logo
IPL 2025: At Chennai, all things start and end with MS Dhoni - but how long can he keep playing?

IPL 2025: At Chennai, all things start and end with MS Dhoni - but how long can he keep playing?

The National08-04-2025

Every great event has a starting point. For the Indian Premier League, that moment was 2007 when an unheralded group of Indian youngsters won the inaugural T20 World Cup in South Africa. After the failure of the senior team at the 2007 ODI World Cup in the Caribbean, the mood in India cricket was sombre. Simultaneously, 20-over cricket was gaining popularity, although India had been staunchly against embracing the fast-rising format. At the newly created World T20 in South Africa, India sent a team filled with youngsters, under the leadership of Mahendra Singh Dhoni. With zero expectations, and hardly any idea about how to tackle the format, Dhoni's India won the trophy, captured the imagination of the nation, and kicked into motion a series of events that has changed the course of cricket. The next year, the Indian Premier League was born after the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) realised the true potential of the format. A rival Indian Cricket League was quickly quashed, with the Indian board taking full control of a domestic league that ushered in the franchise format. Dhoni was there in 2007. He was there in the first IPL in 2008. He is still standing in 2025, at the age of 43, on one good knee. His association with Chennai Super Kings is unlike any other in cricket, made deeper and stronger by the unwavering and fanatic support of the franchise. It has reached a point where you get full stadiums just to see Dhoni practice for Chennai ahead of an IPL season. That is about the only time you get to see the former India captain pick up a bat and glove during the year, as he was pulled back from every other competitive cricket and even public life. Chennai and Dhoni fans only want to see their favourite 'Thala' (boss in Tamil) come out to bat, irrespective of the state of the match or the fortunes of the team. It did not bother fans that Dhoni had injured his knee a couple of seasons back and was greatly incapacitated, on top of his advancing years. The injury has restricted his duties to wicketkeeping and batting for no more than 3-4 overs at the death. His magic still worked. In 2023, Dhoni guided the Super Kings to the final where a four and a six off the last two balls of the tournament – hit by Ravindra Jadeja – handed Chennai their fifth IPL title. Many thought it was the ideal time for Dhoni to end his playing days, and possibly take up a management role at Chennai. But he still played on, with the untested Ruturaj Gaikwad as captain. It has not been the same since. Chennai failed to qualify for the play-offs last year. This year, things look even worse with three defeats in their first four games. Since everything at Chennai seems to start and finish at Dhoni, it is the T20 veteran's actions on the field that have garnered the most attention. Tongues started wagging when he came in at number nine against Bengaluru while chasing 197 and the team tottering at 99-7. Dhoni could not take the team past the finish line against Rajasthan, making 16 from 11 while chasing 183. It was the same story against Delhi at home as Dhoni laboured to 30 from 26 balls while chasing 184. The Super Kings lost all three matches. In all the games so far, Chennai's top order has been shockingly conservative, showing almost no intent of maximising the powerplay overs and leaving way too much to do in the final overs. But the conversation somehow leads back to Dhoni. Even though there are much bigger issues such as the selection of batters like Rahul Tripathi, Deepak Hooda and Vijay Shankar – not exactly T20 box office – or that of a finger spinner like Ravichandran Ashwin whose effectiveness has clearly waned. Unfortunately, that is what happens when the entire identity of the franchise revolves around you. The franchise and IPL management might be happy to push Dhoni to play as long as is physically possible, because the fans simply can't get enough of him, and also because he is still sharp as a wicketkeeper and a tactician. But how long will Dhoni play, with one good knee and an inability to make an impact with the bat for extended periods? Chennai and Dhoni might still stumble upon some luck, grab a few wins and get back on track. It is a long tournament after all. However, is the pain worth it? If questions are already being asked, especially by some Chennai fans now, you already know the answer.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Royal Challengers Bengaluru lift IPL trophy
Royal Challengers Bengaluru lift IPL trophy

Dubai Eye

time12 minutes ago

  • Dubai Eye

Royal Challengers Bengaluru lift IPL trophy

Royal Challengers Bengaluru has defeated Punjab Kings by six runs to lift their their maiden Indian Premier League (IPL) trophy at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad. Under Rajat Patidar this season, RCB ended its 18-year long wait for the title. Put into bat, Bengaluru posted a modest 190-9 before returning to restrict Punjab to 184-7 at the Narendra Modi Stadium. Virat Kohli top scored for his side with 43 but it was their lion-hearted bowling which secured Bengaluru's memorable victory. RCB has won all seven away games in the group stage and crushed Punjab in the first qualifier.

Kohli and RCB break jinx, win IPL title after 18 years
Kohli and RCB break jinx, win IPL title after 18 years

Gulf Today

time15 minutes ago

  • Gulf Today

Kohli and RCB break jinx, win IPL title after 18 years

Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) claimed their maiden title in the Indian Premier League (IPL), ending an 18-year wait with a sensational performance in the final for a six-run victory against Punjab Kings in the final at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on Tuesday. Restricted to 190/9 in 20 overs by a fine bowling performance led by Arshdeep Singh (3-40) and Kyle Jamieson (3-38), the Rajat Patidar-led side came back strongly with a mesmerising bowling performance of their own to keep Punjab Kings to 184/7 in 20 overs. Krunal Pandya claimed 2-17 in four overs to turn things around for RCB. For PBKS, Shashank Singh led a late charge with a flurry of boundaries, ending with a majestic unbeaten 61 off 30 balls but that was too late and they fell short by six runs. With this, RCB ended an 18-year-old wait for the title, their title coming under first-time captain Rajat Patidar. The victory made Virat Kohli the first player to claim the title while playing 18 years for a single team. Virat Kohli reacts after winning in the IPL final cricket at Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on Tuesday. AP Punjab Kings lost Impact Sub Prabhsimran Singh, who charged down the wicket for a wild hoick across the line off Krunal Pandya but only managed to top-edge an easy catch to Bhuvneshwar Kumar, and slumped to 72/3 chasing a challenging target of 191 on a slower pitch. A lot now depended on skipper Shreyas Iyer, who had guided them to victory against Mumbai Indians in the Eliminator clash with a brilliant 87 not out. But the PBKS skipper, playing his second successive IPL final albeit with two different teams, faltered and was out for 1, edging behind Jintesh Sharma off Romanio Shepherd. The two wickets by Pandya and Shephered in successive overs and the dismissal of the dangerous Josh Inglis by Pandya a couple of overs later helped RCB take the wind out of the PBKS sails to leave them gasping at 98/4. They had made a decent start, just like RCB, to reach 52/1. Priyansh Arya was out for 24 off 19 balls, laced with four boundaries, caught brilliantly by Phil Salt off Josh Hazlewood. Arya lofted a length ball towards the square-leg boundary where Salt ran a fair distance, caught the ball, and threw it up in the air before losing balance and going over the rope. He ran back in to complete the catch. Things went from bad to worse for PBKS with Prabhsimran, Iyer, and Inglis getting out in quick succession, everything depended on Nehal Wadhera and Shashank Singh. Inglis kept the fight going with a 23-ball 39 studded with one four and four sixes off Yash Dayal, Pandya, Suyash Sharma, and Pandya. Royal Challengers Bengaluru's Krunal Pandya celebrates with Anushka Sharma, wife of Virat Kohli after winning IPL title at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on Tuesday. Reuters Initially, it was felt that the eight overs bowled by Krunal Pandya and leggie Suyash Sharma would be the key for PBKS. But Pandya turned things in RCB's favour with a sensational spell of 4-0-17-2 while Shepherd played his part with the key wicket of Iyer. With Bhuvneshwar, Hazlewood, and Yash Dayal also bowling to the plan, RCB took a strong grip on the match. Shashank Singh struck Hazlewood for two sixes in a 17-run over (16th) that included a wide and raised some hopes but Wadhera got out Bhuvneshwar Kumar for 15 off 18 balls, getting the toe-end of the bat for a lofted drive that Pandya grabbed gleefully. Marcus Stoinis blasted a superb six of the first ball he faced but Bhuvneshwar had the last laugh as he got the batter on the next ball with a wide yorker and PBKS, needing 47 off 18 balls, slumped to 142/6. Azmatullah Omarzai was claimed by Yash Dayal for one and though Shashank Singh struck a six and a four off Bhuvi in the 19th over, it left Punjab Kings needing 29 runs off the last six balls. Brief scores: Royal Challengers Bengaluru 190/9 in 20 overs (Virat Kohli 43, Rajat Patidar 26, Jitesh Sharma 24; Arshdeep Singh 3-40, Kyle Jamieson 3-48) beat Punjab Kings (Josh Inglis 39, Shashank Singh 61 not out; Krunal Pandya 2-17, Bhuvneshwar Kumar 2-38) Indo-Asian News Service

All eyes on Olaroiu to spark UAE's World Cup bid
All eyes on Olaroiu to spark UAE's World Cup bid

Al Etihad

time5 hours ago

  • Al Etihad

All eyes on Olaroiu to spark UAE's World Cup bid

4 June 2025 00:11 KUUMAR SHYAM (ABU DHABI)The national football team faces a pivotal moment in the fourth round of the Asian qualifying to the 2026 FIFA World Cup and 2027 Asian Cup under the guidance of newly appointed manager Cosmin Romanian has been parachuted into the role following the dismissal of Paulo Bento, with the UAE aiming to secure a spot in the global tournament set to be hosted by Canada, Mexico, and the United the tough task, the coach is also the best placed to pin hopes of winning a qualification berth because the manager has coached three UAE clubs during 10 years of stay in the country. Even Olaroiu has acknowledge he picked up the posting because of his desire to "give back" for his deep-rooted connection to the UAE, both professionally and appointment comes after a successful tenure with Sharjah, where he led the club to victory in the AFC Champions League Two, marking his 14th trophy in the region. "I have a very difficult mission," Olaroiu acknowledged following Sharjah's triumph coming days after losing in the UAE President's Cup final against Shabab Al Ahli, another club he has coached."I know the big responsibility that I have. I have to pay back the hospitality this country has given me and my family. I have learned a lot of things in this country and have made myself a better person with a better vision of life. I have to pay back, which is why I accepted this mission."The UAE's path to World Cup qualification is challenging. Currently third in Group A, they trail group leaders Iran and second-placed Uzbekistan, with two matches remaining. The top two teams from each group earn automatic qualification, while the third and fourth-placed teams advance to further play-off Iran are through and Uzbekistan are four points ahead of UAE, the national team can still upset Uzbekistan whom they play on Thursday evening at Al Nahyan Stadium in Abu Dhabi. Uzbekistan, under coach Timur Kapadze, need only a draw in Abu Dhabi to secure their first-ever World Cup berth. A loss for the UAE would leave them into the grind of potentially two complicated final rounds of play-offs for third- and fourth-placed teams from this Olaroiu remains resolute. "Of course, I have the dream to participate in the World Cup. I will do my best to do that, and I think this fantastic nation deserves it," he stated. "The way this country has developed, the way they have grown up in sport, they deserve to participate in the World Cup. I hope we can do it."The final group match against Kyrgyzstan on June 10 will further determine the UAE's fate. If UAE beat Uzbekistan and the latter lose to Qatar, then even a draw against Kyrgyzstan should see UAE take the automatic second-place berth on better goal Uzbekistan's road can become tougher if they lose to UAE because they will be facing Qatar, who have also changed their coach and gone for the experienced Spanish stalwart Julen Lopetegui. Having replaced compatriot Luis Garcia, Lopetegui responded to a question if Qatar is looking at him for the long-term, by saying: "The long-term vision, for now, is the 5th of June," Lopetegui said to local media. "Then, it will be the 10th of June, that's how football works." Just like Lopetegui, Olaroiu is also looking to focus at the game in hand. Sporting a rare half-grin on his face after a training session at Al Jazira's Mohamed bin Zayed Stadium down the road from the match venue, the coach called upon the fans to come out in large numbers. "It is a very important night for UAE football and we need all your support and, Inshallah, we will bring home the most important result for us," Olaroiu said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store