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"Virat Kohli reminds me of Imran Khan" : Ravi Shastri

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KOLKATA: Heaping praise on skipper Virat Kohli and his recent exploits in South Africa, India cricket team coach Ravi Shastri has compared the mercurial player to Pakistan's World Cup winning captain Imran Khan.

"It's still early days for Virat. He is still very very young. But he is already there among the very best. He wants to lead by example. He reminds me a lot of Imran. He is still very young but he has got lot of qualities that Imran had when it came to leading a side. Which is great," Shastri told Anandabazar Patrika.

Kohli, ranked No.1 batsman in One Day Internationals, was in imperious form against the Proteas becoming the first batsman ever to score 500 or more runs in a bilateral ODI series.

The dashing right-hander, rated as one of the finest in modern times, finished the series with 558 runs racking up three centuries, a record for an Indian batsman, and one fifty in six innings.

Kohli's six innings in the series are - 112, 46*, 160 not out, 75, 36 and 129 not out.

Imran led Pakistan to the 1992 World Cup and was arguably the best cricketer produced by Pakistan.

Asked about the similarities between Imran and Kohli, Shastri said the desire to always be on top and having an infectious energy level made him draw the comparision.

"Just the ability to always want to dominate, want to compete, irrespective of whatever conditions you get, believe that you can do it and when you have that kind of quality it spreads among the other players as well. And that was very similar to the way Imran led."

"I think he was fantastic on the last trip. It was a tough trip," Shastri said on Kohli's leadership and performance in South Africa.

India lost the Test series 1-2 but came back strongly in the 50-over format, winning the six-match series 5-1. In the T20Is, India edged past the hosts 2-1.

"When you are the leading batsman in the side plus the captain, plus the conditions you get, plus the side that you are playing which is formidable, you need to be on top of your game.

"Mentally and physically. And he did just that. For someone to score 870-plus score on a single tour in two months, is an unbelievable achievement. Really unbelievable achievement," said Shastri who has played 80 Tests and 150 ODIs for India.

Shastri lashed out at former cricketers asking Kohli to cut down on his aggression on the field, saying they should allow him and his captain to go about their business.

"My only advice to them is to mind their own business. I will keep it very simple. Whoever is saying that, mind your own business. Let us get on with our job.

"I think he is absolutely fine. If there was a problem, the umpires are there. The match-referee is there to sort it out. What are they there for? He is hardly been called by the match-referee for going over the top in his career. So where is the problem?"

Shastri also rated India's batting performance in the third Test at the Wanderers in Johannesburg as "one of the most courageous and bravest batting performances ever."

India braved hostile batting conditions to win the game by 63 runs with batting salvos from Cheteshwar Pujara (50) and Kohli (54) in the first innings, then Ajinkya Rahane and (48) and Kohli (41) again in the second being the highlights.

"It has to go down as one of the most courageous and bravest batting performances ever," the 55-year-old opined.

"Not only in the history of Indian cricket, but in the history of the game. Absolutely no question about that because the conditions was such and with the kind of attack they had, it needed a lot of guts, courage, application, determination to do what they did. And above all, belief. And there is a reason why I give them credit.

"On that track, everyone was surprised that we batted first. But the end result shows we were right," the former all-rounder added.

"It is one of the toughest tours and if you look at the pitches that were on offer to us, it is chalk and cheese when you look at the track that has been given against Australia.A

"When you look at the track now in Durban and looked at the tracks we played on, they look like chalk and cheese. And on those tracks, to perform the way they did, I think, was simply outstanding," Shastri said.

Australia are currently playing their first Test against South Africa in Durban.

Shastri signed off by priding that they don't shy away from playing in any condition and never whine.

"I have always said that we don't want a team that would complain about the tracks. We will play on whatever is on offer. And we will try and get the right combination to counter that."

http://www.newindianexpress.com/spo...-skipper-imran-khan-ravi-shastri-1782372.html
 
Didn't Kohli say that the team couldn't have a proper warmup to SA series because his wedding was his first priority or something like that? That is the problem with giving a player too much power.
 
Didn't Kohli say that the team couldn't have a proper warmup to SA series because his wedding was his first priority or something like that? That is the problem with giving a player too much power.
If he did say that, highly unprofessional. He performed so well, imagine if he postponed a little bit. But the marriage helped his form :ashwin, even in ODI's, which I thought wasn't possible. :ravi
 
Wasim Akram not Imran Khan

Wasim had some trouble controlling his aggression too which Imran did very well.

But Kohli is improving his attitude and will become IK if he wins a WC
 
Eh, not quite feeling the comparison stylistically, Dhoni was closer to an IK than Virat.
 
I don't see IK in Kohli at all. He will be a good captain though.
 
I haven't seen much of Imran, so cannot comment. I only saw Imran in 1992 WC and I was very young at that time. Kohli is a good captain but has a long way to go. Shastri should stop with this unnecessary comparisons.
 
I haven't seen much of Imran, so cannot comment. I only saw Imran in 1992 WC and I was very young at that time. Kohli is a good captain but has a long way to go. Shastri should stop with this unnecessary comparisons.

Shastriji need to say different things to impress Kohli. Else his job is in jeopardy
 
I haven't seen much of Imran, so cannot comment. I only saw Imran in 1992 WC and I was very young at that time. Kohli is a good captain but has a long way to go. Shastri should stop with this unnecessary comparisons.

Atleast :ravi is far better than :ma ...

Every second day :ma compares his players with legends :ashwin latest one was Faheem Klusener !
 
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Under Imran's leadership Pakistan had their first win in England and India plus a series leveler against the all conquering West Indies and also never lost any Test series against them. And remember unlike the 70's team besides him and Miandad there were hardly any superstars, it was Imran who made them into better cricketers, prime example is Wasim who from medium-fast become an all-out fast, match winner and leader of the attack by 1989-90.

Let Kholi first win some overseas Test series then we can decide, till now like his predecessors Azharuddin and Sachin he has only won home series. People say Indian team of the 90s were ordinary but a close look will tell you they never lost a series at home in the 90's which included wins over Australia and drawn series against West Indies and Pakistan. They this decade they only once lost a series and that was in 1999-2000 a two match series against South Africa. The current Indian team is a good ODI side and is hyped a lot.

And unlike Imran, Kohli is blessed with a strong batting lineup and batting friendly conditions. Imran used to carry the bowling attack and in most of his career bowled on flat tracks.
 
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He certainly has the same drive to be the best.

100% effort in every match and incredible consistency.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Virat, you can go with your head held high. Few have achieved what you have as captain. Definitely India's most aggressive and successful. Sad day for me personally as this is the team &#55356;&#56814;&#55356;&#56819; we built together - <a href="https://twitter.com/imVkohli?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">@imVkohli</a> <a href="https://t.co/lQC3LvekOf">pic.twitter.com/lQC3LvekOf</a></p>— Ravi Shastri (@RaviShastriOfc) <a href="https://twitter.com/RaviShastriOfc/status/1482365980827594753?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">January 15, 2022</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
One of India's great captains. Possibly the best, even though I have massive respect for Kapil Dev & Gavaskar. (Ganguly was cheeky and the captain who paved this path, but he threw tantrums sometimes & skipped Tests he didn't like the pitch in)
 
Surpassed Imran eons ago. It is disrespectful to compare a captain with 14 wins to a captain with 40, not to mention Imran lost to Sri Lanka in 1985, the minnow Test side of the era and only won 3-4 Tests away from home. He couldn’t even win in Australia when they were at the their weakest.

Kohli is the greatest Asian Test captain of all time. Full stop.

40 Test wins, kept his team at the top of the rankings longer than any Asian team in the past, kept his team at the top of the rankings longer than any team in the 2010-20 decade.

Revamped India’s pace bowling culture. Just look at the difference between someone like Ishant Sharma under Dhoni and Kohli.

No Asian captain of the past can boost greater achievements.
 
Virat Kohli on Saturday brought an end to a seven-year stint as the Test captain of the Indian cricket team after he announced that he was stepping down from the role. Last year in September, Kohli had quit as captain of the India T20I team, following which he was replaced as ODI captain of the team by the board. He had earlier also stepped as captain Indian Premier League (IPL) franchise Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB). Reacting to the same, former India batter Sanjay Manjrekar said that Kohli "wants to make himself unsackable as captain" and "when he gets that vibe that his captaincy is under threat, he tends to quit".

"I think, in some way, he wants to make himself unsackable as captain. When he gets that vibe that his captaincy is under threat, he tends to quit," Manjrekar said.

"It's come one after the other in a very short span - giving up captaincy at RCB and then the white-ball captaincy as well. This also was unexpected, but it is interesting that all these three resignations of important positions have come so quickly one after the other," he added.

Manjrekar further highlighted that the change in management has also played a major role. He feels that the Kohli won't get the same backing from current head coach Rahul Dravid like the way he used to get under former coach Ravi Shastri.

"He was uncomfortable when Anil Kumble was the coach and once Shastri and the support staff came in, he felt comfortable and was able to enjoy his captaincy. The new coach (Rahul Dravid) is no Ravi Shastri. He would have got some inkling of the kind of support he was going to get from him," he stated.

Manjrekar also pointed out that Kohli has found himself out of his comfort zone.

"Clearly, a guy who finds himself outside his comfort zone. Individually, his batting is not at its best. All that has just added up. He is not in a great space at the moment. These are all emotional decisions that one can understand.

Notably, Kohli's Test captaincy announcement came a day after India lost the three-match Test series in South Africa.

https://sports.ndtv.com/cricket/he-...ohli-stepping-down-india-test-captain-2712062
 
Surpassed Imran eons ago. It is disrespectful to compare a captain with 14 wins to a captain with 40, not to mention Imran lost to Sri Lanka in 1985, the minnow Test side of the era and only won 3-4 Tests away from home. He couldn’t even win in Australia when they were at the their weakest.

Kohli is the greatest Asian Test captain of all time. Full stop.

40 Test wins, kept his team at the top of the rankings longer than any Asian team in the past, kept his team at the top of the rankings longer than any team in the 2010-20 decade.

Revamped India’s pace bowling culture. Just look at the difference between someone like Ishant Sharma under Dhoni and Kohli.

No Asian captain of the past can boost greater achievements.
Strange that he has still be thrown out of captaincy in all three formats at such a young age of 33.
Strange that with 7 years of experience he has been schooled by a baby South African team and was the main reason of loosing the last test.
Strange strange strange...
 
Kohli and Imran is a fitting comparison made by Shastri because he's clearly seen both of them play in flesh, and not behind a keyboard.

They are both charismatic, influential, leaders and won accolades for their countries. Imran gave us the biggest cricketing achievement and moment by winning the World Cup, while Kohli made India into a powerhouse test team. Both are iconic personalities of their era, and most importantly will be held in high regard by the generations to follow.
 
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