2
Getty Images Having shouldered the responsibility of captaining India for close to a decade, it will be the last time that a team list will find the word captain alongside MS Dhoni when he leads India A in the first warm-up game against England. Comeback men Yuvraj Singh and left-arm pace Ashish Nehra will also get some game time as India continue a long domestic season. Equally important will be the performance of Shikhar Dhawan, who has been out of the team with a fractured thumb. India will play three ODIs and T20s against England. England captain Eoin Morgan said it will be a big challenge for the visitors to beat India at home but they are ready for the “special experience” that awaits. “Yes, I am looking forward to it. Playing against India in India is special experience. (They) are a strong side and hard to beat at home. I think, that’s something we are looking forward to as a side (and) it’s going to be a challenge. It is only a short series, but we think we can learn a lot from it.” ‘Captain Dhoni’ has One Last Go Morgan Intrigued by India Challenge VITALS W ith time, they no longer seem like memories. They are too strange, too diffi- cult to explain. They feel, instead, like hallucinatory flashbacks from some fever dream. The butchers who paid tribute through the medium of sausage; the pil- grimage of the van driver from North London, drawn to a city he did not know, compelled to find a wall on which to paint a mural; the story of the television personality who appeared on screen na- ked save for a pair of crisp, white boxers. With time, an air of unreality has set- tled on it all. If it remains hard to com- prehend the overwhelming fact that Leicester City, the 5,000-to-1 shot, actually won the Premier League title last May, then all of the little details that illu- minated the story have become more unfathomable still. For a few weeks last year, everything around Leicester felt dizzy, giddy. Now, eight months on, it all seems hazy, flickering and shimmering somewhere between recol- lection and imagination. Leicester, for so long one of England’s “yo-yo” teams — bouncing between the top flight and the second tier, never able to settle — are back in their traditional role. The weekend’s FA Cup match at Everton, a 2-1 win, brought a little relief from what has become an arduous, but familiar, season, the club once more flirting with the relegation battle. Fans who felt only joy for a year are starting to rediscov- er anxiety and anger. There have been questions about the wisdom of the club’s summer recruitment, expres- sions of frustration at the players. As Claudio Ranieri, Leicester’s manager, put it last week: “The first six months of 2016 were fantasy, and the second six months were reality.” Those who were caught up in the story feel the same. Gary Lineker, the stripped-to-his-boxers television per- sonality in question, supports Leicester and played for it, but even he believes the club has simply reverted to type. “It’s not that anything in particular has gone wrong this season,” he said. “It’s just that this is what Leicester is, what it has always been.” The contrast between what Leicester are and what Leicester, briefly, were has simply served to deepen the sense of disbelief, to allow the doubts to flourish. It is hard to be sure that it did, actually, happen. “I think I remem- ber it,” Lineker said. Only firm proof assuages the doubt. There is their con- tinuing Champions League campaign, of course. Ranieri set his team a target of remaining in European competi- tion beyond Christmas, and his players delivered in style: Sevilla await in the Round of 16. And there are the awards, which continue to trickle in. Before Christmas, Leicester were named team of the year in the BBC’s year-end awards, while Ranieri picked up the honour as best coach. Just this week, Riyad Mahrez was named African player of the year, a title Shinji Okazaki had already picked up in Asia. Rich Wilson is not a Leicester fan; his only connection with the city was that an old friend, Junior Lewis, once played for the team. In April, though, Wilson — an ama- teur street artist — decided to make the club his next subject. He remembers circling the city, “thinking this was stupid,” when he turned behind the back of an elec- tronics shop and onto Kate Street. “That was when I saw the wall,” he said. The shop’s owner, also the owner of an executive box at the King Power, agreed to let him use the wall to paint Ranieri. “He did not know who I was. But everyone was so carried away with what was happening, so he just agreed,” said Wilson. The mural is still there; Wilson has returned only once, after his image of N’Golo Kanté was defaced after the player moved to Chelsea. “I do worry that something else might happen,” he said. “Particularly I worry that Leicester fans might do something, because they are so passionate after a bad defeat.” It is not quite at that stage yet, of course, but perhaps Leicester could do with another dream. And the FA Cup could provide it. This time last year, Tottenham eliminat- ed Leicester. Defeat in that battle helped Ranieri win the war — it enabled him to give his players a crucial break. Now, the cup might provide something quite different: It is not a distraction, but a destination. Leicester have never won it. The New York Times Leicester Need Another Dream Rory Smith The FA Cup, ignored last season, could be it as their Premier League title fades fast into history Kumble was in charge during ‘Monkeygate’ in 2008, and he proved to be a statesman and an example for those to follow Kumble to Dhoni, And Now Kohli R Kaushik “Only one team is playing in the spirit of the game.” Nine years on, these words still reso- nate. They weren’t uttered in a fit of pique, with simmering anger, or with scarcely concealed bitterness. These words elevated a champion cricketer to the status of a statesman, to a masterful leader. Anil Kumble had summed up the passage of play over the five days – gripping action at all times with both teams equally contributing, less than edifying behaviour from one of the pro- tagonists, who took win-at-any-cost to a whole new level. January 6, 2008 started with Australia in control, it ended with Australia holding a 2-0 lead in the four-Test series. In the space of five deliveries, with stumps and a draw looming, Michael Clarke spun out Harbhajan Singh, RP Singh and Ishant Sharma to consign India to a 122-run defeat after having led by 69 on the first count. In itself, the result was a bitter pill to swallow, not least for the captain who had sent down 65.3 overs for match figures of 8 for 254, and then gamely soldiered on for more than two hours in making an unbeaten 45 when Ishant was caught at slip by Mike Hussey. That final act brought the curtain down on the most acrimonious of Test matches, a Test of silken strokeplay and excellent bowling but also extraor- dinarily poor decision-making from Steve Bucknor in particular that trig- gered the subsequent breaking down of relations between the two sides. Just how India maintained their equanimity in the face of dire provo- cation – thick outside edges and pal- pable leg-befores missed, even a stun- ning third-umpire error, competed with a snarling Australia claiming bump catches and hanging around after edging to slip, no less – is still hard to understand. But for all that drama, the Sydney of ’08 will be remembered for Monkeygate exploding in our faces, for Harbhajan and Andrew Symonds, S a c h i n Tendulkar and Matthew Hayden being the key players in an episode that drove a wedge between India and Australia. Sometimes, when you look back at the events of a tour that seemed endless but passed by in a flash you wonder what if. What if Kumble had not been the captain? What if a less grounded, less articulate man had been at the helm? Kumble’s Test captaincy career lasted less than 12 months – between November 22, 2007 and November 2, 2008 when a broken finger most cer- tainly hastened the ace leggie’s retire- ment from the longest version. India lost more Tests (five) than they won (three) with Kumble at the helm, but that period wasn’t only about results. It was a period of consolidation, with an eye not so much on the immediate as the long-term. When he took over, it was obvious that he was merely warming the seat. It was a period of apprenticeship for the king in waiting, and who better to take him through the paces than the king of hearts, the man who has never flinched from a challenge. Dhoni picked up the lessons beau- tifully. In time to come, he was to es- tablish himself as a statesman in his own right. He had the spirit, the ag- gression, the spunk and the courage of Kumble, but he also had a charisma that was entirely Dhoni. Dhoni was the one that shooed oth- ers away and carried Kumble on his broad shoulders on a final lap of hon- our around the Kotla when the older man dramatically retired from Test cricket. That was November 2008. A little over two-and-a-half years later, another king in waiting hoisted an- other legend of Indian cricket on his shoulders on an emotional April night at the Wankhede. It is no coincidence that Dhoni and Virat Kohli have emerged as the lead- ers of modern India, their tributes to Kumble and Tendulkar respectively stemming both from deep-seated Indian values and a genuine sense of respect, admiration and awe for the deeds and conduct of two of the world’s greatest cricketers ever. Like Dhoni did under Kumble, Kohli has served his apprenticeship under inarguably India’s most successful captain. Only, this has been a longer period of watching and learning. Wisden India The cup is no longer a dis- traction, but a destination for the Foxes who’ve never won it Sometimes you wonder, what if a less grounded, less articulate man had been at the helm? Who’ll be FIFA’s Best? FIFA’s newly- renovated World Player of the Year will be handed out today, January 9, at The Best FIFA Football Awards 2016. Here are the main awards on offer: BEST MEN’S PLAYER FINALISTS: Cristiano Ronaldo (Real Madrid/Portugal), Antoine Griezmann (Atletico Madrid/France), Lionel Messi (Barcelona/Argentina) BEST WOMEN’S PLAYER: Melane Behringer (Bayern Munich/ Germany), Carli Lloyd (Houston Dash/USA) Marta (FC Rosengard/Brazil) BEST MEN’S COACH: Claudio Ranieri (Leicester City), Fernando Santos (Portugal) and Zinedine Zidane (Real Madrid) BEST WOMEN’S COACH: Jill Ellis (United States), Silvia Neid (Germany) and Pia Sundhage (Sweden) Goal.com Conte Doesn’t Think He can Match Sir Alex, Wenger Antonio Conte considers Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger are two greats who’s exploits he’s unsure of replicating as he expects to retire at a much younger age. “You are talking about two monsters, two great managers,” Conte said. “For me, fantastic managers because Sir Alex Ferguson is a good example for me.“When I see him, but also when I see Arsene, they are a big example for me. I hope to have not completely their career, but 10 years, yes. It’s enough for me. “Twenty more years? Now I’m 47. I prefer that my wife doesn’t listen to this. This is our life. Football is our life, with this pressure, with all. Football is our life and it’s right to continue to live in football”. Goal.com Antoine Griezmann Lionel Messi Cristiano Ronaldo Anil Kumble, then India captain, appeals for the dismissal of Brett Lee during day two of the Second Test match between Australia and India at the Sydney Cricket Ground on January 3, 2008 NYT AFP AFP AFP 21 WWW.ECONOMICTIMES.COM Sports: The Great Games PUBLISHED FOR THE PROPRIETORS, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. by Rajeev Yadav at Times House, 7, Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg, NewDelhi-110 002, Phone: 011-23302000, Fax: 011- 23323346 and printed by himat Times of India Press, 13 & 15/1, Site IV, Industrial Area, Sahibabad (UP). REGD. OFFICE: Dr Dadabhai Naoroji Road, Mumbai-400 001. EDITOR (DELHI MARKET): Javed Sayed (Responsible for selection of news under PRB Act). © Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission of the publisher is prohibited. All rights reserved. RNI NO. 26749/74 | MADE IN NewDelhi | VOLUME 45 NO. 6 AIR CHARGE Raipur, Ahmedabad, Srinagar, Leh & via . `2.00 | PRICE IN NEPAL: NEP . `15.00 except Saturday & Sunday : NEP . `25.00

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Page 1: Sports: The Great Games Leicester Need Kumble to Dhoni ...2017.pdfDhoni picked up the lessons beau - tifully. In time to come, he was to es-tablish himself as a statesman in his own

Getty Images

Having shouldered the responsibility of captaining India for close to a decade, it will be the last time that a team list will find the word captain alongside MS Dhoni when he leads India A in the first warm-up game against England. Comeback men Yuvraj Singh and left-arm pace Ashish Nehra will also get some game time as India continue a long domestic season. Equally important will be the performance of Shikhar Dhawan, who

has been out of the team with a fractured thumb. India will play three ODIs and T20s against England.

England captain Eoin Morgan said it will be a big challenge for the visitors to beat India at home but they are ready for the “special experience” that awaits. “Yes, I am looking forward to it. Playing against India in India is special experience. (They) are a strong side and hard to beat at home. I think, that’s something we are looking forward to as a side (and) it’s going to be a challenge. It is only a short series, but we think we can learn a lot from it.”

‘Captain Dhoni’ has One Last GoMorgan Intrigued by India Challenge

VITALS

With time, they no longer seem like memories. They are too strange, too diffi-cult to explain. They feel, instead, like

hallucinatory flashbacks from some fever dream.

The butchers who paid tribute through the medium of sausage; the pil-grimage of the van driver from North London, drawn to a city he did not know, compelled to find a wall on which to paint a mural; the story of the television personality who appeared on screen na-ked save for a pair of crisp, white boxers.

With time, an air of unreality has set-tled on it all. If it remains hard to com-prehend the overwhelming fact that Leicester City, the 5,000-to-1 shot, actually won the Premier League title last May, then all of the little details that illu-minated the story have become more unfathomable still.

For a few weeks last year, everything around Leicester felt dizzy, giddy. Now, eight months on, it all seems hazy, flickering and shimmering somewhere between recol-lection and imagination.

Leicester, for so long one of England’s “yo-yo” teams — bouncing between the top flight and the second tier, never able to settle — are back in their traditional role. The weekend’s FA Cup match at Everton, a 2-1 win, brought a little relief from what has become an arduous, but familiar, season, the club once more flirting with the relegation battle.

Fans who felt only joy for a year are starting to rediscov-er anxiety and anger. There have been questions about the wisdom of the club’s summer recruitment, expres-sions of frustration at the players.

As Claudio Ranieri, Leicester’s manager, put it last week: “The first six months of 2016 were fantasy, and the second six months were reality.”

Those who were caught up in the story feel the same. Gary Lineker, the stripped-to-his-boxers television per-sonality in question, supports Leicester and played for it, but even he believes the club has simply reverted to type.

“It’s not that anything in particular has gone wrong this season,” he said. “It’s just that this is what Leicester is, what it has always been.”

The contrast between what Leicester are and what Leicester, briefly, were has simply served to deepen the sense of disbelief, to allow the doubts to flourish. It is hard to be sure that it did, actually, happen. “I think I remem-ber it,” Lineker said.

Only firm proof assuages the doubt. There is their con-tinuing Champions League campaign, of course. Ranieri set his team a target of remaining in European competi-tion beyond Christmas, and his players delivered in style: Sevilla await in the Round of 16.

And there are the awards, which continue to trickle in. Before Christmas, Leicester were named team of the year in the BBC’s year-end awards, while Ranieri picked up the honour as best coach. Just this week, Riyad Mahrez was named African player of the year, a title Shinji Okazaki had already picked up in Asia.

Rich Wilson is not a Leicester fan; his only connection with the city was that an old friend, Junior Lewis, once played for the team. In April, though, Wilson — an ama-

teur street artist — decided to make the club his next subject.

He remembers circling the city, “thinking this was stupid,” when he turned behind the back of an elec-tronics shop and onto Kate Street. “That was when I saw the wall,” he said. The shop’s owner, also the owner of an executive box at the King

Power, agreed to let him use the wall to paint Ranieri. “He did not know who I was. But everyone was so carried away with what was happening, so he just agreed,” said Wilson.

The mural is still there; Wilson has returned only once, after his image of N’Golo Kanté was defaced after the player moved to Chelsea. “I do worry that something else might happen,” he said. “Particularly I worry that Leicester fans might do something, because they are so passionate after a bad defeat.”

It is not quite at that stage yet, of course, but perhaps Leicester could do with another dream. And the FA Cup could provide it. This time last year, Tottenham eliminat-ed Leicester. Defeat in that battle helped Ranieri win the war — it enabled him to give his players a crucial break.

Now, the cup might provide something quite different: It is not a distraction, but a destination. Leicester have never won it.

The New York Times

Leicester Need Another Dream

Rory Smith

The FA Cup, ignored last season, could be it as their Premier League title fades fast into history

Kumble was in charge during ‘Monkeygate’ in 2008, and he proved to be a statesman and an example for those to follow

Kumble to Dhoni, And Now Kohli

R Kaushik

“Only one team is playing in the spirit of the game.”

Nine years on, these words still reso-nate. They weren’t uttered in a fit of pique, with simmering anger, or with scarcely concealed bitterness. These words elevated a champion cricketer to the status of a statesman, to a masterful leader. Anil Kumble had summed up the passage of play over the five days – gripping action at all times with both teams equally contributing, less than edifying behaviour from one of the pro-tagonists, who took win-at-any-cost to a whole new level.

January 6, 2008 started with Australia in control, it ended with Australia holding a 2-0 lead in the four-Test series. In the space of five deliveries, with stumps and a draw looming, Michael Clarke spun out Harbhajan Singh, RP Singh and Ishant Sharma to consign India to a 122-run defeat after having led by 69 on the first count. In itself, the result was a bitter pill to swallow, not least for the captain who had sent down 65.3 overs for match figures of 8 for 254, and then gamely soldiered on for more than two hours in making an unbeaten 45 when Ishant was caught at slip by Mike Hussey.

That final act brought the curtain down on the most acrimonious of Test matches, a Test of silken strokeplay and excellent bowling but also extraor-dinarily poor decision-making from Steve Bucknor in particular that trig-gered the subsequent breaking down of

relations between the two sides.Just how India maintained their

equanimity in the face of dire provo-cation – thick outside edges and pal-pable leg-befores missed, even a stun-ning third-umpire error, competed with a snarling Australia claiming bump catches and hanging around after edging to slip, no less – is still hard to understand.

But for all that drama, the Sydney of ’08 will be remembered for Monkeygate exploding in our faces, for Harbhajan and Andrew

S y m o n d s , S a c h i n T e n d u l k a r a nd M at t hew Hayden being the key players in an episode t h at d r ove a wedge between

India and Australia.Sometimes, when you look back

at the events of a tour that seemed endless but passed by in a flash you wonder what if. What if Kumble had not been the captain? What if a less grounded, less articulate man had been at the helm?

Kumble’s Test captaincy career lasted less than 12 months – between November 22, 2007 and November 2, 2008 when a broken finger most cer-tainly hastened the ace leggie’s retire-ment from the longest version. India lost more Tests (five) than they won (three) with Kumble at the helm, but that period wasn’t only about results. It was a period of consolidation, with an eye not so much on the immediate

as the long-term.When he took over, it was obvious

that he was merely warming the seat. It was a period of apprenticeship for the king in waiting, and who better to take him through the paces than the king of hearts, the man who has never flinched from a challenge.

Dhoni picked up the lessons beau-tifully. In time to come, he was to es-tablish himself as a statesman in his own right. He had the spirit, the ag-gression, the spunk and the courage of Kumble, but he also had a charisma that was entirely Dhoni.

Dhoni was the one that shooed oth-ers away and carried Kumble on his broad shoulders on a final lap of hon-our around the Kotla when the older man dramatically retired from Test cricket. That was November 2008. A little over two-and-a-half years later, another king in waiting hoisted an-other legend of Indian cricket on his shoulders on an emotional April night at the Wankhede.

It is no coincidence that Dhoni and Virat Kohli have emerged as the lead-ers of modern India, their tributes to Kumble and Tendulkar respectively stemming both from deep-seated Indian values and a genuine sense of respect, admiration and awe for the deeds and conduct of two of the world’s greatest cricketers ever.

Like Dhoni did under Kumble, Kohli has served his apprenticeship under inarguably India’s most successful captain. Only, this has been a longer period of watching and learning.

Wisden India

The cup is no longer a dis-traction, but a destination for the Foxes who’ve never won it

Sometimes you wonder, what if a less grounded, less articulate man had been at the helm?

Who’ll be FIFA’s Best?FIFA’s newly-renovated World Player of the Year will be handed out today, January 9, at The Best FIFA Football Awards 2016. Here are the main awards on offer:BEST MEN’S PLAYER FINALISTS:Cristiano Ronaldo (Real Madrid/Portugal),

Antoine Griezmann(Atletico Madrid/France),

Lionel Messi(Barcelona/Argentina)

BEST WOMEN’S PLAYER:Melane Behringer(Bayern Munich/Germany),

Carli Lloyd (Houston Dash/USA)

Marta(FC Rosengard/Brazil)

BEST MEN’S COACH:Claudio Ranieri(Leicester City),

Fernando Santos (Portugal) and Zinedine Zidane (Real Madrid)BEST WOMEN’S COACH:Jill Ellis (United States), Silvia Neid (Germany) and Pia Sundhage (Sweden) —Goal.com

Conte Doesn’t Think He can Match Sir Alex, Wenger

Antonio Conte considers Sir Alex Ferguson and Arsene Wenger are two greats who’s exploits he’s unsure of replicating as he expects to retire at a much

younger age. “You are talking about two monsters, two great managers,” Conte said. “For me, fantastic managers because Sir Alex Ferguson is a good example for me.“When I see him, but also when I see Arsene, they are a big example for me. I hope to have not completely their career, but 10 years, yes. It’s enough for me.“Twenty more years? Now I’m 47. I prefer that my wife doesn’t listen to this. This is our life. Football is our life, with this pressure, with all. Football is our life and it’s right to continue to live in football”. —Goal.com

Antoine Griezmann

Lionel Messi

Cristiano Ronaldo

Anil Kumble, then India captain, appeals for the dismissal of Brett Lee during day two of the Second Test match between Australia and India at the Sydney Cricket Ground on January 3, 2008

NYT

AFP

AFP

AFP

21�WWW.ECONOMICTIMES.COM

Sports: The Great Games

PUBLISHED FOR THE PROPRIETORS, Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. by Rajeev Yadav at TimesHouse, 7, Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg, New Delhi-110 002, Phone: 011-23302000, Fax: 011-23323346 and printed by him at Times of India Press, 13 & 15/1, Site IV, Industrial Area,Sahibabad (UP).REGD. OFFICE: Dr Dadabhai Naoroji Road, Mumbai-400 001. EDITOR (DELHI MARKET): JavedSayed (Responsible for selection of news under PRB Act). © Reproduction in whole or in partwithout written permission of the publisher is prohibited. All rights reserved.

RNI NO. 26749/74 | MADE IN New Delhi | VOLUME 45 NO. 6

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Page 2: Sports: The Great Games Leicester Need Kumble to Dhoni ...2017.pdfDhoni picked up the lessons beau - tifully. In time to come, he was to es-tablish himself as a statesman in his own

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