'Don’t create monsters in dressing room it was MS Dhoni earlier, it's Virat Kohli now'

Former India cricketer and a two-time World Cup winner, Gautam Gambhir, has criticised the 'hero worship' which is prevalent ...

By Lokmat English Desk | Published: September 19, 2022 04:23 PM2022-09-19T16:23:36+5:302022-09-19T16:24:14+5:30

'Don’t create monsters in dressing room it was MS Dhoni earlier, it's Virat Kohli now' | 'Don’t create monsters in dressing room it was MS Dhoni earlier, it's Virat Kohli now'

'Don’t create monsters in dressing room it was MS Dhoni earlier, it's Virat Kohli now'

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Former India cricketer and a two-time World Cup winner, Gautam Gambhir, has criticised the 'hero worship' which is prevalent in Indian cricket fraternity, not just among the fans, but also in media and by the broadcasters themselves. Gambhir believes that this culture, which dates back to 1983 when India had scripted history with their cricket World Cup win, has led to fans hailing stars like Virat Kohli, MS Dhoni and Kapil Dev to an extent that they have forgotten or disregarded the contributions of other members of the team.

Speaking to Indian Express in their show 'Idea Exchange', Gambhir initially was talking about his approach in politics before he shifted to the gentleman's game when asked a follow-up question on brand-creation in Indian cricket. It is then that he said, "Don’t create monsters in the dressing room. Only monster should be Indian cricket, not an individual”. “Do you think that this whole hero worship chokes the next star to come up? Nobody has grown in that shadow. It was Mahendra Singh Dhoni earlier, it is Virat Kohli now," he added before he made the most recent reference to Indian cricket, talking about the match against Afghanistan in Asia Cup earlier this month. The entire country had celebrated former captain Kohli after he had ended his 1021-day long century drought with a stellar 122 in the match. It was his first international century since November 2019 and very first in T20I cricket. What had left Gambhir concerned was that while Kohli did make a meaningful contribution to the match and to India's win, there was another player who was equally incredible in the game with his record-scripting five-wicket haul - Bhuvneshwar Kumar.

“ When Kohli got a 100 and there was this young guy from a small town of Meerut [Bhuvneshwar Kumar], who also managed to get five wickets, no one even bothered to speak about him. This was so unfortunate. I was the only one, during that commentary stint, who said that. He bowled four overs and got five wickets and I don’t think anyone knows about that. But Kohli scores a 100 and there are celebrations everywhere in this country. India needs to come out of this hero worship. Whether it’s Indian cricket, whether it’s politics, whether it’s Delhi cricket. We have to stop worshipping heroes. The only thing that we need to worship is Indian cricket, or for that matter Delhi or India," he said. Gambhir further explained how this "hero worship" culture has been prevalent in Indian cricket since 1983 with people only talking about then captain Kapil Dev. He pointed out that the same happened in 2007 and 2011 when India claimed the T20 World Cup and the ODI World Cup respectively under Dhoni's captaincy. Gambhir went on to add that he wanted to bring glory to India and make people happy instead of "finishing anyone" while referring to the contributions of the Kapil Dev-led team. India won the for the World Cup first time in 1983 after defeating the mighty West Indies in the final at Lord's.

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