Really admire Virat Kohli’s commitment to purest form of cricket, states Gideon Haigh

no image

Australian journalist Gideon Haigh has admitted that what really stands out, to him, about India skipper Virat Kohli is his absolute commitment to the purest form of cricket - Tests. Haigh also spoke highly about how Kohli manages to handle his own fame and his aggressive captaincy.

Having authored 19 books — on cricket and business — and being a keen spectator of the sport from the revolutionary days of the Kerry Packer series, there is no doubt that Haigh knows the game inside out. However, Haigh disagrees with the observation that the traditional Test format is losing popularity, given the four-day proposal being considered by the ICC. 

“There have always been voices citing signs of extinction of the five-day game. It never had many great advocates in circles of power, but still it keeps on peaking. One thing I really admire about Kohli is his absolute commitment to the purest form of the game. He has been a great advocate of the game. If anyone in this generation can keep Test cricket alive it is Kohli,” Haigh told TOI in an exclusive chat. 

The senior journalist puts India’s rise as a cricketing superpower down to the explosive pace-bowling attack which allows Kohli to express himself as a captain on the field. 

“I never thought I would see a day when an Indian pace attack will out-bowl Australian attack in Australian conditions like I saw during last summer 2018-19. India was always a very formidable country in its home conditions but always struggled when it didn't have the support of its own crowd. Now India can win anywhere. And it's the confidence that arises from there. That knowledge has made Virat Kohli a more aggressive captain and a more dynamic individual and in some respects most revolutionary cricketer of this time,” he said.

In a country where people worship their cricket heroes like Sachin Tendulkar or MS Dhoni, Haigh has been impressed with Kohli’s handling of his public image.

“Kohli has taken a more proactive approach with managing his image. He has done that extremely shrewdly. It seems to me from a distance that he remains capable of being his own man. I would wait to see if he takes a political position on something. Whether he could use his fame and stature to voice his own opinion,” Haigh added.

Comments

Leave a comment

0 Comments

read previousAFG vs SL | Twitter in splits as Rashid's zeal for batting leaves him blissfully unaware of own dismissal
Whether batters should walk or not when they know they are out is an age-old debate in cricket, but Rashid Khan added a new dimension to the argument. The Afghan skipper was adamant on staying at the crease and taking a review, even after his bails lit up against Sri Lanka in Abu Dhabi on Wednesday.
IND vs NZ | India becoming exponentially better away from home, admits Tim Southeeread next
Kiwi pacer Tim Southee feels India is becoming better and better away from home with each game as reflected in the visitors taking a 0-2 lead in the five-match T20I series. Southee further revealed that the Black Caps aren’t making any particular plans to target the in-form KL Rahul or Shreyas Iyer.
View non-AMP page