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Regular-article-logo Sunday, 27 April 2025

Sehwag's captaincy ambitions hurt team, says Greg ChappellIndian culture doesn't breed leaders, feels former coach

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(AGENCIES) Published 08.03.12, 12:00 AM

Adelaide: Greg Chappell, on Wednesday took a dig at Virender Sehwag’s captaincy ambition and said such an attitude hurt the Indian team.

“Sehwag thought he should be captain after (Anil) Kumble, so there is a bit of a collision there,” Chappell said during a promotional event for his book Fierce Focus.

“I think Dhoni is getting to a point where Test cricket is getting too hard for him, and the undercurrent around the dressing room cannot help,” Chappell said.

In a vicious attack on Indian culture and Indian cricket team of which he was the coach, Chappell said the side lacked leaders because parents, school teachers and coaches made all the decisions in the Indian system.

“The (Indian) culture is very different, it’s not a team culture. They lack leaders in the team because they are not trained to be leaders. From an early age, their parents make all the decisions, their schoolteachers make their decisions, their cricket coaches make the decisions,” Chappell said.

“The culture of India is such that, if you put your head above the parapet, someone will shoot it. Knock your head off. So they learn to keep their head down and not take responsibility.

“The Poms (British) taught them really well to keep their head down. For if someone was deemed to be responsible, they’d get punished. So the Indians have learnt to avoid responsibility. So before taking responsibility for any decisions, they prefer not to,” Chappell said.

He said Indian captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni was an exception to that rule but even he seems to have lost to the system.

“Dhoni is one of the most impressive young men that I have ever worked with. When he came into that Indian team, you just knew that he was a leader in the making. He was definitely someone who could make decisions, and he didn’t mind putting his head above the parapet, and didn’t mind putting the bigger players in their place. I think he is the best thing to have happened to Indian cricket in recent times,” he said.

However, Chappell felt, excessive cricket has now started taking a toll on Dhoni.

“But looking at him on this tour — I didn’t meet or speak to him at all — but just watching the body language and just watching him on the field, it wasn’t the MS Dhoni that I knew. I think Indian cricket has worn him down as well.

“Especially, captaining all three formats, and India play about 50 per cent more cricket than Australia do. And Dhoni played four years, captaining three years while being wicketkeeper and their key batman — one of the best chasers of a target that I’ve ever seen,” he said.

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