Rohit Sharma – Manjushreesudheendra.com https://manjushreesudheendra.com Wed, 07 May 2025 15:32:52 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 Rohit Sharma’s Test Retirement: From Flawed Genius to Modern Indian Great https://manjushreesudheendra.com/2025/05/07/rohit-sharmas-test-retirement-from-flawed-genius-to-modern-indian-great/ https://manjushreesudheendra.com/2025/05/07/rohit-sharmas-test-retirement-from-flawed-genius-to-modern-indian-great/#respond Wed, 07 May 2025 15:32:49 +0000 https://manjushreesudheendra.com/?p=1085 On May 7, 2025, Rohit Sharma announced his retirement from Test cricket, marking the end of a red-ball journey that was as complex as it was inspiring. From a dream debut to becoming India’s captain, Rohit’s Test career is a story of delayed brilliance, setbacks, transformation and ultimately, redemption.

A Dream Debut

Rohit made his Test debut in November 2013 against the West Indies at Eden Gardens. It couldn’t have been more dramatic: he scored a magnificent 177 in his very first innings. Just days later, at Wankhede Stadium, he followed it up with an unbeaten 111*, in what was also Sachin Tendulkar’s farewell Test.

Two matches. Two centuries. A fairy-tale start.

The Struggle to Find a Place

But Test cricket is never easy, and Rohit soon discovered that. Between 2014 and 2018, Rohit’s red-ball career remained stop-start. He was in and out of the side, rarely trusted for overseas tours. His Test average hovered around the low 30s for years, and many believed he wasn’t suited for the format.

Between his debut and the end of 2018, he had played just 27 Tests in five years.

2019: The Reinvention

Everything changed in October 2019. Rohit Sharma was asked to open the innings in Tests—a bold, almost desperate move by the team management. But Rohit grabbed it with both hands.

In the 3-Test series against South Africa at home, he scored:

176 (1st Test)

127 (1st Test, 2nd innings)

212 (3rd Test, Ranchi – his career-best)

From middle-order doubts to a dominant opener—the transformation was stunning.

Numbers Post-Promotion (Oct 2019 – Dec 2021)

Matches: 20

Runs: 1,611

Average: 52.00+

Centuries: 5

Fifties: 6

He played crucial innings in Australia, England, and at home. His technique against spin and newfound patience against seam made him a complete Test batsman.

Iconic Knocks That Defined Him

127 at The Oval, 2021 – Rohit’s first overseas century in SENA countries. A masterclass of control and grit.

161 vs England, Chennai 2021 – On a difficult pitch, this was Rohit’s finest home innings.

212 vs South Africa, Ranchi 2019 – His highest Test score, showing aggressive dominance.

Leading India

Rohit Sharma became India’s full-time Test captain in 2022, succeeding Virat Kohli. Under his leadership:

India remained unbeaten at home.

Reached the World Test Championship Final 2023.

Though India lost to Australia at The Oval in that final, Rohit’s calm leadership and support for young players stood out.

Final Career Test Stats

Matches: 67

Runs: 4,301

Average: 40.57

Centuries: 12

Fifties: 16

Highest Score: 212

Catches: 60+

The Decline and Decision

In his final 19 Test innings, Rohit scored only one century. With younger players knocking on the door and his own form dipping, the decision to retire was as graceful as it was timely.

He exits not as a struggling veteran, but as someone who transformed his career and earned respect worldwide.

A Legacy Carved in Grit

Rohit Sharma’s Test career is a lesson in patience, adaptability, and evolution. He may not have been the most natural Test cricketer, but he worked hard to become one.

From being told “he doesn’t belong in Tests” to becoming India’s most consistent opener since Sehwag—Rohit proved everyone wrong.

He didn’t just play Test cricket. He conquered it. On his own terms.
Thank you, Rohit.The whites will miss you. But your story will inspire forever.

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Khel Khatam, Paisa Hazam: Lessons from Melbourne’s Debacle https://manjushreesudheendra.com/2024/12/30/khel-khatam-paisa-hazam-lessons-from-melbournes-debacle/ https://manjushreesudheendra.com/2024/12/30/khel-khatam-paisa-hazam-lessons-from-melbournes-debacle/#respond Mon, 30 Dec 2024 13:07:54 +0000 https://manjushreesudheendra.com/?p=1043 ▶ Rohit Sharma’s Defensive Captaincy:Pat Cummins ke aggressive field sets ne Australia ka dominance dikhaya. But Rohit Sharma’s defensive approach failed to counter it. When the game needed aggression, why spread the field and play safe? Boland aur Lyon ke against attack karna chahiye tha, par woh chance liya hi nahi.

▶ Kohli-Rohit Duo Fails:India’s most reliable players, Rohit and Kohli, couldn’t step up when it mattered. “Puji aur Rahane ke jagah kaun lega?” remains an unanswered question. Neither could anchor the innings, nor could they score runs. Defensive cricket aur lack of runs—don’t work together!

▶ Pant’s Reckless Batting:Rishabh Pant’s aggressive shots turned into careless dismissals. “There’s a fine line between aggression and recklessness, and Pant crossed it.” Jab team ko stability chahiye thi, tab unhone wickets throw kiye.

▶ Batting Collapse:The middle order, especially KL Rahul, completely failed. A position change shouldn’t lead to form loss! Yashasvi Jaiswal was unlucky, but the rest lacked intent. Without a strong middle order, victories are impossible.

▶ Over-Dependence on Bumrah: Bumrah ko har baar team ka burden uthana padta hai. Cricket is a team game, not a one-man show! 

▶ Fielding Errors: Catches win matches, but India kept dropping them. Missed run-outs and no-balls turned crucial moments into disasters. Fielding discipline pura missing tha.

Ab WTC Final ek sapna ban gaya.

Melbourne Test showed that skill isn’t enough—a winning mindset, execution, and intent are equally crucial. Without it, the road ahead looks tough.

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10 things this World Cup teaches all of us: https://manjushreesudheendra.com/2024/06/30/10-things-this-world-cup-teaches-all-of-us/ https://manjushreesudheendra.com/2024/06/30/10-things-this-world-cup-teaches-all-of-us/#respond Sun, 30 Jun 2024 13:52:50 +0000 https://manjushreesudheendra.com/?p=872 “Learnings” – 10 things this World Cup teaches all of us:

  1. Class is permanent, even if it doesn’t work a few times.. Peaks at the right time – Virat Kohli
  2. ⁠When a leader leads from the front, and if fails once in a while – entire team comes together to cover up – Rohit Sharma
  3. ⁠It’s not over till you think it’s over – India team even after SA needed Run a ball
    30 of 30.
  4. ⁠You can bounce back from the lowest unimaginable lows (even if the entire world is against you) – Hardik Pandya
  5. ⁠Hardwork and Humility pays off – even if it hasn’t for decades – Rahul Dravid
  6. ⁠Consistency pays off eventually – Jasprit Bumrah
  7. ⁠There is a point in life which comes for most people from where getting up/getting back seems impossible.. sheer will and determination gets you back – Rishab Pant
  8. ⁠Losses at a big stage are possible as important is the comeback – India team after t50 World Cup to winning the t20 World Cup..
  9. ⁠Nothing is above team work, ultimately every single individuals contribution matters.
  10. ⁠At times the smallest contribution can be the biggest in the game (even of life) – Surya’s catch ?? INDIA TEAM (everyone contributed in their own way at some point in the tournament).
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