Ranji Trophy: Mumbai No Longer Dominant, Other Teams Getting Stronger, Says Sanjay Manjrekar
Manjrekar also believes that in the early Mumbai teams, there was one India player, who was captaining the side and that is somehow missing in the present team.
- Posted by SylvesterT
- Updated: November 23, 2017 02:11 pm IST
Highlights
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Manjrekar feels rise of other teams has led to Mumbai's Ranji decline
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41-time champions need to beat Tripura in their last Group C league game
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Last year, Mumbai were beaten by Gujarat in the final
Former India batsman Sanjay Manjrekar has stated that the rise in form of other teams is the reason for the recent dwindling presence of Ranji champions Mumbai. Even in this season's Ranji Trophy, Mumbai have been made to wait till the last league game to try and seal their knockout spot. The 41-time champions need to beat Tripura in their last Group C league game here, commencing on November 25, to make it to the quarters. Last year, Mumbai were beaten by Gujarat in the final held in Indore.
"May be one reason is that the other teams are getting stronger (in the Ranji Trophy). Earlier Mumbai and a couple of other metros who were dominant, now the small town boys are playing with the same kind of 'jigar' (enthusiasm)," Manjrekar said.
"There are more players from around India who are putting up a stiff competition," he said. The topic came up at the discussion after Manjrekar and former Mumbai opener Lalchand Rajput released a book, 'Spell-binding Spells', penned by Anindya Dutta.
Manjrekar also believes that in the early Mumbai teams, there was one India player, who was captaining the side and that is somehow missing in the present team.
"And the other reason, if we look at all the good Mumbai teams, there was always an international player captaining them, that's where somehow (they) were able to rub on the right kind of culture," he said. "I played under Sandeep Patil and he made sure that the message was passed on from the highest level to those players. That link, I think, is missing."
Rajput, a domestic bulwark who scored tons of runs in domestic cricket before going on to play for India, echoed similar views, while pointing out the positive influence of the Indian Premier League on other teams' players.
"That is one of the reasons, yes, other players (apart from Mumbai) have also started (playing well). The second part is the IPL. A lot of players become more mature by rubbing shoulders with national stars. So they become more confident," he said.
"I will give you an example, if Gujarat was playing against Mumbai, they would get out before the match started, they would say 'do din me khatam hoga ya ek din mei' (will it get over in two days or one day)," said Rajput, who now coaches Assam.
Mumbai recently played their 500th Ranji game versus Baroda and were made to struggle for a draw after conceding the first innings lead. Even their next game against Andhra Pradesh in Ongole ended in a draw after Mumbai gained the first innings lead.
(With PTI inputs)