Dhoni retires from tests, Kohli to lead India

Wednesday, 31 December 2014 00:05 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

MELBOURNE (Reuters): India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni has retired from test cricket ‘citing the strain of playing all formats’, and Virat Kohli will lead the team in the fourth test against Australia in Sydney, the country’s cricket board said on Tuesday.   Mahendra Singh Dhoni during a test match at the Oval cricket ground in London 17August 2014 – Reuters   The shock announcement came minutes after Dhoni faced reporters in the wake of India’s draw in the third test against Australia in Melbourne, which conceded the four-match series 2-0 to the hosts. Dhoni said nothing of his retirement plans during the post-match media conference at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and the news was broken on the Board of Control for Cricket in India BCCI’s twitter feed. “MS Dhoni has chosen to retire from Test Cricket with immediate effect,” the said on its Twitter feed. “Virat (Kohli) will be the captain for the 4th and Final Test against Australia.” The BCCI later issued a statement saying the wicketkeeper-captain would now concentrate on one-day internationals and Twenty20 cricket, a surprise move given most senior cricketers generally forgo the shorter formats of the game in a bid to preserve their test careers. “One of India’s greatest Test Captains under whose leadership India became the No. 1 team in the Test Rankings MS Dhoni, has decided to retire from Test Cricket citing the strain of playing all formats of Cricket,” the statement said. “BCCI while respecting the decision of M S Dhoni to retire from Test Cricket, wishes to thank him for his enormous contribution to Test Cricket and the laurels that he has brought to India.” The 33-year-old had been under immense pressure in the wake of the team’s disappointing 3-1 loss against England and the series defeat by Australia may have hastened the decision. Long considered Dhoni’s heir apparent, Kohli led the team in the first test against Australia in Adelaide, scoring back-to-back centuries in his debut as captain and earning plaudits for his aggressive approach despite the cliff-hanging loss by 48 runs. Though not a victory, Dhoni’s last test in charge may have been satisfying on a personal level, having struck an unbeaten 24 to help guide his team to safety on the fifth and final day as Australia’s seamers pushed hard for a third successive win. His stewardship is likely to be hotly debated for months and years to come, having taken India’s test team to the world number one ranking for a brief period, but also leading a team that would invariably fail to perform away from home soil.

 Factbox: Former India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni

    MELBOURNE (Reuters): Factbox on former India captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni who quit test cricket on Tuesday. Born: July 7, 1981 in Ranchi. Nickname: Mahi. Made his test debut against Sri Lanka in 2005, scoring 30 in the rain-hit match in Chennai. He went on to play 90 tests for India, amassing 4876 runs at a 38-plus average, hitting six centuries and 33 fifties. He also took 256 catches and contributed 38 stumpings. Dhoni’s highest test score of 224 came against Australia in February 2013. The wicketkeeper-batsman made his ODI debut against Bangladesh in late 2004 and was run out for a first ball duck in the Chittagong match. Dhoni has played 250 ODIs, scoring 8192 runs, averaging 52.85 with a strike rate in the vicinity of 90. He has hit nine centuries in this format to go with 56 fifties. He has also played 50 Twenty20 Internationals, scoring 849 runs, averaging nearly 34 with a 116 strike rate. Under his captaincy, India won the inaugural Twenty20 World Cup in 2007, the 50-over World Cup in 2011 and remained the number one test team for 18 months from December 2009. He received Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, India’s highest sports honour, in 2007. Known for his penchant to seal a victory with a six, Dhoni’s trademark “helicopter” shot has amused fans who have also hailed his unflappable temperament. India’s string of away test defeats remains a blot on his captaincy records, though, and the emergence of Virat Kohli was seen as an alternative. He surpassed retired great Sachin Tendulkar as the highest-earning Indian sportsman but remains a fiercely private person.
 

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