Cricket

When I heard it, I was really surprised: Ponting on Kohli quitting Test captaincy

Former Australia captain Ricky Ponting revealed being ‘really surprised’ on Virat Kohli stepping down as India’s Test captain. He added Kohli had mentioned to him about stepping away from white-ball captaincy during first half of IPL 2021. A day after India lost the Test series to South Africa 2-1, Kohli announced he was quitting as the Test captain, bringing a seven-year reign to an end.

Sentinel Digital Desk

MELBOURNE: Former Australia captain Ricky Ponting revealed being 'really surprised' on Virat Kohli stepping down as India's Test captain. He added Kohli had mentioned to him about stepping away from white-ball captaincy during first half of IPL 2021. A day after India lost the Test series to South Africa 2-1, Kohli announced he was quitting as the Test captain, bringing a seven-year reign to an end.

"Yes, it did actually (surprise me). Probably the main reason why I had a chat and good catch-up with Virat during the first part of the IPL (2021) before it got postponed. He was talking then about stepping away (from captaincy) from white-ball cricket and how passionate he was to continue on to be Test match captain," said Ponting to former England pacer Isa Guha on first episode of ICC Review show.

"He just loved and cherished that job and that post so much. Obviously, the Indian Test team had achieved a lot under his leadership. When I heard it, I was really, really surprised. You only have to watch him on the field for an hour of the day's play to realise how passionate he is about that job and the role, and how much he wants the team to win and how much he wants the best for Indian cricket," added Ponting, who captained Australia in 77 Tests.

After overcoming the initial shock of Kohli resigning from Test captaincy, Ponting began to delve into reasons over the same, ranging from shelf life of captains to immense pressure from fans in India.

"I was shocked, but then I started thinking about other things, even my own time as captain. I have gone on record and said that I probably think I played a couple of years longer than I should have in hindsight. I think I might have been captain for a couple of years longer than I should have.

"So I think there is potentially a shelf-life for international cricket captains and even coaches. Virat's been there for close to seven years now. If there's a country in the world that's the most difficult to captain, it's probably India because of just how popular the game is and how much every single Indian loves to see the fortunes of the Indian cricket team, whether they are good or bad. You weigh all those things up." IANS

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