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December 8, 2005 Thursday Ziqa’ad 5, 1426

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Chappell makes peace with Ganguly


CHENNAI, Dec 7: India’s cricket coach Greg Chappell on Wednesday drew the curtain on the unsavoury row with Saurav Ganguly, saying the spat was history. “We have moved on. The drama that surrounded the episode was much greater than actually was the case,” Chappell said in an interview after the drawn first Test against Sri Lanka here.

Chappell and Ganguly clashed in September when the coach slammed the country’s most successful captain as being “unfit to lead the side” in a leaked e-mail to Indian cricket chiefs.

A truce was brokered between the two but Ganguly was replaced as captain by Rahul Dravid and also sacked from the one-day side for matches against Sri Lanka and South Africa.

The left-hander won a narrow 3-2 verdict by the selectors to remain in the Test squad, but lasted just 24 deliveries in the rain-ravaged Chennai Test where he ran out Vangipurappu Laxman before being dismissed for five.

Ganguly goes into the second Test starting in New Delhi on Saturday knowing only a big score will prolong his international career.

Chappell refused to read too much into Ganguly’s failure in the first Test, saying: “I would not make much of it. What can I say? The whole team made only 167 runs.”

The former Australian captain, who took over as Indian coach in June for a two-year term, said the showdown with Ganguly was not an issue anymore — as long as he was performing.

“One thing I have learnt about life is that forget the past, but do not forget the lesson you learn from it,” said Chappell.

“He (Ganguly) wants to play cricket for India. I want to be a good coach. And I want to be the coach of a good Indian team.”

Chappell also took a swipe at former selector Yashpal Sharma for suggesting the coach was targeting players like Ganguly, Virender Sehwag, Harbhajan Singh and Zaheer Khan because he did not get along with them.

“I don’t have that much clout,” he said. “All I can say is that Yashpal doesn’t really understand what is going on.

“I don’t want to get sidetracked. I don’t want to get involved in a slanging match. He is frustrated that he lost a job which he obviously wanted to keep.—AFP



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