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Listened to my inner self when I was out of the team: Rahane
Soul searching proved to be a cathartic experience for India’s Test vice-captain Ajinkya Rahane, who learnt to accept rejection after being snubbed for this year’s ODI World Cup.
New Delhi
Rahane was playing county cricket when his teammates were fighting it out in England. For someone, who was an automatic choice in white ball cricket in the 2015 World Cup, it was time for some introspection and he realised that blind pursuit of success was not ideal, always.
“At times, we get too caught up in our pursuit of success and then we suddenly realise that we are required to just stop, sit back and introspect. I did exactly that when I wasn’t selected for the 2019 World Cup,” Rahane said.
The 32-year-old then spoke about how he spent his two-month stay in Southampton, playing for Hampshire. He found his mojo back during the West Indies tour, where he scored his first Test hundred in three years and followed it up with another one against South Africa at home. “I am in a very good space right now and it started from the West Indies series. I was in England, playing county cricket where I learnt a lot not only as a cricketer but also as a human being,” Rahane said.
Initially, it was lonely but then things changed as he started revisiting his past, trying to find answers, he had never sought before.
“In two months, I played seven games. So it wasn’t always about on-field learnings but also about off field learning.”
“I sometimes walked alone in the parks, at times jogged. Sometimes I would simply sit with a cup of coffee thinking about past days, thinking about my younger days, what used to be my mindset when I played club cricket or age group cricket before I made my international debut. I needed some answers and got them.” For an intense man, there couldn’t be a better guide than Rahul Dravid, with whom Rahane had a session before embarking on the Caribbean tour.
“Conversations with Rahul bhai also helped me get those answers that I should keep my batting really simple. Take one game at a time. Be in a positive mindset.
“So now, I am in a very good mind space. Whatever happened earlier is gone. Now I have to focus on upcoming things,” one of India’s best players in away conditions said.
Wife Radhika proved to be a pillar of strength during testing times, but he also credited childhood coaches Praveen Amre and Prayag Raj for showing him the mirror.
“Radhika is a very positive person. She believes in me. When your life partner has belief in you, you tend to put in more than 100 percent effort. My parents, my brother, my sister, whenever I talk to them, they are positive,” he said.
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