fault in your action, go out and correct it and come
back," said the former Test batting stalwart.
You have (bowled) a no-ball when you overstep the line
and nobody says you are cheating. They say come back behind the line and here
they say come back behind 15 degrees and play the game.
In the context of some Indian players being accompanied by
wives and girlfriends during the Test series that they lost 1-3 to England, he
said it should be allowed.
The guys play 10 or 11 months a year. If you don't
allow their wives or girlfriends on tour then that would be a bigger problem. I
don't think you can start blaming wives or girlfriends for performance, he said, referring to the dismal run of Virat Kohli whose girlfriend was with
him in England.
Though he scored five double Test hundreds and also got
involved in a series-turning 376-run partnership with VVS Laxman against
Australia at Kolkata in 2001 when he scored 180 and Laxman notched up 281,
Dravid said he is more satisfied with his two half centuries in Kingston,
Jamaica in the 2006 Test series against the West Indies.
"The two innings that gave me the most satisfaction were
scoring those two fifties against West Indies in a Test match in Kingston in
Jamaica, in 2006. The series was tied at 0-0 and I was captain of the side and
was feeling a bit of pressure that India needed to win the series.
We go into the last Test and we play on a terrible
wicket and as soon as you looked at the wicket you knew this match wasn't going
to last more than three days. I got a couple of fifties in that game and I
think only Sarwan got a 50 for West Indies in the second innings.
When I look back on my career, I got a double hundred
at Adelaide, I think scoring those two 50s in really difficult conditions and
winning the Test match for India, probably gave me the most satisfaction.
Dravid felt today's youngsters should aim to play all the
three formats of the game.
I remember growing up I always wanted to be a Test cricketer. All the
stories I heard were exploits in Test cricket. My father told me about (Sunil)
Gavaskar's 776 runs (in his debut series in 1971 in the West Indies and GR
Vishwanath's 96 (in Chennai against West Indies in 1975-76) and so I grew up in
Bangalore hearing about Test cricket, that's how I grew up and that is how I
played.
One-day cricket was there and it was an after thought.
After three days of Ranji cricket and at the end of the fourth day they would
put in an ODI game against the same team and lot of times you would give the
13th, 14th and 15th person a chance.
It changed in 1996 and I realised I need to be good at
this (one-day cricket) if I wanted to play for a long period of time. It was a
transition for me and I had to learn how to adapt.
Success in Test and ODI needs certain skills and
abilities. If you do not possess these skills and abilities, you need to work
on them, he added.
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