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How will MS Dhoni be remembered as a cricketer?

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MS Dhoni announced his retirement from international cricket on the 74th Independence Day of India. Dhoni’s rise from a young captain who loved to gamble with big decisions to one of the sharpest cricketing minds ever has been one of the most fascinating stories in Indian cricket.

While we all wait for cricket to start his second innings as a cricketer in IPL 2020 as the leader of Chennai Super Kings, here’s a look back at five instances which changed the fortunes of India and also of few players because of just one man - MS Dhoni!


Giving Joginder Sharma that last over

Harbhajan Singh had one over left but Dhoni left everyone scratching their heads when he handed over the last over of ICC World T20 final in 2007 to medium-pacer Joginder Sharma. Pakistan needed 13 runs to become first-ever T20 champions of the world and they had Misbah-ul-Haq at crease who was batting at 37* off 35 deliveries.

Dhoni took a chance with Joginder because Misbah had smashed three sixes off Harbhajan in the 17th over. Joginder started off with a wide as hearts of a billion Indians collectively sank. The first official delivery was a dot and then Misbah hit a straight six. But as Indian heads started to drop, Misbah went for the paddle shot over short-fine leg but ended up hitting the ball into the hands of Sreesanth. Dhoni’s magical captaincy career had just begun with a historic title in Johannesburg.


Dropping Sourav Ganguly-Rahul Dravid from ODIs

In 2008, Dhoni committed the blasphemy of dropping these two from Indian squad for tri-series in Australia involving Sri Lanka. When asked, then BCCI secretary Niranjan Shah had said ‘the emphasis was on fielding abilities and chief selectors and team management wanted a young fielding side for the tour’.

In hindsight, this is the exact moment in Indian cricket when fielding became an equal ability as batting and bowling. The change in culture resulted in India being regarded as one of the best fielding sides in the world, if not the best. Not to forget their first-ever tri-series win in Australia.


Promoting himself to number 5 in 2011 World Cup final

The biggest stage of them all... chasing a stiff target of 275... Virender Sehwag, Sachin Tendulkar and Virat Kohli back in the hut... still needing 161 to win with Lasith Malinga in full flow. This was the situation when Dhoni opted to walk out in the middle of the park at the packed Wankhede, where Indian fans were seeing their World Cup dream quickly turning into a nightmare.

The true sign of a leader is that he turns up when it matters the most and that is what Dhoni did when he came at number four, ahead of specialist Yuvraj Singh.

Dhoni struck a majestic 91* as India were crowned World Champions for the second time in the history of the tournament. Gautam Gambhir’s 97 bailed India out of trouble but Dhoni’s six took them over the line on the historic occasion. A World Cup final man of the match trophy sits pretty in Dhoni’s illustrious cabinet, something which is not given away but earned.


Rotating Tendulkar/ Sehwag/ Gambhir in CB series 2012/13

India tend to worship players more than the sport itself and that is why certain god-like figures in the dressing room get more time than the others before they have to see teammates play from the bench or on TV for that matter. Dhoni ensured the change in culture came about during his time at helm as after opting for ‘better fielders’ in 2008, he now decided to rotate the trio of Sachin Tendulkar, Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir during the 2012 CB series tri-series in Australia.

Despite having impeccable record at the top of the order, the trio didn’t feature together in the line-up right through the course of the series as Dhoni kept rotating between them. India ended up not qualifying for the final but the poor show from the openers did point out that India needed an overhaul at the top of the order.


Promoting Rohit Sharma as opener

The year 2013 was special for Dhoni because this is when he became the only captain to win World T20, World Cup and Champions Trophy titles. This is also the same year when he changed the fortunes of an inconsistent cricketer, who was still trying to cement his place in the side.

Rohit Sharma was part of the Indian set-up since 2007 but wasn’t able put on consistent performances that would have helped him become a regular. Dhoni first gave him a chance to open the innings in 2011 during the South Africa tour but he could muster just 29 runs in three innings.

In January 2013, he was given the chance once more to shine at the top against England and Rohit smashed 83 runs in Mohali and never looked back since. From middle-order obscurity to one of the most explosive openers in the game, Rohit has come a long way since. He still tips his hat to Dhoni with an occasional double century for changing his fortunes and the betterment of Indian cricket as a whole.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...dia-matches/story-E1bRk58ufoHQhd3MwRAp0O.html
 
2009 ICC Test Championship awarded to Australia.
India won in
2010
2011
2017
2018
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2020
 
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He will be remembered as India's Greatest LOI cricketer in terms of impact and value.

There was a magic in his hands which is why even the opposition knew that the game is not finished until Dhoni is there.

He has a strong claim to be considered as the greatest LOI captain of all-time.
 
General Musharraf speaking about MS Dhoni!


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An excellent wicket-keeper.

A smart tactician.

Never say die attitude.

A very good captain.

Gave youngsters a chance.

Did not shirk responsibility.

An excellent role-model.
 
Tribute from Pakistan Head Coach/Chief Selector Misbah-ul--Haq

==

Pakistan coach Misbah-ul-Haq said M.S. Dhoni had "changed the whole face of Indian cricket" after the former captain announced his international retirement on Saturday.

Dhoni, a 39-year-old wicketkeeper and batsman, is India's most successful skipper, having played a starring role in their 2011 World Cup final win on home soil and also guided them to victory in the inaugural T20 World Cup final and the Champions Trophy.

"He's a big name in Indian cricket, he's served Indian cricket very well," Misbah, who played against Dhoni, told AFP after the third day's play in the second Test between England and Pakistan at Southampton was washed out.

Misbah added Dhoni, known for his unflappable demeanour at the crease, had altered the mentality of the Indian team.

"One of the greats I think, the way he changed the approach and especially he achieved so much for Indian cricket, winning the World Cup, winning the Champions Trophy, winning the T20 World Cup," said Misbah.

"He's got all the trophies in his bag," added the former batsman, a member of the Pakistan side that suffered a dramatic five-run defeat by arch-rivals India in the 2007 World Twenty20 final in Johannesburg.

- 'Cool captain' -

Dhoni was also renowned for his ability under pressure, a talent he demonstrated during his 91 not out against Sri Lanka in the 2011 World Cup final in Mumbai where he sealed a six-wicket win in style with a towering six off Nuwan Kulasekara after promoting himself up the batting order.

"He was such a cool captain on the outside, but from the inside such an aggressive player," said former Pakistan skipper Misbah, who also paid tribute to Dhoni's qualities as a tactician and man-manager.

"He was such a 'shrewd', you could say, captain -- the way he handled the team, the way he just developed the team and changed the team from seniors (senior players), brought up some juniors.

"He changed the whole culture of the team, the whole face of Indian cricket -- a wonderful servant of the game."

Misbah added that under Dhoni the national side had gone on to greater heights than even the celebrated team captained by Sourav Ganguly, now the president of the Board of Control for Cricket in India.

"He was the one name who really took Indian cricket from wherever Sourav left the team and then from there on he did wonders for Indian cricket," said Misbah. "Such a wonderful person and a very, very good captain."

https://www.france24.com/en/2020081...face-of-indian-cricket-says-pakistan-s-misbah
 
MS Dhoni brought an end to an illustrious international career spanning 16 years as the former India captain decided to announce his retirement from limited overs cricket on Saturday evening. Dhoni had already retired from Test cricket in December 2014. Dhoni, however will continue to ply his trade for the Chennai Super Kings in IPL. The 13th edition of the tournament will being from September 19 in the UAE.

Dhoni’s international retirement was always on the cards. The wicket-keeper batsman had not played any competitive cricket match ever since India’s defeat to New Zealand in the 2019 World Cup semi-final against New Zealand at Manchester.

Dhoni, however, goes away as one of the greatest cricketers and captains of all time. Here are some of Dhoni’s captaincy and batting and wicket-keeping world records.


Only captain to win three ICC tournaments

MS Dhoni led India to victory in the inaugural edition of World T20 in 2007, followed it with an ODI World Cup triumph in 2011 and then became the only captain to lift all three ICC tournaments by leading India to the Champions Trophy title in 2013.


Most international matches as a captain

Dhoni has captained India in 332 international matches - 200 ODIs, 60 Tests and 72 T20Is – which is a world record. Australia’s Ricky Ponting has captained in 324 international matches. Dhoni is also the only captain to have led in 50+ international matches in each of the three formats of the game.


Most final wins as a captain (ODIs)

Dhoni has led India to 6 multi-nation ODI tournament finals and of which India have won 4 – making him the most successful captain in multi-nation ODI tournament finals. Overall, Dhoni has won 110 ODI ODIs as a captain, which is the second-most by any player. Ponting is in the first place on the list by winning 165 ODIs.


Most Not Outs in ODIs

MS Dhoni has remained unbeaten in 84 ODIs, which is again a world record. The second best is by former South Africa all-rounder Shaun Pollock, who has 72 not outs to his name. Out of the 84 times, Dhoni remained unbeaten in ODIs, 51 came while India were chasing and amazingly, the Men in Blue have emerged victorious in 47 of those while two matches were tied and they lost only 2 times.


Most stumpings in international cricket

MS Dhoni also holds the record for inflicting most number of stumpings in international cricket. in 350 matches, Dhoni has 123 stumpings to his name. He is also the only wicket-keeper to have inflicted 100 international stumpings in his career. In terms of total dismissals, Dhoni is behind South Africa’s Mark Boucher and Australia’s Adam Gilchrist.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...still-holds/story-YbxnnG021spBzodUAzw5EK.html
 
One of the GOATs in ODIs for sure, batsmanship and captaincy included.

You can even say captaincy in t20s too- he was an alright batsman in t20s but his captaincy in that format was still top tier.

One of his underrated moments: rescuing the ship in the aane do series vs us.
 
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">MS Dhoni:<br><br>The only captain to win three ICC tournaments<br>Most international matches as a captain<br>Most final wins as a captain in ODIs<br>Most Not Outs in ODIs<br>Most stumpings in international cricket<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://t.co/zImx5MUwMa">pic.twitter.com/zImx5MUwMa</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1294718995204059149?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">August 15, 2020</a></blockquote>
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He will be remembered for how cool he was under pressure. Ner seen anything like it.
 
If I have to summarise the impact of MSD, I would simply point out to the muscle BCCI has in cricketing world today. BCCI's rise to power has been solely on the back of this great man.
 
He will be remembered for how cool he was under pressure. Ner seen anything like it.

Absolutely. In the cauldron of a high pressure ODI chase, he always thought very clearly and performed his plans to perfection, while the rest of the viewing audience were wondering for 45 overs what on earth he was doing. The definition of a clutch player, no one could think and perform under so much pressure like he could.
 
One of the best captains of all time and definitely the best Indian captain of all time.

Champion player.
 
I'm not sure why Pakistani fans are falling over backwards to heap praise on Dhoni. This is the man who tried not to win a game in the World Cup, where an Indian loss would result in Pakistan's exit from the tournament. Lost all respect for Dhoni on that day.
 
overrated.
one of the best ever odi captains/player etc. But for me test matches are the real format of cricket.

Dhoni is a good test player but not a great one. very good player but not an ATG in tests imo.
 
To be fair to MSD, not only will he be remembered as a great keeper, captain and finisher, but I think probably the best thing about him is that he'll be remembered as a decent human being all over the world.

Probably waited a year or two too long but, nobody's perfect.

A really likeable man and a unique holder of every ICC trophy. Wish him all the best.
 
A true pressure cricketer. In my time watching the game, only Waugh and Smith have been as calm and collected on the biggest stage.
Will go down as a bonafide LOI ATG and an admittedly flawed test cricketer but most importantly as a fantastic captain
 
Nasser Hussain hailed India great MS Dhoni as "probably the best white-ball captain there has ever been" after he announced his retirement from international cricket on Saturday.

Dhoni played 90 Test matches for India, 98 T20Is and a staggering 350 ODIs, averaging 50.57 and scoring 10 centuries in the 50-over format. He is India's most successful captain in limited-over internationals, having won three ICC trophies - the 2007 World T20, the 2011 World Cup on home soil and the 2013 Champions Trophy.

As well as Hussain, Sky Sports' Michael Atherton also paid tribute to Dhoni, while Shane Warne tried to recruit him for London Spirit in The Hundred next year.

Nasser Hussain

"A great captain, probably the best white-ball captain there has ever been.

"And also a cool, calm customer under pressure; a great finisher of a game, the game wasn't won until you got Dhoni out. That is a good combination when you're a great captain, cool and calm under pressure.

"He was involved in some of the great moments of Indian cricket. He did it his own way; a very, very fine cricketer."


Michael Atherton

"When a player retires, what do people remember about that player? Not the average or the numbers but how they played the game and the iconic moments that they were involved in.

"I would remember the hitting of that six at the Wankhede Stadium to win that World Cup in 2011.

"What a fabulous player he was."


Shane Warne

"A terrific cricketer. You think back to some of the games that he won for India, off his own back.

"And you think of his captaincy, his leadership, he was a terrific competitor and a wonderful player. He will go down in history as one of the all-time great wicketkeeper-batsmen

"He had a calmness about him that was fantastic and he always got the best out of his team, whether it was India, Chennai Super Kings, whoever it was. His players really respected him and responded to the way Dhoni wanted to play the game.

"In T20 cricket, especially, the best captains, their teams will be in and around the finals all the time - it's so key in T20 cricket - and Chennai have won [the IPL] three times.

"I just wonder if I could get him down to the London Spirit next year for The Hundred. I might put out a call to see if he wants to play at Lord's. I'll find the money, MS!"


Wasim Akram

"I saw him when he started his cricketing career, his first tour to Pakistan [in 2006], he became a mega hit because of his long hair, his batting - he got runs on that tour [a maiden Test hundred].

"He played 350 ODIs, averaging 50; he was one of the true match-winners for India. Batting at No 6 or 7, he was a finisher, he'd take the game to the last two or three overs and had every shot - the helicopter shot he created.

"As a skipper, I always thought he was very calm, no matter the situation. And when you're calm as a captain, you make right decisions. If you panic, the whole team panics and Dhoni wasn't one of them.

"On and off the field he was a true gentleman and the world will remember him, as Shane says, as one of the best wicketkeeper-batsmen ever.

"He was a treat to watch, as long as he was not playing against Pakistan."

https://www.skysports.com/cricket/n...-warne-leads-tributes-from-sky-sports-pundits
 
Dhoni is in exactly the same category as Martin Guptill and Michael Bevan and Imran Tahir and Mitchell Starc.

That is to say, he was a superb white ball cricketer and a deeply mediocre Test cricketer.

That's OK - the different formats of the game have diverged so far now that it's fine to be a specialist in one form but not the other.

Dhoni was a sound but unexceptional glovesman. It is actually a compliment to him that his glovework was so unmemorable - he made relatively few howlers.

Against a white ball on grassless wickets with no slip cordon, Dhoni was an all-time great. He took the white ball format very seriously and could pace an innings very well until the 2015 World Cup, when he was almost 34 and messed up the Semi-Final chase at Sydney. From then on there was a continuous slow deterioration, as viewed in the defeats by England and New Zealand in the 2019 World Cup. He was hard to dismiss, but he just couldn't get the pacing right when it really mattered.

In Test cricket there was nothing special or exceptional about MS Dhoni. He was a class below Gilchrist and Sangakkara and De Viliiers and even Watling as a batsman, and it showed.

He averaged 46 at home with 5 centuries in 42 Tests.

But he was utterly exposed away: in 48 Tests he managed just one century, and averaged 32.84.

That away Test average is hugely significant, because it is only half a run better than Tim Paine's away Test average. And Tim Paine was robbed by injury of his own Test career between the ages of 26 and 33, whereas Dhoni did get to play at his peak.

And there's worse! Sarfraz Ahmed actually averaged 32.86 in his 29 away Tests, with 1 century and 12 fifties in 52 innings (Dhoni averaged 32.84 away with 1 century and 18 fifties in 83 innings).

So there we have it.

Dhoni was one of the very greatest white ball players of all time.

But as a Test cricketer he was average, and almost as good as Sarfraz Ahmed.

So there we have it.
 
The first half of his career was amazing right until 2012-2013 with both his captaincy and batting, after that it was just a drag to watch him .. particularly all the occasions he refused to chase down a target for whatever bizarre reason has tarred my opinion of him.
 
The first half of his career was amazing right until 2012-2013 with both his captaincy and batting, after that it was just a drag to watch him .. particularly all the occasions he refused to chase down a target for whatever bizarre reason has tarred my opinion of him.
He should have compulsorily retired or made to retire after WC '15 at the worst.

No way in the hell he should've been been part of our WC '19 squad.

That way, Tendulkar timed his ODI retirement better when he stopped playing ODIs after WC '11 except some and retired way before WC '15.

When you are not good enough to be part of next WC to be played, you should retire from ODIs. Period.
 
If I have to summarise the impact of MSD, I would simply point out to the muscle BCCI has in cricketing world today. BCCI's rise to power has been solely on the back of this great man.
BCCI started adding heft to its financial muscle in the '90s itself especially after a very successful WC '96.
 
Selfish
Mafia of Credit stealer
Won the cups with the best team and still people think Dhoni was the one who won these all cups
And with time people were not able to tolerate his innings now
So he retired
Its a good thing for India he retired
 
And also he used to slow down at every chase
And i can bet he never wanted india to win cup under virat captaincy
So he failed in ct he failed in t20 world cup he failed in 2019 world cup
So people remember only Dhoni for world cups
 
Now he was preparing for t20 2020 world cup
As world cup 8s npw postponed
So definitely wa kicked out now by sourav
As there was no chance for him to play that too at the age of 41 in 2021
 
For the great batsmen, who took the art of batsmanship in one-day cricket to a higher pedestal, wielding the willow in limited overs cricket was about skill and technique, just like it was in Test cricket. But for someone like MS Dhoni, batting in ODIs was all about a bit of brain and a lot of brawn. Dhoni’s batting mirrored his streetsmart personality. Always ready with a fix for the most complex of situations.

He didn’t care how he looked while and after he played a shot - perhaps the only exception was the 2011 ICC World Cup final, when he hit that six over cow corner and stayed put in that pose - and in that was his simple way of tackling the best bowlers in world cricket.

Thank You Mahi! - Highlights of a glittering career

He batted almost the entirety of his ODI career in the middle order and finished with 10,773 runs. His average at the end of his career, spanning 350 matches, is a whopping 50.57.

That puts him in the 10th position in the overall list of batsmen with highest batting average in ODIs.

But interestingly, among batsmen with over 10,000 runs in their ODI career, often considered the gold standard of success in modern ODI batting history, Dhoni is only the second batsman with an average above 50, and the only one among those who have finished their careers.

Indian captain Virat Kohli is the only other batsman with over 10,000 runs to have an average over 50, but he is still playing. Among those, who are in the 10k club and have retired from the game, Sachin Tendulkar comes in behind Dhoni, with an average of 44.83.

At the end of the day, it might just be another statistic and another parameter to judge batsmen by. But what it tells about Dhoni is the fact that he made a huge impact in a format where he seldom got the chance to play too many deliveries.

Among the 14 batsmen to have scored 10,000 or more runs in ODI cricket, most are opening batsmen. The others have batted for the majority of their respective career either in the number 3 position or number 4.

Dhoni played most of his cricket at the numbers 5 and 6 and therein lies his greatness. He retires from the game as the best ODI finisher ever. It was a joy to watch you bat, Mahi.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...te-odi-list/story-yGij6Hz6xcwZq1GQdsLheP.html
 
Sunil Gavaskar recalled the time when he told MS Dhoni that he would love to watch his 2011 World Cup-winning six one last time before he says goodbye to the world. Dhoni announced his retirement from international cricket on Saturday, drawing curtains on what has been an exceptional career for the former India captain. Dhoni announced his decision in an Instagram post with a video depicting his entire journey in an Indian jersey.

Remembering his fond memories of Dhoni, the legendary Gavaskar recalled his iconic six against Nuwan Kulasekara in the final of the 2011 World Cup against Sri Lanka at the Wankhede Stadium in Mumbai. Dhoni had slammed an unbeaten knock of 91 runs in the final to help India chase down the tricky target of 275 runs with ease along with Gautam Gambhir, who scored a brilliant 97.

With 4 runs required in the penultimate over of the summit clash, Dhoni launched Kulasekara for a six over long-on. The memorable shot is etched in the memory of Indian cricket fan as it brought an end to an agonising wait of 28 years for India's second World Cup after 1983. Gavaskar, who had previously said he would like to watch that six from Dhoni one last time before he dies, revealed he told the same thing to the man himself and recalled his reaction.

Gavaskar said he met Dhoni during the IPL season after the 2011 World Cup - where he told the wicket-keeper batsman that his six would be the last thing he would want to see before he says goodbye to the world. Dhoni was modest about it and responded with a smile.

"A few days later, the IPL started. CSK were playing their first game. I was at the ground and I met MSD and I remember saying to him that look 'if I know that in this world, I have got a few couple of minutes left, then I would ask somebody to put that shot on, then I would love to see that shot and then say goodbye to this world. I would go with a smile on my face," Gavaskar told India Today after Dhoni's retirement from international cricket on Saturday.

"That's exactly what I said to MSD and MSD of course was very modest about. He just smiled and didn't say anything. That's what I genuinely feel," he added.

Dhoni led India to numerous triumphs under his captaincy including the 2007 World T20, 2011 ODI World Cup and 2013 Champions Trophy. He led India in 200 ODIs, 60 Tests and 72 T20Is. He led India in a total of 332 matches across formats and holds the record for most matches as captain in international cricket.

https://www.timesnownews.com/sports...ng-goodbye-to-the-world-sunil-gavaskar/637724
 
He should have compulsorily retired or made to retire after WC '15 at the worst.

No way in the hell he should've been been part of our WC '19 squad.

That way, Tendulkar timed his ODI retirement better when he stopped playing ODIs after WC '11 except some and retired way before WC '15.

When you are not good enough to be part of next WC to be played, you should retire from ODIs. Period.

Yeah, due to the dhoni worship .. other players have missed out, commentators have lost their jobs and selectors have been fired. You gotta cut the loose when they don't perform, no matter how big a legacy they had..
 
GOAT wicketkeeper batsman in ODIs and also the greatest finisher ever.
A level ahead of Michael Bevan because he could bat aggressively unlike the former.

Even in test cricket he has respectable stats.
An away average of 32.5 is not great but still better than the overrated oldies.
Jeff dujon-31.75
Ian healy-25.LOL
Rod marsh,Jack rusell etc etc.
He also carried forward the legacy of Adam Gilchrist and told the world that pure wicketkeepers don't belong in modern test cricket.
Wicketkeeping as a skill is not comparable to battingor bowling.Its much easier to master.
He was also as good as a specialist batsman at home .
 
He will be remembered as a revolutionary who brought a paradigm shift to Indian cricket.

The fiasco of last 2-3 years will hurt but it takes nothing away from everything he brought to Indian cricket.

A hero.

Thank you MS Dhoni.
 
People forgets he demoted himself from no. 3 to 7 when he has a very good record at 3.. That give us Dhoni the finisher and King Kohli..
 
How Pakistan could do with such a character, to shake-up their cricket team(s) and wake them from their slumber.
 
Now, that he has retired, hope we can see a glimpse of old MSD in upcoming IPL. For one last time, let us fans rejoice Heli Shot.

For me, he will always be remembered for his Six of Kulasekra in 2011 WC Final. That moment brought joy to millions of cricket crazy Indian fans all over the world.
Overall, a true champion player and captain cool and great humble human being.
 
Their stint together yielded India the 2011 World Cup trophy and former India coach Gary Kirsten on Monday doffed his hat to the enigmatic Mahendra Singh Dhoni, calling him “one of the best leaders” he has worked with.

Dhoni, the only captain to have won all the ICC trophies, retired from international cricket on Saturday, more than a year after he last played for India — the lost World Cup semifinal against New Zealand.

The 52-year-old Kirsten, who was head coach of the Indian team between 2008 to 2011, thanked Dhoni for all the good memories that he made during his tenure.

“A privilege to work with one of the best leaders I have come across. Thanks MS for many fond memories with the Indian Cricket Team @msdhoni,” the former South African batsman wrote on his Twitter handle.

Under Kirsten, India had claimed the Asia Cup in 2010 before ending a 28-year long wait to win their second World Cup crown in 2011.

Kirsten built a strong relationship with Dhoni during the time and on Monday, he revisited a past statement, which described their bond aptly.

“I would go to war with Dhoni by my side.”

Dhoni”s retirement has triggered an avalanche of emotional tributes with several past and current cricketers expressing their admiration for his unorthodox leadership, brilliant finishing skills and sharpness behind the stumps.

The man himself, only issued a brief “consider me retired” post on instagram to announce the big decision and has not spoken after that.

He will, however, be seen in action during the IPL starting September 19 in the UAE.

https://indianexpress.com/article/s...est-leaders-gary-kirsten-on-ms-dhoni-6558152/
 
Cricketer-turned-politician Gautam Gambhir has said that no other Indian captain will ever match Mahendra Singh Dhoni's feat of winning three ICC trophies.

Dhoni, 39, announced his retirement from international cricket on August 15, ending an illustrious career that witnessed India winning the 2007 T20 World Cup, the 2011 ODI World Cup, and the 2013 Champions Trophy. And he remains the only captain to win all three.

“One record if you talk about, which is going to stay forever is MS Dhoni’s three ICC trophies. I don’t think so any other captain would ever be able to achieve that! I think, whether it the T20 World Cup, whether it is ICC Champions Trophy or 2011 World Cup," Gambhir said while speaking in Cricket Connected.

Gambhir, who played a pivotal role in India's 2011 World Cup triumph at home under Dhoni, is so confident of his claim that added he can bet on it. He said that records like centuries count will eventually be broken, but he's certain that winning three different ICC tournaments is impossible.

"I think that is something which is going to stay forever, and I can bet, that’s going to stay forever! I think 100s will eventually get broken, someone will come and probably score more double 100s than Rohit Sharma, but I don’t think so any Indian captain would be able to achieve three ICC trophies, so MS Dhoni’s going to be there to stay forever," the former opener added.

For the uninitiated, the ICC Champions Trophy was last held in 2017 and may never return. But ICC does have another global tournament, The World Test Championship. For any captain to match Dhoni's feat, he will need to win it, along with the T20 World Cup and 50-Over World Cup.

Dhoni's decision to retire came as no surprise, given he's at the wrong side of 30 and has not played for India since the 2019 World Cup semi-final defeat to New Zealand.

https://www.outlookindia.com/websit...an-skipper-will-ever-achieve-this-feat/358813
 
MS Dhoni records


17,266 - The number of runs Dhoni scored, a tally bettered only by Sri Lanka great Kumar Sangakkara (17,840)

332 - Dhoni captained his country 332 times, more than any other skipper. Ricky Ponting (324) is next on the list.

535 - He played for his country over 500 times, a landmark only eight other men have passed – including the likes of Sachin Tendulkar, Ponting and Sangakkara.

123 - Dhoni is the only wicketkeeper to register over 100 ODI stumpings, finishing with 123.

195 - He quit with 195 stumpings across all three formats, which is another record.

444 - The India legend sits third on the list of most ODI dismissals with 444, behind Sangakkara (482) and Adam Gilchrist (472).

50.57 - Dhoni is one of only five men (who have played at least 100 games) to average over 50 with the bat in ODI cricket. Virat Kohli, Michael Bevan, AB de Villiers and Joe Root being the others.

229 - Just five men have hit more ODI sixes than the powerful right-hander, who cleared the ropes 229 times in the 50-over format.


https://www.outlookindia.com/websit...eper-ms-dhonis-india-career-in-numbers/358773
 
As a cricketer you can’t argue! But I can’t stand any Indian player from that era, cocky when winning, crying when loosing!
 
goat wicketkeeper is sangakarra not me dhoni. sanga is superior in all formats.

Gilchrist > Sanga. Sanga only averages 40 with the bat while keeping, and is an inferior keeper to Gilchrist
Dhoni is a better ODI bat than Sanga anyway
 
Gilchrist > Sanga. Sanga only averages 40 with the bat while keeping, and is an inferior keeper to Gilchrist
Dhoni is a better ODI bat than Sanga anyway

Totally agreed.

Sangakkara as an ODI batsman went through a 15 year career with zero impact whatsoever. Jayasuriya, Dilshan were always their star ODI attractions and Mahela definitely outplayed him in ODIs. Some might say in tests as well.

Sangakkara record against BIG 3 + Sena isn't ground breaking as compared to his overall record honestly speaking.


Gilchrist is iconic and match winning in all formats.
 
India skipper Virat Kohli told Mahendra Singh Dhoni "you will always be my captain" as he hailed the influence of the cricketing great, who has called time on his international career.

Kohli, who made his India debut under Dhoni's leadership in 2008, heaped praise on the talismanic captain who led his country to Twenty20 and 50-over World Cup triumphs.

"Words fall short a lot of times in life and I think this is one of those moments," Kohli said in an emotional video message on the Board of Control for Cricket in India website.

"All I can say is that you will always be that guy who sat in the last seat of the bus. Not saying much but your presence, your aura saying a lot."

Dhoni, a flamboyant wicketkeeper-batsman, quit Tests in 2014 and stepped aside as limited-overs captain three years later, paving the way for Kohli to lead the team across all formats.

But Kohli has frequently called on his mentor for guidance from his position behind the stumps.

"We have shared a great camaraderie, friendship, understanding and that has happened because we have always played for the same roles, same goals, which was to make the team win," said Kohli.

"It's been a pleasure playing alongside you and playing under you initially in my career. You showed belief in me, which I would always be grateful for."

"I have said it before, I will say it again, you will always be my captain," he signed off.

Dhoni, 39, drew the curtains on his 16-year international career Saturday.

India coach Ravi Shastri said: "As a leader and captain he can sit on Mount Everest with those kind of achievements.

"Multiple world cups, Champions Trophy, number one Test team in the world, IPL titles, Champions League. You name it and he has got it."

Dhoni led India to the Twenty20 World Cup in 2007, the 50-over event in 2011 and the Champions Trophy in 2013.

Dhoni will continue to lead his Indian Premier League side Chennai Super Kings, which has won three title under him, in the upcoming edition next month in the United Arab Emirates.

Dhoni has not played for India since their World Cup semi-final loss against New Zealand in England last year -- his 350th one-day international.

He holds the record for most international matches as captain, 332, and his 195 international stumpings is also the most by any wicket-keeper.

https://www.france24.com/en/20200817-you-ll-always-be-my-captain-kohli-hails-mentor-dhoni
 
Mahendra Singh Dhoni is not only India's most successful captain so far, but indeed one of the best wicketkeepers in the world.

On Saturday on the occasion of India's 74th Independence Day, the 39-year-old announced his retirement from international cricket and thus brought down curtains to his illustrious career spanning 16 years.

Dhoni ended his career as the only Indian captain to win all the major ICC trophies namely 50-over World Cup, T20 World Cup, and Champions Trophy.

Though the former Indian skipper would have broken many records during his international career, there is one record is quite unchaseable.

Dhoni remains the only wicketkeeper in the world to notch up 100 or more stumpings in the One-Day Internationals (ODIs).

With a total of 123 stumpings, Dhoni is leading the list of wicketkeepers with most number of stumpings to their name in the 50-over format.

Dhoni is followed by Sri Lanka's Kumar Sangakkara (99 stumpings) and Romesh Kaluwitharana (75) stumpings.

Pakistan's Moin Khan (73 stumpings) and Australia's Adam Gilchrist (55 stumpings) rounds off the top five.

The International Cricket Council (ICC) took to its official Twitter handle to inform its followers of this record of Dhoni.

Posting a picture of Dhoni hitting the stumps, the world's cricket governing body wrote, "List of wicket-keepers with hundred or more stumpings in ODIs: 1. MS Dhoni – 123.End of list."

Besides this, Dhoni also tops the list of Indian wicket-takers with most dismissals with a total of 829 dismissals across the three formats of the game. Overall, he is standing just behind South Africa's Mark Boucher (998) and Australia's Adam Gilchrist (829 dismissals) in the list.

The former wicketkeeper-batsman notched up 4,876 runs in 98 matches with 256 catches and 38 stumpings in a Test career that he called an end to in 2014. He finished his ODI career with a total of 10,773 runs with 321 catches and 123 stumpings, last turning out for India in the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019.

In T20Is, he aggregated 1,617 runs with 57 catches and 34 stumpings. He scored six centuries in Tests and 10 in ODIs.

The former skipper also spent 656 days as the top-ranked batsman in the ICC Men’s ODI Player Rankings from 2006 to 2010 and was the ICC ODI Player of the Year in 2008 and 2009.

Dhoni was also included in the ICC ODI Teams of the Year in 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 and in the ICC Test Teams of the Year in 2009, 2010, 2012 and 2013. He won the ICC Spirit of Cricket award in 2011.

Dhoni will now return to field when he will lead Chennai Super Kings (CSK) in the 2020 Indian Premier League (IPL), which is slated to take place in the United Arab Emirates from September 19 to November 10.

https://zeenews.india.com/cricket/m...undred-or-more-stumpings-in-odis-2303367.html
 
With MS Dhoni ending the debate on his international future, several cricketers are taking to social media to pay tribute to the cricketing legend. Dhoni’s former teammate and India spinner R Ashwin also did the same and released a video on his YouTube channel “Reminisce with Ash”.

In this video, Ashwin spoke about the moment when Dhoni had called quits from the traditional format of the game in Australia. Dhoni, who is also known as ‘Captain Cool’, failed to remain calm and Ashwin along with Suresh Raina and Ishant Sharma saw the wicketkeeper-batsman in tears after his decision.

“I remember when he retired from Test cricket in 2014, I was batting with him to save the match in Melbourne,” said Ashwin.

“But once we lost, he simply picked up a stump and walked off saying he’s done. It was quite an emotional moment for him. Ishant Sharma, Suresh Raina and I were sitting in his room that evening. He was still wearing his Test match jersey through the entire night and he shed a few tears as well.”

Ashwin also noted that after playing with Dhoni for Chennai Super Kings, he realised his leadership skills.

“I first met him as a net bowler during an India-West Indies ODI at Chepauk. And then when I joined Chennai Super Kings in 2008, I got to work with him and learn a lot. He had that long hair when I met him earlier but then after spending time with him at CSK I realised what a mature leader he was,” he said.

Ashwin also shared that Dhoni had given him a healthy advice early on in his career and how he follows it to date.

“During the 2010 Champions League, he taught me a very important lesson. I bowled the Super Over against the Victoria Bushrangers [CSK lost the game] and MS came up to me and said, ‘you didn’t bowl your best ball under pressure. You’ve got the carrom ball and you need to use it a lot more’.

“And that’s something he always maintained with respect to me. He said I was very, very innovative and skillful and I must keep sharpening this aspect of my game. This advice stuck with me and I follow it to date,” said Ashwin.

https://indianexpress.com/article/sports/cricket/ms-dhoni-retirement-r-ashwin-6560922/
 
NEW DELHI: Standing in the first slip and observing Mahendra Singh Dhoni's match-reading skills convinced Sachin Tendulkar that he was ready for India captaincy, something he told the BCCI when he was asked for his suggestion back in 2007.

Tendulkar, Sourav Ganguly and Rahul Dravid had decided to give juniors a chance in the inaugural ICC World T20 that year and BCCI had asked the maestro about who would be his choice for captaincy.

"I wouldn't get into details how it happened but yes I did say when I was asked (by the senior BCCI people) as to what do I think," Tendulkar recollected during an interview to PTI on the just-retired former India captain.

"I had mentioned that I won't be going to SA as I was carrying a few injuries...But back then, I used to stand in the slip cordon and I used to interact with MS and understand what he was thinking, the field setting and I would discuss all those aspects.

"I observed his match reading and I came to the conclusion that he had a good cricketing brain so I suggested to the board that this is what I feel. MS should be the next one to take charge," India's greatest batsman recollected what transpired 13 summers back.

Tendulkar said he was impressed by Dhoni's ability to convince anyone of his decisions.

"Whatever I was thinking and whatever he thought, we were more or less on the same page. If I have to convince you about something, I have to be on your page and that is exactly what happened with MS. We both were thinking alike and that's why I suggested he should be the one."

Dhoni's promotion to Test captaincy in 2008 happened at a time when the Indian dressing room still had Tendulkar himself, Rahul Dravid, VVS Laxman, Virender Sehwag, Harbhajan Singh and Zaheer Khan as senior cricketers.

Asked how he rated Dhoni's handling of senior players, Tendulkar said: "I can only speak for myself that I didn't have any aspirations to become captain. I can tell you that I was not wanting to become captain and what I wanted was to go out and win every match for the team.

"For that whoever the captain was, I was going to give 100 percent all the time and whatever I feel are the right things to do, I was going to tell that person. Then the decision becomes captain's but it becomes our duty to take the load off him."

For Tendulkar, it was his duty to give multiple suggestions to Dhoni and let him enjoy the freedom of taking the final call.

"If each person contributes in different capacities, then there is less load on captain...That's what good teams do. The moot idea is to help each other."

So did he ever come to Tendulkar with what he expected of him? Tendulkar said that it was like a bridge.

Both persons traverse a distance and meet at a common point.

"When MS became the Test captain in 2008, I had completed almost 19 years in international cricket. After having played that long, I also understood my responsibility.

"They looked up to me as an elder brother and it was my duty to guide them and tell them what I feel and also tell them equally.

It could not be one way traffic that I tell them and they listen to me.

"We should have kind of relationship that they should also be able to tell you what they feel and I believed in that."

World's highest run-scorer in Tests and ODIs feels that one of Dhoni's biggest contributions was to give confidence to the players he believed in.

Rohit Sharma's emergence as a world-class white-ball opener and Ravindra Jadeja's elevation as the team's premier all format all-rounder are a case in point.

"I think for any player to have the captain's faith in your abilities makes a huge difference. It's not just this generation but all generations, players have needed support.

"It surely helps. MS having confidence in a number of players in the team has surely helped us without any doubt."

Another aspect that a young captain can find challenging is friendships with contemporaries in the team.

But Dhoni, according to Tendulkar, set the bar quite high as far as compartmentalizing personal and professional equations was concerned.

"I firmly believe that friendship and cricket can be two separate things. You can be friends but that should not affect your ability to take decisions as a captain you want to take.

Friendship shouldn't be dependent on that.

"Friendship should otherwise only be friendship whether the captain takes decision in your favour or someone else's favour. Friendship should still last. It has got nothing to do with whether you are getting a chance to play or not."

https://www.newindianexpress.com/sp...he-next-captain-sachin-tendulkar-2185116.html
 
Former Indian captain MS Dhoni announced his retirement from international cricket on August 15. The 39-year-old, who is one of India's most successful captains of all-time, announced his decision with a post on Instagram at 7:29 pm as tributes started pouring in for the legend. Several Pakistani cricketers, including the likes of Shoaib Akhtar and Shahid Afridi also hailed Dhoni for his contributions to Indian cricket after his retirement.

Veteran Pakistan wicket-keeper batsman Kamran Akmal also lauded Dhoni for always placing his team ahead of him as captain. Dhoni won many laurels for India as captain and was known for his astute leadership, brilliant reading of the game and ability to take bold decisions under pressure. He remains the only captain in the world to have won all three major ICC trophies as captain and led India in a staggering 332 matches across formats - most by any captain in the world.

Akmal, who played against Dhoni on several occasions for Pakistan, demanded a good farewell for the former Indian captain and said such players do not deserve to go without a standing ovation at the ground.

“He was a player who took the team along. Doing captaincy is very easy, that I do captaincy and my place remains secure whether the team wins or losses, you have no concern. But Dhoni had this speciality that he was building the team and his own performance was also world-class. You can see the players he was creating, they are still No.1. He only wanted to do good for his country.” Akmal told Paktv.tv.

“Such players should not go like this, he should get a standing ovation. He should get a farewell match where he goes from the ground, like the way the great Sachin Tendulkar went. He has gone just like his name Mr. Cool. Such a player comes rarely in world cricket," he added.

Akmal was further asked in the interview how far the Pakistan team would have come if Dhoni was their captain. Akmal responded by stating that Pakistan too have had good captains in the past like Inzamam-ul-Haq and Younis Khan but he would like to see a captain like Dhoni grace Pakistan cricket in the future. He also called for the current Pakistan captains and other youngsters to learn from Dhoni on how to carry themselves while playing for the country.

“Such captains are very much required. We have seen Inzi bhai and Younis bhai, how they have carried the team along. MS Dhoni was destined to play for India and he did well for his nation. He is a great example in front of us. He has not only played cricket but built a team as well and taken the Indian in an upward direction. Such mentality should also be there in our captains," said Akmal.

“Nowadays, you see that they are playing for their own positions, to secure their spots and they have no concern whether the team wins or not. Such things are harmful for any country’s team. I wish such captains come in Pakistan as well. It is a request to the current captain that unless they win and their own performance is not world-class, the way Dhoni has done, we will not be able to go up," he added.

https://www.timesnownews.com/sports...ays-veteran-wicket-keeper-kamran-akmal/639494
 
Former India captain MS Dhoni had an unforgettable career in which he went on to earn numerous plaudits that were once considered impossible. In 2007, a young Indian team led by Dhoni went on to win the inaugural T20 World Cup. Four years later, the Dhoni-led Indian team won the 2011 ODI World Cup. In 2013, Dhoni won his third ICC trophy as captain - winning the Champions League.

Dhoni became the first captain to win all three major ICC trophies. But as Dhoni bows out of international cricket, former England batsman Kevin Pietersen wants to remind him that there is one stat that he has not achieved in his career - that is Dhoni never got Pietersen out in Test cricket.

It has largely been rumoured among cricket fans that Dhoni, during 2011 Lord’s Test against England, had dismissed Pietersen. Dhoni had made an appeal for a caught behind and the umpire had raised his finger. But Pietersen had actually made a DRS appeal, and the Ultra Edge had shown that there was no nick off his bat and the decision was overturned.

Pietersen, on the latest episode of Star Sports’ chat show Cricket Connected, congratulated Dhoni for a stellar career, but also cheekily reminded him that he did not get his wicket.

“MS (MS Dhoni), my great buddy! What a career, what a stellar career, what an amazing career, what a magical career. One career that you should be so so proud of. The whole of India and the world of cricket have been so blessed to witness one of the best and one of the most magical careers,” Pietersen said.

“I think but now at the end of your career, there is one thing, just that one thing. You never got me out. It was referred at Lords’ and the continuous stick that I get from you and your fans that I am your first Test wicket.

“You know, I know, that it never happened. Okay? Now that you are done, let’s just clear the air. It never happened. Anyway buddy, awesome career. Congrats and welcome to the club, we are all out,” the English batting great added.

Dhoni will return to play for Chennai Super Kings when the 13th season of Indian Premier League kicks off from September 19th in the UAE.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...or-ms-dhoni/story-GEX7YSVH9kadBlPMSpYuoK.html
 
Dhoni was also included in the ICC ODI Teams of the Year in 2006, 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014 and in the ICC Test Teams of the Year in 2009, 2010, 2012 and 2013. He won the ICC Spirit of Cricket award in 2011.

So he's been included in Test Team of the Year 4 times in his 9 year long test career... And yet to some he's a mediocre test player..
 
Former India fast bowler RP Singh recalled an instance from the first-ever T20 World Cup which convinced him of MS Dhoni’s strategic acumen. Singh, who is considered one of Dhoni’s closest friends in the cricketing circuit, was an integral part of the tournament in South Africa which India won. Even though Dhoni did not get a huge score in the tournament – his scores read 33, 24, 10*, 45, 36 and 6, Singh reckons Dhoni’s presence made the big difference.

“For me, it was during the T20 World Cup final in 2007 that I got the sense he is a very special kind of a player. He was not the same Dhoni I had been interacting with. If you look closely, MS didn’t have any defining batting performance in that tournament but he was always there, almost in every match,” Singh told Cricket.com.

Singh, who picked up 12 wickets in the tournament, including figures of 4/13 against South Africa, revealed an instance from the T20 World Cup where Dhoni was one step ahead of the opposition batsman and almost foresaw what was going to happen.

“In the final of the T20 World Cup, MS told me in advance that Kamran Akmal would be bowled as his feet were not moving. He asked me to forget about other things and just concentrate on bowling line and length,” Singh added. “I realized that he had got a tremendous reading of batsmen because I would have bowled differently to Akmal. I had asked for a different fielding set-up. But he convinced me in a way it was easier to follow.”

As it turned out, Dhoni was spot on. Akmal misjudged the bounce and with his feet rooted to the crease, played a nothing shot – almost a swipe down the wrong line – missing the ball altogether and had his stumps rattled. Another incident.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...a-dismissal/story-wNrYubbfMbINDbtqLUyglM.html
 
Former Australia batsman and India head coach Greg Chappell placed the recently-retired MS Dhoni in the same bracket as Clive Llyod, Mike Brearley, Ian Chappell and Mark Taylor and called him one of the most influential leaders of world cricket in the last 50 years.

Chappell who came in as India’s head coach barely months after MS Dhoni had made his ODI debut in December 2004 in Bangladesh, said Dhoni is the best Indian captain he has seen.

“In my opinion, he is the best Indian captain that I have seen and I would put him in the highest bracket of captains and leaders in the game in my experience. He is up there with Michael Brearley, Ian Chappell, Mark Taylor, and Clive Lloyd as the most inspirational captains of the past 50 years,” Chappell told IANS.

Chappell who was India head coach from 2005 to 2007, said the standout feature of Dhoni was his confidence and directness.

“The outstanding feature was his self-belief. He stood out amongst his peers with his confidence and his directness. MS was not interested in ‘games’. He liked to be dealt with in a direct way and he responded in kind,” Chappell added.

The former Australia great said Dhoni was always clear about the things he knew he could pull off.

“My experience with Dhoni the cricketer and Dhoni the person were positive. He was very easy to work with because he was open and forthright. There was no false modesty with Dhoni; if he thought he could do something, he was confident enough to say that he could.

“I enjoyed Dhoni’s humour and cheeky manner. He was a good competitor who loved a challenge. I enjoyed challenging him to be the best player that he could be.

“He exceeded any expectations that I had and he may have exceeded his own expectations. It is a great credit to him that he utilised his immense skills to become one of the great all-rounders of his era and an inspirational leader,” Chappell added.

Dhoni, who announced his retirement from international cricket on August 15th, is expected to return to the cricket field as the leader of Chennai Super Kings in IPL 2020, which is slated to begin from September 19 in the UAE.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...eg-chappell/story-mXU29z0yhI9lY9wIBjxCbN.html
 
I mean he’s one of the best wicket keeper batsman ever. One of the best players India has produced.

However, there is one innings that sticks for me, the one he played to lose in the World Cup where Pakistan’s qualification was dependent on it. I have never seen an instance as much as this where someone had purposely tried to lose with no attempt made whatsoever to go for the win.
 
Dhoni was pulling Akhtar for fours and sixes, we thought how’s he doing that?: Monty Panesar

Former India captain MS Dhoni might have retired from international cricket but his numerous memorable innings will still go down in cricket history as some of the most destructive displays of batting ever seen on the cricket field. Dhoni, since arriving in 2004, went on to make a name for himself for his abilities to not only hit the big shots but also to take his team home from precarious positions. The game was not over till MS Dhoni was in the middle.

In a recent interaction, former England spinner Monty Panesar recalled some of his favourite memories on the field with Dhoni, and talked about one innings that left him wondering ‘how is he doing that!’

“My favorite moment with Dhoni was in Mumbai when I missed his catch. It landed 10 meters on my right, went through the sun and I completely misjudged it. And then two balls later, I caught him. So, that’s cricket for you. One minute you’re zero, next minute you are a hero. He (Dhoni) will always be a hero for the nation,” Panesar told Times of India.

“I think (when) Dhoni came into (the) reckoning was actually his hundred against Pakistan, when he was pulling Shoaib Akhtar for fours and sixes. We all were sitting and wondering - ‘Oh, how is he doing that?’” Panesar further added.

Panesar, most likely, was talking about Dhoni’s innings of 148 in Faisalabad Test in 2006 against Pakistan. It is so because when Dhoni smashed 148 in the 2005 ODI against Pakistan in Vizag, Akhtar was not playing.

“And then I remember bowling to him in Kolkata where he hit me for a six out of nowhere. It just went miles. Dhoni’s six-hitting ability is almost 20 meters further than the normal batsman,” the former England pacer added.

“I think I always found MSD very calm, collected and he always seemed like life was going at a slow pace for him. It was like nothing was bothering him. It was his calm demeanor that was his strength. Not a lot of cricketers have this quality, but he had it throughout his whole career. I think that’s what makes him such a great, great leader,” Panesar signed off.

https://m.hindustantimes.com/cricke...nty-panesar/story-bS9kKZXXDIWJvwjydNKvyM.html
 
Only differance is that India during 2002-2013 could do with a 33 averaged Dhoni even overseas as they had Sehvag, Gambhir/Jaffer, Dravid, SRT, Gang, Lax, Bhajji@8, Kumble@9. Today's Aus cant even do with Paine's 31 avg even at home.In overseas tests, its not MSD's runs but the lack of innovative captainship and lack of good bowling partner to Zaheer cost us more matches.
 
One of the greatest ODI players of all time. A more than decent test keeper bat who nevertheless was too defensive as captain overseas albeit because of the weakness in pace bowling.
 
GOAT wicketkeeper batsman in ODIs and also the greatest finisher ever.
A level ahead of Michael Bevan because he could bat aggressively unlike the former.

Even in test cricket he has respectable stats.
An away average of 32.5 is not great but still better than the overrated oldies.
Jeff dujon-31.75
Ian healy-25.LOL
Rod marsh,Jack rusell etc etc.
He also carried forward the legacy of Adam Gilchrist and told the world that pure wicketkeepers don't belong in modern test cricket.
Wicketkeeping as a skill is not comparable to battingor bowling.Its much easier to master.
He was also as good as a specialist batsman at home .

Really? Is that easy to master? Why can't Pant do it then?

Also it's nice to see you speaking good about Dhoni. I will definitely remind you of this post next time you try to make fun of his cricket career. :inti
 
Chennai Super Kings captain MS Dhoni will return to cricket after a 14-month gap when his side takes on defending champions Mumbai Indians in the IPL 2020 opener on Saturday in Abu Dhabi. Dhoni can make the occasion even more special if he brings out his helicopter and whack a few sixes.


The CSK captain, who already holds the record for most sixes by an Indian in the IPL, needs four hits over the ropes to go past RCB’s AB de Villiers in the IPL six-hitters’ list. Dhoni has smashed 209 sixes in IPL so far, while South African legend de Villiers has 212 sixes to his name.

If Dhoni manages to hit four sixes against MI in the tournament opener on Saturday, he will climb to the second spot in IPL list of batsmen with most sixes, which is currently led by KXIP’s Chris Gayle, who has 326 sixes to his credit.

Dhoni, who last played in India’s semi-final defeat to New Zealand in July last year, announced his retirement from international cricket on August 15. That however, has had little effect on the legendary wicketkeeper-batsman. He has been in fantastic touch which CSK players like Shane Watson and CEO Kasi Viswanathan have described as his best in recent times.

Here are the other records that Dhoni holds in the IPL.

Most matches as captain

Dhoni, who holds the record for captaining in most international matches has also captained the most in IPLs. Dhoni, who has led Chennai Super Kings in 10 seasons and Rising Pune Supergiant in one, has captained in 174 IPL matches. He had played as a keeper-batsman in IPL 2017 when RPS was led by Australia’s Steve Smith.

Most wins as captain

Dhoni who has won three IPLs as CSK captain also holds the record for most wins in the tournament as captain. Dhoni has 104 wins, only captain to have 100 wins in IPL. Dhoni’s win percentage of 60.11 is the best by a captain with min. 50 matches in the IPL.

Most successful keeper in IPL

With 132 dismissals a wicketkeeper Dhoni has the most dismissals by a wicket-keeper in IPL. Dhoni has inflicted 38 stumpings which is also the most by a keeper in the history of the tournament.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...-elite-list/story-BQEpgWxpaG5xUg5oZc4yYP.html
 
He's back to his finisher role at the IPL.
 
He will be remembered for his amazing captaincy; being the ice-man, captain cool, and the best finisher of all time; being one of the best LOI keeper-batsman ever (top 3, maybe even #1); and finally -which might go under the radar- being controversy free. While all of his cricketing accolades are quite simply amazing, him being such a great role model is likely going to remain very, very underrated.
 
MS Dhoni – who announced his international retirement last month – reached another milestone in his glittering cricket career during the IPL opener in Shiekh Zayed Stadium, Abu Dhabi on Saturday. The 39-year old former India captain became the first keeper in the world to 250 dismissals in T20 cricket. Dhoni is followed by Pakistan’s Kamran Akmal. Also Read - LIVE Mumbai Indians vs Chennai Super Kings Match 1 Live Cricket Score And Updates: Watson, Vijay Fall Cheaply; MI Hurt CSK in 163 Chase

Dhoni – who is making a comeback to competitive cricket after 436 days – showed no rustiness as he looked fit as ever and sharp from behind the stumps. Dhoni dived low to his right swiftly to get his gloves under the ball and hold onto it to sens Krunal Pandya packing for three off three balls. Also Read - MI vs CSK Dream11 IPL 2020: Faf Du Plessis Takes Stunning Catch to Send Hardik Pandya Packing | WATCH

At the toss, Dhoni revealed that he had been doing a lot of physical running during the lockdown and going to the gym whenever possible. Also Read - MI vs CSK Dream11 IPL: Piyush Chawla Edges Past Harbhajan Singh to Become Third-Highest Wicket-Taker During Opener

“Well, you have the liberty during lockdown to spend some time on yourself. Could not do a lot of physical running and all. So I hit the gym as much as possible and maybe look fit,” Dhoni said when asked about the secret behind his strong physique.

Earlier in the day, CSK won the toss and Dhoni opted to field first. Thanks to good bowling, CSK restricted MI to 162 for nine in 20 overs.

Lungi Ngidi with three wickets was the pick of the bowlers, while Deepak Chahar and Ravindra Jadeja chipped in with two wickets apiece.

https://www.india.com/sports/mi-vs-...per-to-250-dismissals-in-t20-cricket-4146433/
 
Chennai Super Kings skipper MS Dhoni has a number of accolades to his name. And the Captain Cool registered his name for two more records as he led his team in the IPL opener against Mumbai Indians. He not only became the first captain to lead any franchise to 100 IPL wins, but he also became the first keeper to take 250 catches in T20 cricket, overtaking Pakistan wicket-keeper Kamran Akmal.

Now, in the second game against Rajasthan Royals, the former Indian skipper is on the cusp of achieving yet another feat. If Dhoni manages to hit five sixes against Rajasthan Royals, he will join fellow CSK teammate Suresh Raina and Mumbai Indians captain Rohit Sharma in the elite list of batsmen who have hit 300 sixes in T20 cricket.

Currently, MS Dhoni has 295 sixes to his name and if he reaches the landmark, he will become only the 3rd Indian after Rohit Sharma (361) and Suresh Raina (311) to do so.

In the last match, it was after more than 14 months that Dhoni fans saw him bat. However, Dhoni was not required to do much with the bat on Saturday as the others did the job. Dhoni remained unbeaten on 0 of 2 at the other end when the game was done. He had promoted Ravindra Jadeja and Sam Curran above himself to take on left-arm spin of Krunal Pandya and leg-spin of Rahul Chahar. Both Curran and Jadeja played cameos to justify the move as CSK chased down the target of 163.

So, when CSK take the field against Rajasthan Royals at the Sharjah Cricket Stadium for their second match, CSK and Dhoni fans will be eager to see more of Dhoni with the bat hitting the bowlers out of the park.

https://www.news18.com/cricketnext/...-batsmen-to-hit-300-t20-maximums-2898011.html
 
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As MS DHoni walked onto the field against Sunrisers Hyderabad on Friday, he broke a huge record. The CSK captain became the player with most caps in any T20 league in world cricket. The Chennai Super Kings captain also became the player with most IPL appearances in the history of the tournament. He surpassed his teammate Suresh Raina, who is missing IPL 2020 due to personal reasons.

Ahead of the match, MS Dhoni was tied on 193 appearances in the IPL with Raina and he made the record his own as stepped for the toss plays against the David Warner-led SRH at Dubai International. ‘Thala’ is now the most capped player in the IPL.

Rohit Sharma is also inching closer to Dhoni in the most appearances list as he has played 192 times in the IPL and is ahead of Kolkata Knight Riders captain Dinesh Karthik who has 185 appearances.

There has been a lot of talk around Chennai Super Kings captain MS Dhoni’s batting position in IPL 2020. But Dhoni so far has not drifted away from his initial plans of batting at No.6 and 7 and allow the likes of Sam Curran and Ravindra Jadeja to express themselves.

Meanwhile Warner won the toss opted to bat first against CSK as SRH went in with the same team that beat Delhi Capitals a couple of nights ago.

Dhoni made three changes to the CSK playing XI. He brought in Ambati Rayudu, Dwayne Bravo and Shardul Thakur in place of Murali Vijay, Josh Hazlewood and Ruturaj Gaikwad.

The CSK captain is on the verge of completing three more milestones as a batsman and one as a keeper.

Dhoni is just two sixes away from joining Rohit Sharma (368), Suresh Raina (311) in the list of Indians with 300 or more sixes in T20s. He currently has 298 sixes in T20s.

And if Dhoni manages to find his old form and hit 8 sixes against SRH then he would surpass AB de Villiers in the list of players with most sixes in IPL. Dhoni needs 24 more runs to complete 4500 runs in IPL. He will become the fourth Indian after Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma, and Suresh Raina to do so.

He is 2 catches away from completing 100 IPL catches as wicket-keeper. He will become the second wicket-keeper to do so after KKR captain Dinesh Karthik.

https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...-t20-league/story-BlCQ9VjroJN8NTT5OIFM0I.html
 
There has been a lot of talk about MS Dhoni in the 13th season of the Indian Premier League. Dhoni had announced his retirement from international cricket ahead of IPL 2020 and all the eyes were firmly on him during the tournament as fans had waited patiently to see their favourite superstar in action. He hasn’t set the tournament on fire with his batting as Dhoni has struggled to find his groove.

Although there have been glimpses of his belligerent self but largely Dhoni has failed to time the ball properly this year. He is coming into the tournament after not playing competitive cricket for more than a year and the transition has been a little difficult for him. To compound problems, Chennai Super Kings under Dhoni’s leadership have not been able to hit form in IPL 2020 and are languishing in seventh position in the points table.

Former Pakistan skipper Javed Miandad talked about the wicket-keeper batsman and suggested that even though he looks physically fit, Dhoni needs to work to increase his match fitness.

“I played cricket with my brain. If you use your brain, you can play irrespective of your age. Maybe, you won’t be the player you used to be, but you would still be pretty useful,” Miandad told Indian Express.

“My suggestion to Dhoni will be to increase his exercise drills and batting time at the nets. If he is doing 20 sit-ups (for example), he can increase it to 30. If he doing five sprints, he can increase it to eight. If he is spending an hour at the nets for batting practice, he can increase it to two hours. It’s not necessary that you have to do it at a stretch. You can do it in parts. You can do it in three sessions – morning, afternoon and evening. Dhoni knows this and maybe, he is already doing that.”

Dhoni will now look to find form when CSK take Rajasthan Royals on Monday in a must-win match for the side.

https://m.hindustantimes.com/cricke...tch-fitness/story-BkVyEokywgzSyNXLcZlBaM.html
 
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MS Dhoni is making his 200th IPL appearance; he's the 1st player to record that many in the competition.
 
MS Dhoni-led Chennai Super Kings have fared way below expectations in the ongoing Indian Premier League (IPL) 2020, which has seen them failing to qualify for the IPL Playoffs for the first time in history. Dhoni's side, which reached the final in the last edition, became the first side to be knocked out of this year's cash-rich league, being played in the UAE. The team which once harped about the importance of experienced players in the squad looked nowhere near their best, which raised questions on the amount of changes that will be made to the side before the next edition.

Amid all the uncertainty, Chennai Super Kings CEO Kasi Viswanathan is confident that MS Dhoni, who has been part of the franchise since the inaugural edition, will continue to lead the side next year. Speaking to Times of India, Viswanathan said that one bad year doesn't mean they need to make alarming changes to the squad. He pointed that they have been one of the most consistent sides for several years now, including winning three titles.

"Yes, definitely. I am very confident that Dhoni will lead CSK in 2021. He has won three titles for us in the IPL. This is the first year we have not qualified for the playoffs. No other team has done that. One bad year does not mean we will have to change everything," Viswanathan told Times of India.

However, he did expect that the second-most successful side in IPL didn't play to its full potential. Analysing the reason why they struggled, the CSK CEO said that they lost some close games which they could have gone either way.

He also accepted the that unavailability of senior players like Suresh Raina and Harbhajan Singh, along with a couple of positive Covid cases upset the team's rhythm even before the tournament had started.

"We didn't play to our potential this season. We lost games that we should have won. That pushed us back. The withdrawals of Suresh Raina and Harbhajan Singh coupled with Covid cases in the camp meant that the balance of the side was upset," Viswanathan added.

With just four wins from 12 games, CSK are languishing at the bottom of the IPL 2020 Points Table. With nothing to lose, CSK can spoil the party for Kolkata Knight Riders and Kings XI Punjab, who are still in contention for a top four finish.

https://sports.ndtv.com/ipl-2020/ch...ll-continue-to-lead-franchise-in-2021-2316629
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Cricketers sometimes hang around and play for too long when they are clearly past their best and should have retired. MS Dhoni at this IPL:<br><br>Innings 12<br>Runs 200<br>Average 25<br>Strike rate 116<br>Fifties 0<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a></p>— Saj Sadiq (@Saj_PakPassion) <a href="https://twitter.com/Saj_PakPassion/status/1321865848903094279?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">October 29, 2020</a></blockquote>
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From 2005-2011 MSD was a gun cricketer and great captain.

From 2012-2020, a selfish man who lost India many crucial matches due to his pathetic batting and team selection.
 
Chennai Super Kings’ poor performance in IPL 2020 has coincided with captain MS Dhoni’s poor form as well. Dhoni has in the past taken his team out of trouble with his batting but this season has been different.


Part of the problem has been Dhoni’s long absence from international cricket, which eventually ended with the former India captain announcing his retirement on August 15, 2020.

The lack of match practice has clearly left its mark on Dhoni’s form, who has looked patchy throughout the season. With the next season of IPL expected to take place in around 6 months’ time, Dhoni needs to get back in form to change the fortunes of his team.

Former Sri Lanka captain Kumar Sangakkara, who is commentating in the IPL feels this could just be one of those years for Dhoni when things didn’t go right.

But he too feels that Dhoni needs to play competitive cricket to be in form for a tournament as tough as the IPL, where the best players in the world compete.

“.... you will always have a season or series where you’re off the boil, and this is MS’. It has reflected on the team’s fortunes as well. And it’s something you get to expect. You can over analyse it, you analyse it any which way, it just happens. And it’s happened at the back end of MSD’s career.

“But that doesn’t make him a lesser player or less important for CSK at all. It’s just one of those phases that he has got to deal with and he’s got to come out of it,” Kumar Sangakkara told Star Sports on Thursday.

“I am sure he is hungry to keep playing, hungry to perform. Knowing MSD, he would much rather take a team win than a half-century for himself. That’s the way he has been built, that’s the way he has always thought. If he can contribute to it in any way, even by scoring 10 runs he’d be happy.

“He will of course be disappointed with his personal form but with only 2 games to go, I don’t think there is any point in trying to salvage that. It’s about winning games. He can address it after he goes and comes back next year.

“But what he has to do is to play some more super-competitive cricket in between. You can’t have long gaps between your IPL seasons, not playing international cricket or not playing regional or first-class cricket. He has got to be super competitive and play competitive cricket to be in form.”

It will be interesting to see if Dhoni plays any domestic cricket or takes the T20 route by participating in leagues around the world. But for that he would need a permission from the BCCI.


https://www.hindustantimes.com/cric...of-ipl-2021/story-dsKmRQgdkyusmhv0wvoJ9M.html
 
MS Dhoni's wife's birthday celebrations alongside another celebrity couple

0d52c8c2-5d64-4404-9f6d-6b1f62899f78.jpg
 
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<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">🏏 148 runs off 123 balls<br>💥 15 fours, four sixes<a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/OnThisDay?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#OnThisDay</a> in 2005, MS Dhoni slammed his maiden international century in an ODI.<br><br>His 🔥 knock helped India post 356/9 against Pakistan, eventually winning the game by 58 runs! <a href="https://t.co/n7B0ZhpEiB">pic.twitter.com/n7B0ZhpEiB</a></p>— ICC (@ICC) <a href="https://twitter.com/ICC/status/1378980806727585796?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">April 5, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Best LOI captain.
Legendary cricketer.

Man has cult following across the globe.
 
A legend of the game that made toss irrelevant. A predominantly batting first team for.decades started winning games chasing. Kohli took it to the next level. Great ODI player, surprisingly average T20 players and a below average test player. Calculated and had nerves of steel. Should have retired after 2015 WC or at least 2017 CT. A frail middle order, Kohli's dependence and millions of contract sponsorship obligations meant he played past his prime. That shouldn't take away his achievements. Won every title. One of the greatest ODI captains ever.
 
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A mediocre cricketer who overachied in ODIs and failed in other two formats.
Agree with you! I wouldnt consider him a bad captain/keeper, just a bad and selfish finisher. Also a ridiculously boring interviewee. Too Political, scheming - good riddance, welcome Pant.
 
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