By Sriram Veera
On Thursday, Indian cricket cut its ties with the past. Virender Sehwag, Yuvraj Singh, Zaheer Khan, Harbhajan Singh and Gautam Gambhir weren’t included in the list of 30 probables for the 2015 World Cup.
It’s not a surprising decision really, as none of them have played in an ODI for almost a year, and not one of them had been in any kind of decent form recently. “Why should this be a surprise to anyone?” a selector asked The Indian express. “We have picked players on form and these seniors haven’t been among runs or wickets for a while now. We have gone with a set of players who we think can win the World Cup for us.”
Still, this is a moment of some gravitas. The charismatic Sehwag was one of the great entertainers and high-impact players Indian cricket has ever seen. Yuvraj Singh might have threatened to remain the boy who refused to grow up but matured just in time to be the player of the tournament of the last World Cup. Zaheer Khan was India’s best seamer in modern-day cricket and certainly in the top three of all time. It was Harbhajan, with his temperament, who signalled the arrival of new young India – at times immature but always passionate. And with his tenacity, Gambhir set up a template for many on how to break through from the wilderness of domestic cricket.
All of them were bid a cold goodbye.
It’s difficult to see how any of these five stars can get out of this dead-end. By choosing to play on over the last year, they had not given themselves any chance of bidding a farewell. Each one of them hung on, hoping for a personal revival in form that could get them back but time has a way of running out and moving on.
All the five were from the middle generation – they weren’t from the Tendulkar or Ganguly era of the nostalgic past and they certainly didn’t represent the zeitgeist like a Virat Kohli. They were somewhere in the middle, the bridge between the past and the present, and it appears Indian cricket has decided to severe that link.
Indian cricket isn’t usually known for its ruthlessness and likes to dole out emotional farewells but the selectors have, rightly, decided that a World Cup isn’t the time to get sentimental.
After all, these five weren’t the only ones who were cut out from the team that won the last World Cup. In fact, only four from that team – M S Dhoni, Virat Kohli, Suresh Raina and R Ashwin – have survived.
“There was a discussion on everyone and the seniors were also considered [for selection],” said BCCI secretary Sanjay Patel. “But the thought process was to give preference to performers. The youngsters had been doing very well at the domestic level so they could not be ignored. Barring major injuries, the World Cup squad would be from this lot. The captain’s views were also considered.”
The recent numbers of those continued…
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