Stories, I believe, are often told to make someone hero. I often wonder, for someone like Dhoni, who prefers to remain private person off-field, what are they going to tell the world about him other than his innings? Journalists chase him down, track down his movements, watch him play in nets, and with very limited information, they still manage to surprise the world. Hero, with less-known heroic stories. Dhoni, as person, is like that. He prefers to stay like that. My journey to favourtism starts with such little observations. I okay-dokay the same.
Nothing seems impossible when Dhoni walks in. Arey bhai, he himself has established this confidence in 1.3 billion hearts. In a world of uncertainty, he has won battles in last overs. He has lost some as well. Fans get something, critics get something. Everyone meets their desires. Good.
When his well-wishers almost threaten you with sharp words — "once he's gone off field, like forever, then you'll understand how your observations were very limited." You better believe them. We can't Afridified everyone. In Test cricket, India manages well without someone like MS, but the answer lies, again, in format. In red ball cricket, you get perennial time to undo your mistakes, to address your mistakes. Limited overs format goes by its name, it's literally limited. You need your think-tank intact. You need to map strategies and adjust yourself with it, over by over. Don't take it from me, ask the players, especially bowlers. They tell you better, I'm sure.
With Dhoni on crease, ship goes steady, and if needs to, it stays steady. It's all on situation, for situation. And mind you, the pattern is never the same. Dhoni plans strategies, he works on them. If you're Ishant, Dhoni will give you strike, and if you're Kedar, he will keep you waiting. Nobody can figure out the logic. One thing is certain. Dhoni always has plans. He never runs out of plans. It varies with partners. He tells you dos and don'ts, and he doesn't consider you at all, when he plays final songs. Complicated? Good morning. Dhoni is never about simple nice-y things.
Happy birthday, Captain Saab! Khush raho. ❤️❤️❤️

Nothing seems impossible when Dhoni walks in. Arey bhai, he himself has established this confidence in 1.3 billion hearts. In a world of uncertainty, he has won battles in last overs. He has lost some as well. Fans get something, critics get something. Everyone meets their desires. Good.
When his well-wishers almost threaten you with sharp words — "once he's gone off field, like forever, then you'll understand how your observations were very limited." You better believe them. We can't Afridified everyone. In Test cricket, India manages well without someone like MS, but the answer lies, again, in format. In red ball cricket, you get perennial time to undo your mistakes, to address your mistakes. Limited overs format goes by its name, it's literally limited. You need your think-tank intact. You need to map strategies and adjust yourself with it, over by over. Don't take it from me, ask the players, especially bowlers. They tell you better, I'm sure.
With Dhoni on crease, ship goes steady, and if needs to, it stays steady. It's all on situation, for situation. And mind you, the pattern is never the same. Dhoni plans strategies, he works on them. If you're Ishant, Dhoni will give you strike, and if you're Kedar, he will keep you waiting. Nobody can figure out the logic. One thing is certain. Dhoni always has plans. He never runs out of plans. It varies with partners. He tells you dos and don'ts, and he doesn't consider you at all, when he plays final songs. Complicated? Good morning. Dhoni is never about simple nice-y things.
Happy birthday, Captain Saab! Khush raho. ❤️❤️❤️
