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This is an archive article published on December 16, 2011
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Opinion As Australia rebuild,Clarke stands where Border once did

Over twenty five years,Australia have only had five captains

December 16, 2011 12:08 AM IST First published on: Dec 16, 2011 at 12:08 AM IST

Over twenty five years,Australia have only had five captains. It is a staggering phenomenon,one that is routinely buried amidst the rather more mundane records that pop up every half an hour. For comparison,India have had eleven in the same period,though there is far greater stability in the second half of that interval.

It tells you that Australia have not only picked captains with care but have also chosen the right moment. From Allan Border to Michael Clarke is quite a story but it is not one of regular linear progression; no,life doesn’t move in simple straight lines. Instead,it is one of astonishing leaps forward,every captain stamping his personality on the job,and,a bit like in a one lap race,an eventual return to the starting point.

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short article insert Border inherited a team in disarray. His predecessor,in the eyes of some a tremendous cricketer sacrificed to the captaincy,had quit in tears. The backroom boy was called up and Australia rebuilt putting attitude first,picking men of character,substantial people. History can sometimes cast a superficial eye on the past but those were the real building years and those that picked the players can take as much credit as the players themselves.

Mark Taylor,someone just born to lead,and Steve Waugh took them far ahead of the opposition; one with flair,the other tinged with ruthlessness. Outstanding cricketers were sprouting everywhere and Australia grew strong by the day,almost like the dollar does against the rupee. But the history of cricket also tells us that a great generation eventually cannibalises another and Ricky Ponting was given the job of proposing the vote of thanks to one of the greatest eras in world cricket.

It is sad if that is all he is remembered for because he is one of the game’s greats but it had been willed that way. As he benefited from being part of an extraordinary set-up so too did he have to bear the brunt of its inevitable by-product. All things that go up must come down. It is the way of life. It is the cycle of life itself.

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Now Clarke stands where Border did twenty six years ago. He is a product of a different era and vastly different in personality. Clarke is outgoing,aggressive and looks like he wants to be a leader. Border was defiant,steely and had to grow into the job. But there is one major difference. Border did not have to sit in judgement over a Greg Chappell as Clarke might just have to with Ponting,a player and leader he has always looked up to.

But Australia’s great strength has been its ability to say goodbye at the right time; as they did with Healy,the Waughs and Gilchrist. And as he contemplates a series against India that can only be more cheerful than the last played in Australia,Clarke will look at his side and wonder why the runs don’t seem to correlate well enough with the pedigree on offer.

Luckily,he has a group of young fast bowlers that he could fall back on and indeed,the clash of fiery,impatient youth with calm,phlegmatic experience will be the highlight of this series. There is no Pat Cummins,cruelly laid low by injury so early in life but Pattinson,Starc,Siddle and Harris,a peculiar alloy of the robust and the fragile,will be a handful. He has to give them wings,let them flutter and fall occasionally for Australia’s future seems to lie with the ball rather more than with the bat.

His opposite number doesn’t quite have the same issues on hand. Dhoni has inherited a side moulded by Ganguly,Dravid and Kumble and he has lent stability to Indian cricket where once a captain was forced to look back as often as he tried to look ahead. Dhoni’s real challenge will come in twelve months when the stalwarts start to say good-bye to astonishing careers. It might have happened by now but in India we err on the side of the status quo where Australia tend to cull and move on.

The status quo,unlike in public policy and economic affairs where it has been a disaster,has actually served India quite well with Tendulkar shrugging off an indifferent spell with aplomb and Dravid peeling back the years with dignity.

Even though Dhoni arrives in Australia with the wounds of the England tour still raw,and with bowlers breaking down either side of making the flight,he knows what it is to win for he has done so in every form of the game. His side is quite at contrast to Clarke’s for he has depth in batting but still no precise idea of who to throw the new ball to on Boxing Day. His great strength has been in managing a side that has in it those he idolised. It couldn’t have been easy but those idols too are men of some class. He sits rather more comfortably on his perch than does Clarke.

It is a series to savour.

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