With only two months left for the 2023 Men’s ODI World Cup to begin, scores of Indian fans will be dreaming again to see the Rohit Sharma-led side ending a ten-year wait for lifting a major trophy on home soil on November 19. The dream of lifting a major trophy has been a long-standing dream for India, who have faltered at every step in the quest for it since winning the 2013 Champions Trophy in England, with Rohit being a part of it. But it is easier said than done, considering their abysmal record in ICC events till now.
For starters, India’s strongest playing eleven is a jigsaw puzzle that is far away from being sorted out. With a few of their first-choice players and potential World Cup pivotal figures still recovering from injuries as well as confusion from experiments with the middle-order in the West Indies, India doesn’t have the aura of a championship winning side.
On October 8, when India play their first 2023 World Cup group match against Australia in Chennai, all eyes will be on Rohit – as the captain and leading the charge in batting. The significance of Rohit leading India in a home World Cup will not be lost on him.