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Published 14:46 IST, July 6th 2024

'Don't like to chop & change too many things': Rahul Dravid on the MAJOR factor affected his tenure

Rahul Dravid cites aversion to frequent changes as a key factor impacting his coaching tenure with Team India.

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Rahul Dravid
Rahul Dravid | Image: JioCinema

Team India's jam-packed celebration plan concluded with a lap of honour around the Wankhede Stadium boundaries. All of the players were happy and thoroughly immersed in the grandeur of the event held for them to bring home the T20 World Cup 2024. This came after Rahul Dravid managed and Rohit Sharma led the Indian cricket team to win the ICC T20 World Cup 2024, beating South Africa in the finals on June 29, 2024. The captain ended India’s 11 years of ICC trophy drought. Fans were crazy when the Indian team did a bus parade at the Marine Drive.

Rahul Dravid made a huge statement on his departure from the Indian cricket team

Following Rahul Dravid's departure from Team India, the former coach expressed his dislike for frequent changes in the team lineup during his tenure. He aimed to support captain Rohit Sharma in developing winning strategies. Dravid recently concluded his coaching role as Team India clinched the T20 World Cup in Barbados, securing their second title since 2007 by defeating South Africa.

"I'm someone who actually likes continuity and don't like to chop and change too many things because I believe that creates a lot of instability and doesn't create very good environment," said Dravid in a video posted by BCCI on Saturday.

"I feel that I am a part of the team whose responsibility is to create the right professional, safe, secure environment that doesn't really have a fear of failure as such but is challenging enough to push people. That has always been my endeavour." 

Dravid said that the period when the players were coming out of the COVID-19 pandemic was a tough one for him as he had just taken over as coach and "never envisaged" that he would have to work with half a dozen captains.

"One of the things that we really had to manage, especially in the early part of my coaching tenure here with India. We were at the back-end of the Covid restrictions. "We really had to manage their workloads through all the three different formats. There were a few injuries and it led to me working with something like 5-6 captains in the first 8-10 months of me being here.

“It was definitely something that I hadn't envisaged, or not something that I thought about, but it just sort of organically happened.”

 Under Dravid's tutelage, India thrashed England in the five-match Test series at home and the team also reached the 2023 ODI World Cup final.

While Covid put a lot of restrictions on players and they virtually lived out of a 'bubble case' at all times, the pandemic also had its up side as a lot of youngsters got a chance to be a part of the India team environment.

"The other thing that happened, which was very nice to see is, because we played so much of cricket after Covid and we had to cram in a lot of series, it meant that we had to almost, at times, have two teams playing at the same time in different parts of the world.

"Over the last 2-1/2 years, especially in white-ball cricket and lately towards the back-end (of my career) even in red-ball cricket, we were able to give a lot of youngsters a lot of opportunities, bring a lot of people into the side." "Some of them developed and stayed on in the side a little bit longer, but some of them, they were there because at that point of time maybe some of the seniors were resting." Dravid's relationship with Indian stalwarts like Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli dates back to the time when he was at the fag end of his cricketing career while the two were finding their feet in international cricket.

"I've really enjoyed working with Rohit, someone I knew as a young boy. Just to see him grow as a person and grow as a leader in Indian cricket, what someone like him has been able to contribute to the team over the last 10-12 years, both as a player and now as a leader, has been a real tribute to him and the effort that he's put in.

"I've really enjoyed getting to him know as a person as well and enjoyed seeing his commitment and his care for the team; to just try and get the environment right where everyone feels safe and secure and enjoys themselves. It's something that I'll miss.

"Even with someone like Virat. In the initial days, just a couple of series with him as a captain, just a couple of matches. Getting to know him as well and to see how he goes about his business, the professionalism that he continues to display...his desired to improve, to get better. It's been fascinating for me to watch." Dravid said he always believed in the process because of which, at times, he was misunderstood as not being result-oriented.

"For me that's (results), of course it's important. I keep saying and people think, 'Oh, I think result are not important'. Of course, results are important.

"I'm in the business to produce results. But it's always like, as a coach, to think about what is it that I can control to help the results and at the end of the day our responsibility should be to try and help the captain deliver his vision and his philosophy of how he wants the team to play." "Of course, to win cricket games is a given. You try to win as much as you can. You start with that. But I always look back on what is it that leads to the winning? How do you win more games and what is the process required to win more games? "For me, the vision was to try and get that process right. Ticking all of those boxes. 'Are we challenging the players enough? Are we practicing well enough? are we prepared tactically, technically? Are we supporting the players as best as we possibly can, Are we creating the right environment? “These are the things I think that are important to tick before you get to the winning. The winning, hopefully, if you do a lot of these things, most of the time the winning will take care of itself.”

(With PTI inputs)

Updated 14:46 IST, July 6th 2024