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  Sourav Ganguly backs skipper Virat Kohli

Sourav Ganguly backs skipper Virat Kohli

PTI
Published : Jan 12, 2015, 6:51 am IST
Updated : Jan 12, 2015, 6:51 am IST

The comparisons will be inevitable but former India skipper Sourav Ganguly on Sunday said it was unfair to equate the leadership skills of Mahendra Singh Dhoni and newly-appointed Test captain Virat K

Sourav Ganguly
 Sourav Ganguly

The comparisons will be inevitable but former India skipper Sourav Ganguly on Sunday said it was unfair to equate the leadership skills of Mahendra Singh Dhoni and newly-appointed Test captain Virat Kohli, who will only become better with experience. “There will be a strong urge to compare Kohli and Dhoni. I don’t think the two can be compared and it would be unfair to do so as well,” Ganguly said.

“Kohli has got the job now and it is his for the near foreseeable future. He has got all the attributes for leadership and I think he will do well because he is aggressive and wants to win all the time. He will lead with passion and it will show on the field. And he will get better with experience and grow into this role.”

Kohli took over the Test captaincy after Dhoni retired midway through the series against Australia, which India eventually lost 0-2.

Ganguly said Kohli was impressive in his short captaincy stint.

The Delhi-born batsmen led India in the first Test at Adelaide when Dhoni was out injured, and then again during the fourth Test in Sydney after the latter announced a shock retirement following the third Test in Melbourne.

India lost the series but they competed aggressively in three out of the four Tests and could have registered wins in at least two of them if they had latched on to pivotal moments.

Kohli shrugged off his failure in England and scored four hundreds during this series, accumulating 692 runs, a record for an Indian batsman against Australia in any one encounter.

The problem for India throughout the series was bowling, which was too inconsistent.

“Length and line bowling is a basic at this international level and is very important. Look at what Josh Hazlewood did on the fifth day. He bowled eight overs for just 3 runs. He kept bowling one line and length and that’s just basic bowling,” said Ganguly.

“The Indian bowlers simply have to find a way to do it. The talent is there. They are consistently bowling at 140-plus mark and you cannot be ordinary bowlers if you keep bowling at that speed. Hopefully, someone will be around to tell them that and they will learn it from this tour,” he added.

Asked if Team India lacked proper coaching, Ganguly said, “It is important to have the right people around in terms of helping out these young boys because they are young and raw. They will have to work with them and it will not happen overnight.”

R. Ashwin was the only stand-out bowler during the last two Tests, bowling with control and discipline in both Melbourne and Sydney. He picked up 12 wickets in three Tests played this series 10 of those in the last two Tests but missed support from the other end.

Ganguly, however, seemed unimpressed by the spinner’s showing.

“Ashwin has got to bowl a lot better especially when it matters later in the Tests. He has been around for a while and is an experienced bowler now. His line has to get a lot better especially in overseas conditions.”

Location: Australia, New South Wales, Sydney