The dust raised by Indian athletes, officials and politicians at Rio seems to have settled and we are back to cricket. Skipper Virat Kohli and board president Anurag Thakur are propounding their new doctrines on the running the sport on and off the field. Dilshan to retire from International Cricket.
If those present in Rio could barely find a handful of survivors to return to Tokyo four years from now, Kohli with his chopping and changing of the playing eleven tells the world that he believes in horses for courses. Suddenly he has realised that five bowlers are too many to shuffle around without under bowling one as he did in the first three Tests before going in with four in the Port of Spain wash-out. Dilshan to retire from International Cricket.
Kohli is now convinced that Ravichandran Ashwin can be categorised as a true all-rounder if not in the same class of more illustrious men who could turn matches upside down either with their batting or bowling alone. By promoting the offie up the order, Kohli and his intellectual coach Anil Kumble prodded wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha to prove that he is no less a batsman to be shoved down. This little side battle for the No.6 slot in the batting order is getting spicy.