Page 264 - IPL1
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He was appointed captain of India’s one-day side in 2005 and
                 soon became Test captain as well. He stood down from the job
                 following  the  tour  of  England  in  2007,  when  he  led  his  team
                 to victory in the Test series. He has been omitted from India’s
                 one-day team recently and he was not part of the squad that
                 won the ICC World Twenty20, either. There is a young band of
                 Indian batsman and Dravid, the old master, might find his future
                 restricted to Test cricket. But his status and popularity are such
                 that he was always going to be nominated as one of the ‘icon’
                 players for the Indian Premier League.


                 Bangalore  Royal  Challengers  were  delighted  to  secure  his
                 captaincy for the duration of the tournament at a cost of just

                 over  US  $1m  and  Dravid  needed  all  his  legendary  calmness
                 under pressure as his side struggled to adapt to the lightning-
                 fast pace of the Twenty20 game. Some questioned his ability to
                 change the tempo of his own batting after he made ducks in his
                 third and fourth innings, against Rajasthan Royals and Chennai
                 Super Kings, but – ever the professional – Dravid proved them
                 wrong with a string of knocks that combined what the purists
                 might call “proper” batting with improvisation few realised him
                 capable of.


                 To score 371 runs in a generally losing cause – almost 150 more
                 than  the  next  most  prolific  player  in  his  side  –  reflected  the
                 character of the man. An innings of 66 against Kings XI Punjab
                 during another home defeat spoke volumes: among his team-
                 mates only Virat Kohli reached double-figures. There may even
                 have been a degree of anger and frustration from this proud
                 man during his ferocious 36-ball 75 not out against Rajasthan
                 Royals in Jaipur, but again he received precious little support.
                 Only  Jacques  Kallis  (20)  and  Cameron  White  (10)  made  it  into
                 double-figures this time in a total of 132 for nine.


                 Dravid  maintained  a  brave  face  throughout  the  tournament
                 despite  the  struggles  of  his  highly  fancied  team  and  even
                 managed to smile when it was put to him that the Bangalore
                 squad  may  have  been  more  suited  to  Test  cricket  than  the
                 Twenty20 format. That, as much as the runs he scored and the
                 respect he commanded from his team-mates, may have been
                 his greatest achievement in what was a difficult few weeks for

                 India’s greatest-ever No. 3.
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