Dhoni pushed and prodded his side into peaking in time
Dhoni pushed and prodded his side into peaking in time
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MS Dhoni and Sachin Tendulkar celebrate India's World Cup final win over Sri Lanka on April 2 |
Unlike their predecessors as the number one ranked team (West Indies and Australia), India doesn't have a dominant attack. Considering bowlers win matches this makes Dhoni's captaincy performance even more meritorious. In that regard he's emulated Ranatunga in conjuring up a World Cup victory with a moderate attack. As there's no indication India is on the verge of unearthing a couple of world-class bowlers and three of it's best Test batsmen are closer to retirement than the pinnacle of their career, Dhoni has a serious challenge on his hands to keep India at the top of the longer game rankings.
However, he can take comfort from the fact that none of the stronger teams look likely to surge past India in the race to be number one.
Fascinating tournament
This is one of the reasons why the 2011 World Cup was such a fascinating tournament; all the teams were flawed. Consequently it was an extremely open World Cup, which proved it's far more interesting when there's a number of good sides rather than one really strong side bullying a string of moderate teams.
With three consecutive World Cup finals (1999, 2003 & 2007) dominated by Australia, the tournament badly needed the upsets and strong finale that 2011 provided. In addition to having the best captain at World Cup 2011, India was also the most capable batting side against spinners.u00a0 There's a worrying trend, which the World Cup exposed, of batsmen whose footwork is inadequate against spin bowling. This is even more of a concern when you consider that, of the three great 21st century spinners, Muralitharan, Warne and Kumble, only the Sri Lankan was in attendance and by the end of the tournament, he was virtually on one leg.
There seems to be a train of thought amongst batsmen from some countries that it's less dangerous to employ all manner of zany, premeditated shots, than it is to counter spin bowling with sharp footwork. This kind of warped thinking is either a product of poor coaching or lazy batting, or more likely a combination of both. I'm referring to coaching received at a young age, not once the player reaches international level. It's too late to drastically change a player's footwork once he's old enough to be competing at the highest level.u00a0 The only major flaw in the 2011 World Cup (apart from the constant confusion over the URS), was the length of time it took to decide a winner. Consequently, it's welcome news that the 2015 tournament will be shorter.
However, the automatic choice of all 10 Test-playing nations as the only qualifiers for 2015 is a short-sighted decision. The World Cup is a prestigious tournament and teams should only be competing on merit.
Poor teams
Currently, neither Bangladesh nor Zimbabwe deserve automatic entry and even the West Indies need to improve dramatically to escape the ignominy of slipping into that category. At least two of those teams should have to qualify by playing in a stringent promotion/demotion tournament with the stronger Associate countries.
Whilst this was a successful (and for the most part entertaining) World Cup, the ICC should always be looking for ways to improve the tournament.
The introduction of a qualifying tournament and the distribution of a paper by Indian coaches on how to teach young batsmen the correct footwork against spin bowling, would be a step in the right direction.
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