Sourav Ganguly's Lord's Celebration Was Ungentlemanly: Bishan Singh Bedi
Recalling the famous shot of the then captain Sourav Ganguly waving his Team India jersey at Lord's after winning a tri-series final against England in 2002, Bishen Singh Bedi said the cricket culture has changed with growing TV coverage.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: November 12, 2014 08:11 pm IST
Not exactly a fan of exuberant celebrations on the cricket field, former Indian captain Bishan Singh Bedi on Wednesday said the players' display of emotion and enthusiasm these days is mostly for the cameras and cannot be considered gentlemanly.
Recalling the famous shot of the then captain Sourav Ganguly waving his Team India jersey at Lord's after winning a tri-series final against England in 2002, Bedi said the cricket culture has changed with growing TV coverage. (Golden Oldies Release Stamps to Commemorate 150 Years of Eden Gardens)
Referring to the gesture which is framed in a photo at the BC Roy Club House in Eden Gardens, Bedi said: "I've seen a picture of him in the Club House taking his shirt off at the Lord's balcony but that was not a gentlemanly thing to do. I tried to lip read what he was saying."
"I know this enthusiasm has a lot to do with TV cameras.
"I suppose you have to put up with this change but I'm not convinced it is for the better," the former left-arm India spinner said during a chat show organised by the CAB.
Speaking highly about his former captain Tiger Pataudi, Bedi said: "Tiger would never be provoked. Even if a player scored a hundred or dismissed a batsman, he would doff his cap to him. Never was he jumping around in celebration. That is cricket culture."
"Tiger was at least 100 years ahead of his time. His innate nature gave him an advantage as far as captaincy was concerned. He was a very proud Indian. At initial team meetings he would always make us think beyond Delhi or Bombay or Karnataka.
"He would always stress on the fact that we are Indians. 'Think we are Indians', he would always say. This togetherness was his greatest contribution. Tiger was very positive."
Bedi also had some words of praise for Ganguly and said, "I watched him from a distance. He created a flair for winning. Along the way he defied cricketing norms because of changing times, but he was cut out to do it and could also afford that."
On the ICC's crackdown on chuckers, he said they should have acted 20 years ago.
"Remember the Asian subcontinent has four votes. The Doosra and Teesras have evolved from the subcontinent. All these are rubbish.
"I don't know much about match-fixing. I have no clue about its modus operandi but chucking is happening under your nose. Cricket is associated with honesty and integrity. Chucking gives unfair advantage to a bowler. You need strong will to clean up the mess."