Sourav Ganguly (left) leads teammate Rahul Dravid onto the ground in his retirement game on the last day of the fourth and final Test match of the Border-Gavaskar Trophy 2008 series between India and Australia at the Vidarbha Cricket Association stadium, Jamtha in Nagpur on November Monday.

Is it just me, or do you get the feeling that the morning papers have been surprisingly unimaginative in celebrating a 2-0 series win over Australia -the first such instance since Clive Lloyd’s marauders blanked Australia 3-0 in the late 1980s?

In Cricinfo, George Binoy looks at Ishant Sharma’s man of the series-winning performance and points at a sea change that has gone largely unremarked: India no longer has to rely on spin to win matches at home. It’s a good time for change: Anil Kumble is the last in a line of great Indian spinners who was unplayable in home conditions; India’s discovery that it can use seam, swing and pace as potent weapons even in Indian conditions could not thus have come at a better time.

The real advantage, which should become increasingly apparent in time, is that this makes India a strong unit at home and abroad: the playing squad will almost invariably comprise of four seamers and two spinners, giving the captain the option of going in with a 3 seam, one spin combination, or two-seam one-spin, or even three seamers and two spinners or no spinner at all in a four-man attack, depending on the conditions and the nature of the opposition.

Ishant comes in for high praise from Steve Waugh in the Hindu:

Ricky Ponting is run out by a direct throw from Amit Mishra. The Australian captain made just eight.

However, the true superstar in the making is Ishant Sharma. India has unearthed a superb bowler in him. He has incredible accuracy, is fast, has height and is a quick learner. He reminds me of Glenn McGrath in his accuracy and of Jason Gillespie in his hand speed.

Cricketing transition is on Suresh Menon’s mind, as he points out that in MS Dhoni and Amit Mishra, we have found the inheritors of the legacy of Anil the captain and Anil the bowler.

Steve Waugh underlines Ponting’s day four captaincy with this pithy comment:

“Winning the Test match is what mattered. You have just spent six weeks in the subcontinent. You just don’t take your foot off the gas.”

Peter Roebuck is none too enamored of the tactics employed by the Indians in pursuit of the win:

But India stooped to conquer. Only 21.3 overs were bowled in the morning session, a ruse designed to slow the scoring and to bring bad light into play in the event of the Australians putting up a sustained fight.

Fieldsmen dawdled, the drinks break lasted seven minutes, balls were thrown over bowlers’ heads, leather-flingers trudged back to their marks, an inexperienced captain took an eternity to set his field. Deliveries came along about once a week – an acceptable rate from Woolworths but not the stuff of positive cricket. In short, India went to the very edge of the laws of the game. Supporters may argue Australia have long followed this strategy but new champions must adopt the strengths of the deposed, not their faults.


Ishant Sharma celebrates taking the wicket of Michael Clarke (22) on Monday.

If this is the best Test cricket has to offer, then it is not worth the bother. For all the weight it carries, it is still a game. Slow over-rates are a blight and an insult to the paying public. Hereafter, lunch must be taken not at a set time but once 30 overs have been bowled, with play to resume on schedule. That’ll hurry things along.

I am not personally a fan of this 30-overs-a-session-regardless theme that has cropped up in the wake of the Nagpur Test. To mandate 90 overs a day is not just fair but necessary, and while on that, Steve Waugh has a point when he says it is time to crack down on the practice of batsmen whistling up drinks at will, under the pretext of getting a new pair of gloves or whatever-if the argument is that slow over rates bore fans, then imagine how it feels for the spectator to sit in the blistering sun watching a bunch of layabouts slowly sipping energy drinks out in the middle, about 10 minutes before a scheduled break in play.

But to insist that a team bowls 30 overs each session is to deny captains the proper use of the new ball. There is an electricity to watching fast bowlers with the shiny ball steaming in off a long run and letting fly; the contest between new ball-wielding fast bowler and opening batsmen is part of cricket’s circadian rhythm and IMHO should not be disturbed. True, savvy captains will then manipulate the rules to bowl their overs slowly in, say, a situation where the opposition is likely to declare in course of the day-but that can be legislated against without creating an absolute session cap.

Greg Baum argues that by going micro in its thinking, Australia stifled its own imagination and with it, its chances.


Mathew Hayden plays a shot on the fifth and final day of the fourth and final Test on Monday.

Process is everything in modern sport. You don’t kick a goal, you go through the process. You don’t hit a cover drive for four, you go through the process. You don’t consciously aim to shape a seven-iron left to right around a tree and stop it on the green, pin-high, you go through the proper damned process.

The theory is that if you follow process correctly, the result will look after itself. It is valid only to the extent that sport can be seen as a mechanical exercise: press this button, pull that lever, get a result. No instinct, no emotion, nothing visceral.

But sport at its best is organic, not mechanical. It is an experience, not a process, powered and animated as much by mental dexterity as muscle memory. When the Australian cricket team was at its best, it followed process, but also hunches and inspiration.

In concentrating all its thinking on its incredibly slow over rate on Sunday night, Ricky Ponting’s team appeared to obsess itself with crossed Ts and properly dotted Is and neglected the essence of its mission in India. It failed where it was once infallible, in its imagination.

Gideon Haigh argues that a game of cricket needs to be judged in totality, and not on arbitrary statistical measures such as X overs per session or Y runs scored equals boredom. An extended clip:

Saturday’s first session contained only 46 runs, but once the Indian tactics and Australian response were clear, each ball was loaded. A wicket or two would change everything. On the stroke of lunch, a reverse-swinging yorker from a toiling fast bowler in the eighth over of a persevering spell; an hour later, an acrobatic save and return by a tyro on his Test debut.

For the rest of the afternoon Australia’s batsmen were like all the king’s horses and men after Humpty-Dumpty’s fall.

For the media to complain about the entertainment value on the basis of the runs scored was like a complaint against Picasso for using too few brush-strokes.

It betrays an unconscious imbibing of the crude assumptions behind Twenty20 : that cricket is only exciting when fours and sixes flow in endless profusion, and that people are too dumb to know better.

Sunday’s final session turned the Test upside down, then inside out. Australia had chipped away at India in the afternoon and retrieved the initiative.


Amit Mishra (right) celebrates with teammate Harbhajan Singh after taking the wicket of Brad Haddin. The spin duo spun a web of deceit to skittle the Australian batting.

This they proceeded to hand back by referencing something beyond the boundary – the playing conditions of the International Cricket Council , which hardly anyone need trouble to consult, but a small elite must know.

Onlookers felt the pressure escape like steam from a leaking valve. We were also granted an insight into the extraneous factors that play on a captain’s mind, which require from him instant decisions, and expose him to blame and ridicule.

The criticism now came from a quite different quadrant – the notion that Test cricket is a matter of national honour and sporting pride; that one must risk defeat, or at least be prepared to incur expense, in order to win.

Here is a tension. We are anxious that Tests justify themselves as spectacle, but can’t abandon the idea that more is at stake. It is a neurosis rooted in Twenty20’s intimidating popularity, and Test cricket’s abiding hold on our imaginations. In fact this Border-Gavaskar Trophy has given great value. Two exquisitely-matched teams with a lot of history and good cause to distrust one another have shown a ton of courage, skill and even civility.

Simon Barnes reframes the question: Are crowds or the lack thereof the true measure of the popularity of Test cricket?


Jason Krejza (4) is stumped by MS Dhoni off the bowling of Amit Mishra on Monday.

The only thing that has marred the series has been the absence of anyone watching it at the grounds. These fraught matches, the frenzied appeals, the furious blows, the stupendous efforts have taken place against an eerie silence, the ball rocketing in among empty seats and the occasional abandoned bottles of the Indian soft drink Thums-Up.

It is like the tree that falls in the deserted forest: does it make any sound at all if there is no one there to hear it? I have no idea, that’s the point of the question. The question of the primacy of Test cricket, then, is nothing to do with public demand. It is, as much as anything, a question of player demand.

Most players are agreed that the complexity and infinite variability of Test-match cricket make it the highest form of the game. It’s just that fewer spectators are interested in the higher form of the game, at least as a paying spectacle. The primacy of Test cricket is being maintained, but it is for reasons other than spectacle or money.

Is it legitimate to run a professional sport for the pursuit of excellence? Is this pursuit more important than the pursuit of money? Is player satisfaction more important than the gratification of your clients? Do the beliefs of your core constituency matter more than the fleeting thrills of the floating voters? After England have played the one-day matches in India, they will play a Test “series” – two matches – which will be be much richer and more satisfying. It will also be poorly attended.

And that larger thought is the perfect grace note to end the Nagpur segment of this round-up with, and to move on to another: the exit of Sourav Ganguly .


Sourav Ganguly waves as teammates carry him on their shoulders as they give him a send-off in his final Test.

The front page of The Telegraph yesterday that goes well with this Soumya Bhattacharya piece on the ultimate Bengali icon; an extended interview in Outlook magazine; a collection of the best Ganguly articles published on Cricinfo; a rare VVS Laxman article celebrating his mate, circa 2004; and a post from Great Bong I remember from way back, that to my mind underlined the schism Sourav’s arrival caused in India’s cricket following public and more importantly, the media, which was divided into those who dared to criticize the player and captain, and those who would brook no criticism and who, at the slightest attempt to query, would launch into a defense based on cultural tropes coupled with a series of ad hominem attacks on the critic. To my mind, that was the essential irony of Sourav’s cricketing career: On the cricket field and in the dressing room, he was in his prime the unifier India badly needed; off the field, within the media and the public, he was the divisive figure. The former was entirely his doing; the latter is in no way his fault.

I was tempted to write an addendum to this post. It is the fashion to rate captains on the basis of their win-loss record, but IMHO that is to take a narrow view of captaincy. MSD has just become the first Indian captain to win three straight Tests; add that to his ODI and T20 wins, does that make him our best captain ever? Not by a long chalk, not yet at all events.

The statistical measurement ignores the ‘leadership’ aspect of captaincy-and IMHO that is the most important-and lasting-attribute. A captain can have a good record, but the best of records will be subsequently broken by others. To my mind, the truly great captains bring an intangible to not just their teams, but to their country’s cricketing mindset-something they alone are uniquely fitted to provide; something that gets enshrined in the dressing room, and is emulated, and even built on, by their successors.


Ganguly and captain Dhoni share a light moment after the win over Australia.

In that sense, Sourav Ganguly’s contribution was way more than those of other Indian captains I’ve followed, dating all the way back to Ajit Wadekar and including Azhar, Sachin, Rahul and Anil.

I could elaborate on that theme-but I had done a piece on this aspect when it was most fresh, and I’d rather leave you with that one, than recreate it all over again.

Sourav Ganguly
ganguly

Sourav Ganguly

India

Player profile

Full name Sourav Chandidas Ganguly

Born July 8, 1972, Calcutta (now Kolkata), Bengal

Current age 36 years 121 days
Major teams India, Asia XI, Bengal, Glamorgan, Kolkata Knight Riders, Lancashire

Batting style Left-hand bat
Bowling style Right-arm medium
Height
5 ft 11 in
Education St Xavier’s College
Relations Brother – Snehasish C Ganguly


Batting| Bowling| Career Statistics | Profile

Batting and fielding averages
Mat Inns NO Runs HS Ave BF SR 100 50 4s 6s Ct St
Tests 112 186 17 7127 239 42.17 13916 51.21 16 34 892 56 71 0
ODIs 311 300 23 11363 183 41.02 15416 73.70 22 72 1122 190 100 0
First-class 240 380 43 14779 239 43.85 31 83 165 0
List A 423 407 42 15161 183 41.53 31 93 130 0
Twenty20 31 30 2 726 91 25.92 657 110.50 0 4 80 24 11 0
Bowling averages
Mat Inns Balls Runs Wkts BBI BBM Ave Econ SR 4w 5w 10
Tests 112 99 3117 1681 32 3/28 3/37 52.53 3.23 97.4 0 0 0
ODIs 311 171 4561 3849 100 5/16 5/16 38.49 5.06 45.6 1 2 0
First-class 240 10920 6013 164 6/46 36.66 3.30 66.5 4 0
List A 423 7949 6454 168 5/16 5/16 38.41 4.87 47.3 4 2 0
Twenty20 31 24 417 521 25 3/27 3/27 20.84 7.49 16.6 0 0 0
Career statistics
Test debut England v India at Lord’s, Jun 20-24, 1996 scorecard
Last Test India v Australia at Delhi, Oct 29-Nov 2, 2008 scorecard
Test statistics

– Statsguru Test analysis –
Player analysis menu/filter

Test match list
———————————
Batting career summary
Batting innings list
High scores
Batting series averages

———————————
Bowling career summary
Bowling innings list
Bowling match list
Best innings bowling
Best match bowling

Bowling series averages
———————————
Fielding career summary
Fielding innings list
Most catches in an innings
Fielding series statistics

ODI debut India v West Indies at Brisbane, Jan 11, 1992 scorecard
Last ODI India v Pakistan at Gwalior, Nov 15, 2007 scorecard
ODI statistics

– Statsguru ODI analysis –
Player analysis menu/filter
ODI match list
———————————

Batting career summary
Batting innings list
High scores
Batting series averages
———————————
Bowling career summary

Bowling innings list
Best innings bowling
Bowling series averages
———————————
Fielding career summary
Fielding innings list

Most catches in an innings
Fielding series statistics

First-class debut 1989/90
Last First-class India v Australia at Delhi, Oct 29-Nov 2, 2008 scorecard
List A debut 1989/90
Last List A East Zone v West Zone at Hyderabad (Decc), Mar 17, 2008 scorecard
Twenty20 debut Glamorgan v Somerset at Cardiff, Jun 22, 2005 scorecard
Last Twenty20 Kolkata Knight Riders v Kings XI Punjab at Kolkata, May 25, 2008 scorecard
 Profile

Some felt he couldn’t play the bouncer, others swore that he was God on the off-side; some laughed at his lack of athleticism, others took immense pride in his ability to galvanise a side. Sourav Ganguly’s ability to polarise opinion led to one of the most fascinating dramas in Indian cricket. Yet, nobody can dispute that he was India’s most successful Test captain – forging a winning unit from a bunch of talented, but directionless, individuals – and nobody can argue about him being one of the greatest one-day batsmen of all time. Despite being a batsman who combined grace with surgical precision in his strokeplay, his career had spluttered to a standstill before being resurrected by a scintillating hundred on debut at Lord’s in 1996. Later that year, he was promoted to the top of the order in ODIs and, along with Sachin Tendulkar, formed one of the most destructive opening pairs in history.

When he took over the captaincy after the match-fixing exposes in 2000, he quickly proved to be a tough, intuitive and uncompromising leader. Under his stewardship India started winning Test matches away, and put together a splendid streak that took them all the way to the World Cup final in 2003. Later that year, in Australia, an unexpected and incandescent hundred at Brisbane set the tone for the series where India fought the world’s best team to a standstill. Victory in Pakistan turned him into a cult figure but instead of being a springboard for greater things, it was the peak of a slippery slope.

The beginning of the end came in 2004 at Nagpur – when his last-minute withdrawal played a part in Australia clinching the series – and things went pear shaped when his loss of personal form coincided with India’s insipid ODI performances. Breaking point was reached when his differences with Greg Chappell leaked into public domain and his career was in jeopardy when India began their remarkable revival under Rahul Dravid.

His gritty 30s at Karachi, when India succumbed to a humiliating defeat in early 2006, weren’t enough for him to retain his spot and some felt he would never get another chance. Others, as always, thought otherwise and they were proved right when he was included in the Test squad for the away series in South Africa in 2006-2007. He ended as the highest Indian run-scorer in that series and capped his fairytale comeback with four half-centuries on his return to ODIs. He continued his fine run in England, where he finished as the second highest scorer in Tests, and went on to slam back-to-back hundreds against Pakistan at home, the second of which was a glorious 239 in Bangalore. Ganguly was surprisingly omitted from India’s ODI squad for the CB Series in Australia and has been out of contention in the one-day squad since. After a poor Test series in Sri Lanka, there were reports of him considering retirement but he was given a lifeline in the Tests against Australia at home. Two days before the first Test, he said the series would be his last.

ganguly

The fourth final Test between India and Australia, starting in Nagpur on Thursday, should turn out to be a match that will be remembered for reasons other than the actual cricket that will be played. A new captain will take charge of the Indian team, which will also see a couple of its ageing stars bow out of the game, and another completing a century of Tests.

A look at what’s in store:

Sourav Ganguly — Final Test match

India’s most successful captain Sourav Ganguly is set to bid farewell to the international game in Nagpur.

Incidentally, it was at this very venue that the left-hander had to pull out of a Test match against Australia in controversial circumstances at the very last moment four years back.

Many believe it was the start of the slide in his career then which ultimately resulted in him losing the captaincy and being dropped from the team for around a year in 2006.

However, his successful comeback after that is still regarded as one of the best ever witnessed.

Ganguly captained India in 49 Test matches out of which the team won 21. He was also India’s most successful captain in one-dayers and led the team to the final of the 2003 World Cup.

His run tally reads — 7127 runs in 112 Tests and 11,363 runs in 311 ODIs.

He was instrumental in helping bring about a major transformation in Indian cricket. It was under his leadership that India started winning away from home and became a major force that it is today.

His fighting century on a bouncy wicket at Brisbane in 2003-04 was the turning point in India-Australia clashes. Since then Indian batsmen have become a pain in the neck for Aussie bowlers and scored runs in all conditions, at home and abroad.

At 38, he is oldest of the Fab Four (Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid and VVS Laxman) and is the first one from that group to call it quits.

Popularly known as ‘Dada’, he started off his Test career with a century and many of his fans are hoping he will end it the same way.

India’s test skipper Anil Kumble dropped a bombshell just a few minutes before the close of third test match between India and Australia at Feroz Shah Kotla by announcing his retirement from cricket. Kumble played 132 tests and took 619 wickets. His illustrious 18-year of cricket career finally came to an end at his favorite cricket ground, where he took 58 wickets in 7 tests. He also took his career-best 10/74 at the Kotla ground against Pakistan in 1999.

Anil Kumble was under tremendous pressure from several quarters, as he has been fighting with injury for a few months. After announcing retirement, Kumble said he had taken the decision before Kotla test and he attributed it to frequent injuries. Kumble also said that he always gave his 100 per cent to the game of cricket. “Feroz Shah Kotla Ground remains memorable for me. That’s why I decided to announce my retirement on this ground. I will definitely go to Nagpur, to watch Sourav Ganguly play in his last test match”, said an emotional Kumble.

Retired cricketers, current Indian cricketers and cricket fans across the globe expressed shock over Kumble’s decision to quit, but they all were on the same opinion that Kumble did it at the right time and bowed out with full dignity. Chief Selector K Srikkanth said that Kumble has been a role model to cricket and with his retirement, an era came to an end. Anil Kumble is placed third in terms of test wickets after Muralitharan and Shane Warne.

Anil Kumble is the second test cricketer to claim all 10 wickets in a test innings. All Indian cricketers, Australian players and a huge crowd gave a standing ovation to Anil Kumble, when he left the ground for the last time on the shoulders of his team mate. Indian cricket will always remain indebted to Anil Kumble. Mahendra Singh Dhoni will be the skipper of Indian cricket team at Nagpur.


SECOND TEST, Mohali:
India 469 & 314-3 dec v Australia 268 & 141-5 (day four, stumps)
Dates: 17-21 October Start time: 0500 BST each day
Coverage: Live text commentary on BBC Sport website

By Jamie Lillywhite

Gautam Gambhir

Gambhir played in fluent fashion after passing fifty to put his side on course


Michael Clarke and Brad Haddin shared a defiant 83, but Australia were 375 from victory at 141-5 at stumps on day four.

India resumed 201 ahead, Gautam Gambhir firing a second Test century in a stand of 182 with Virender Sehwag (90) and Mahendra Dhoni adding 68no in 84 balls.

Dhoni set Australia 516, never chased down before in any first-class match.

Matthew Hayden and Simon Katich fell in Harbhajan Singh’s first over, and he ousted Mike Hussey before Ishant Sharma removed Ricky Ponting in the next over.

That left the Australians on 52-4 in just the 11th over, after 36 manic minutes.

A target of 500 or more has been set on 34 previous occasions in a Test match.

Only three times has that resulted in anything other than a defeat – and they have been draws.

The ever-combative Hayden did his best to overlook the daunting statistics when Australia began their second innings 40 minutes before tea.

India’s batsmen had succeeded in grinding down the tourists but Hayden, more accustomed to applying the mental disintegration than being the victim of it, attempted to bludgeon the dominance away from the bowlers.

He launched at the first ball of the innings, which looped to safety over extra-cover, but hit four fours as 49 came in the first seven overs.

But Harbhajan came into the attack for the final over before tea and trapped Hayden lbw as the burly left-hander tried to sweep.

From the final ball of the session, the usually watchful Simon Katich tried to drive one from out of the rough and spooned to point, where Sachin Tendulkar took a superb catch diving forward, the 99th of his Test career.

Ricky Ponting

Pace sensation Sharma celebrates the key wicket of Ponting in the 11th over

Still the shots continued after the interval, Mike Hussey trying to pull a quicker short one from Harbhajan that had him trapped bang in front,

When Shane Watson was trapped on the back pad by the impressive Sharma, there were still 30 overs remaining in the day.

Clarke and Haddin played responsibly but will be well aware there is not much batting to follow them on the final day.

The day belonged to the bold spirit of India but Gambhir, looking a shade ruffled in the early stages, had added only two to his overnight 46 when he edged prodding forward at Cameron White in the leg-spinner’s first over.

Hayden, however, could not cling on to a sharp low chance at slip after the ball ricocheted off Brad Haddin’s pad.

That slight hesitancy did not last, and 15 were promptly taken from White’s next over, Gambhir launching a majestic straight drive for six that landed in a moat, rather symbolising the sinking feeling for Australia.

There was no reverse swing for the bowlers, but the decision to begin the day with the ineffective Shane Watson and the erratic White was perplexing.

Brett Lee was nursing a split webbing on his bowling hand but still took the field, although neither he nor Michael Clarke’s useful slow left-armers were used in the morning session.

Sehwag, on his 30th birthday, played some marvellously expansive shots, although he should have departed on 88, umpire Asad Rauf failing to detect a clear edge when the dashing opener cut a wide one from Mitchell Johnson.

But Sehwag added only two more before an even thicker edge to the keeper did signal his downfall.

Dhoni’s positive intent was demonstrated by his decision to bat at three, and though boundaries were relatively scarce by his standards, his running was inspired, helping him to reach his 11th Test fifty from 61 balls.

606: DEBATE
LB

Gambhir reached three figures with a flick through mid-wicket for four off White, before driving one straight to mid-off in the same over.

Hussey, with barely 20 first-class wickets to his name from more than 200 first-class games, was entrusted with eight overs but his military medium-pace merely succeeded in sending down a no-ball and roughing up the wicket, for which he received two official warnings.

Lee was introduced to bowl the first over after lunch, but was lashed straight down the ground by Sourav Ganguly, who injured his elbow in a selfless 27.

There was still time for the crowd to rejoice in a sumptuous glance off the pads for four by Tendulkar off Lee and Dhoni to take the lead over 500 by thumping White back over his head for six.

Any doubts about the timing of the declaration were swiftly cast aside by the dramatic demise of the Australian top order, and barring something truly miraculous, either cricketing or meteorological, India will surely complete victory on the final day.


On the auspicious day of Durga Ashtami, Gujarat Chief Minister Narendra Modi scored a major victory, as Tata Motors shifted their dream Nano Car project to Gujarat. It was announced in a joint press conference held by Tata Motors Chairman Ratan Tata and Gujarat CM Narendra Modi. Modi termed the day as historic for Gujarat and people of India, as Nano finally got a place it deserved.

Ratan Tata expressed satisfaction over the deal and said it was as good or slighly better that what they got in Singur. “We are happy to set up the Nano plant in Gujarat. All Singur costs will be retrieved, no big loss on book”, said Ratan Tata. The Nano plant will be set up at Sanand near Ahmedabad. According to Ratan Tata, the plant will have a capacity of 2.5 – 3.5 lakh Nano cars per year in the first phase. “It is a special day for us, as we had a bitter experience in West Bengal”, said Ratan Tata.

According to Narendra Modi, Tatas will buy the land at the current market value. “We have opened a new chapter in partnership with Tatas”, said a victorious Modi. The industry has expressed huge relief over the deal signed between Tatas and Gujarat. Narendra Modi, who has already taken Gujarat to the zenith of its growth and development, has been hailed as a industry-friendly Chief Minister.


Proving people speculations right, India’s successful test skipper Sourav Ganguly announced his retirement from cricket. Ganguly dropped the bombshell today, by saying he would say good bye to cricket at the end of series against Australia. Ganguly said he has already conveyed his decision to selectors and his team mates. “I want to leave on a winning note”, said Sourav.

Before the selection for the Australia series, the media speculated that he would be given a deal by the selectors and would announce his retirement from cricket after the Australia series. According to sources, selectors wanted to give all seniors a dignified exit and Ganguly’s selection in the test squad was part of that plan.

Sourav Ganguly played 109 tests for India and scored 6,888 runs at an average of 41.74. He scored 15 centuries in test cricket. Ganguly’s ODI record was illustrious, as he scored 11,363 runs in 311 matches at an average of 41.02. He scored 22 centuries in ODIs. Ganguly will play four more tests against Australia before calling it a day. Sourav, who was chosed as ‘Bengali No. 1″ in a CNN-IBN poll yesterday, chose the auspicious day of “Durga Ashtami” to announce his retirement from cricket.