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Anil Kumble: Epitome of discipline, determination
Astute knowledge of the game, dogged determination and commitment to excellence were some of the hallmarks of Anil Kumble's playing days, qualities he will now expect from Virat Kohli and his boys as he takes over as the chief coach of the Indian cricket team.
New Delhi
When a 19-year-old Kumble made his his Test debut back in 1990 at the Old Trafford in Manchester, his performance largely went unnoticed as there was a 17-year-old teenager, who scored the first of his 100 international hundred’s.
But as Indians started worshipping Sachin Tendulkar's on-field heroics over the next two decades, the cricket aficionados had one thing for the bespectacled 6 feet 3 inches mechanical engineer from Bengaluru: Respect with capital R.
Not every day, a losing captain gets a clap from his country's media. But in 2008, Kumble's iconic statement: "Only one team played in 'Spirit of Game' at the post-match press-conference in the aftermath of infamous 'Monkey Gate' Test at Sydney was one such time when a captain acted as an elder statesman. He grew in stature even more from that very day.
Call it strange but Kumble is a bit different from the three-member Cricket Advisory Committee (CAC) that recommended his name.
Neither was he a child prodigy like Tendulkar, nor was he immensely gifted as his contemporaries Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman but when it came to the 4 D's: Dedication, Discipline, Determination and Devotion -- he had each of the traits in abundance.
For a leg-spinner coming from the land of Bhagwat Chandrasekhar and pilloried in initial years for not being able to turn his leg-breaks or possessing a googly, he ended his 18-year career with 619 Test and 337 ODI wickets.
And if the stat is just behind Muttiah Muralitharan (800 wickets) and Shane Warne (709 wickets), who were magicians in their own rights, it was certainly a brilliant achievement.
The greatest moment in Test cricket for Kumble obviously will remain his 'Perfect 10' - 10/74 - against Pakistan at the Feroz Shah Kotla. It was a match where his consistency and perseverance paid off.
Similarly, when it came to grit, everyone remembers the sight of Kumble bowling in West Indies with a broken jaw and also ending up with Brian Lara's wicket. That was commitment of the highest order.
India's two most successful captains: Mohammed Azharuddin and Sourav Ganguly were ever grateful to this humble, soft-spoken man, who did not need tailor-made, treacherous turners to win games.
A bit of turn from third day, firm even bouncy pitches in the sub-continent and Kumble was a handful with his impeccable length as he could pitch it on the same spot ball after ball. Â
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