NEW DELHI: India’s cricket board named Gautam Gambhir as head coach on Tuesday, with the ex-opener taking over from Rahul Dravid, tasked with building on their recent T20 World Cup triumph.

Gambhir said it was “an absolute honour” to take India’s top cricketing job.

“I have always taken pride while donning the Indian jersey during my playing days, and it is going to be no different when I take up this new role,” Gambhir said.

Gambhir, 42, takes over from batting great Dravid, who finished his stint with the T20 World Cup title in Barbados last month.

Jay Shah, secretary of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) called Gambhir a “fierce competitor and a brilliant strategist”, and said he had been “unanimously” chosen to be the head coach.

Gambhir scored over 10,000 international runs during his 13-year-long inter­national career for India since his ODI debut in 2003.

“We believe he will bring the same tenacity and leadership to his role as head coach,” Shah said, adding Gambhir “will bring out the best in our players”.

He is the only Indian, and one of four international cricketers including Don Bradman, Jacques Kallis and Mohammad Yousuf, to have scored tons in five successive Test matches.

“Modern-day cricket has evolved rapidly, and Gautam has witnessed this changing landscape up close,” Shah added.

Gambhir, a talented left-handed batsman who played a key part in India’s ODI World Cup win in 2011, recently coached Kolkata Knight Riders to an IPL crown.

“Having endured the grind and excelled in various roles throughout his career, I am confident that Gautam is the ideal person to steer Indian cricket forward,” Shah said.

“His clear vision for Team India, coupled with his vast experience, positions him perfectly to take on this exciting role.”

Gambhir takes over a team with heightened expectations after their T20 triumph, their fourth World Cup title and first major crown since the 2013 Champions Trophy.

BCCI president Roger Binny said Gambhir’s appointment marks a “new chapter for Indian cricket”, praising his “experience, dedication, and vision for the game”.

India’s ODI tour of Sri Lanka in July will be Gambhir’s first assignment as Indian coach.

Shah also offered his “sincere thanks and gratitude” to Dravid, ending his coaching career on a high.

“Under his guidance, Team India emerged as a dominant force across formats, including being crowned T20 World Cup champions,” Shah said. “His strategic acumen, persistent efforts to nurture talent and exemplary leadership have instilled a culture of excellence within the team and that is also the legacy he leaves behind.”

Published in Dawn, July 10th, 2024

Opinion

Editorial

Gaza’s horror
Updated 21 May, 2025

Gaza’s horror

The quickest way to stop the bloodshed would be for the US to immediately halt all military and financial aid to Israel.
Climate planning
21 May, 2025

Climate planning

ALTHOUGH the effects of climate change manifest themselves throughout the year, they seem particularly more...
Failed auction
21 May, 2025

Failed auction

THE poor response to the government’s bid to sell three redundant thermal power plants indicates the investors’...
Drawdown
Updated 20 May, 2025

Drawdown

There is a strong incentive for reinforcing the military drawdown with some soft measures.
Unusual benchmarks
20 May, 2025

Unusual benchmarks

THE IMF has slapped Pakistan with several ‘new’ structural benchmarks — some of them quite unusual — under...
Celebrating Sirbaz
20 May, 2025

Celebrating Sirbaz

SIRBAZ Khan has achieved what no other Pakistani has before him. The scale of his accomplishment also makes him one...