Ashish Nehra feels MS Dhoni is a leader in the true sense

MS Dhoni, the skipper, went to the fore amid the debut version of the ICC World T20 in 2007 and India winning it was the best thing to happen to their cricket. He was before long named the pioneer of the pack in every one of the organizations and the substance of the Indian cricket totally changed. The Men dressed in Blue went on triumph in 2011 Cricket World Cup and 2013 Champions Trophy under him which is the reason, Ashish Nehra has named him as a genuine pioneer. 



Group India likewise achieved the number 1 position in Test cricket surprisingly in 2009 under his administration and his commitment as a wicketkeeper-batsman is massive. Dhoni was taking care of three employments impeccably amid his captaincy residency and he never griped. Indeed, there were extreme days yet he battled dauntlessly with them and dominated the competition when it made a difference the most.

Ashish Nehra, in his section for Outlook Magazine, has showered commends on MS Dhoni's captaincy aptitudes and went ahead to state that he was a genuine pioneer. He likewise shed light on how the veteran assumed control over the test of the captaincy after Anil Kumble resigned and filled in the enormous shoes. 

“Anyone can do captaincy, but Dhoni is a true leader. He proved that in 2007, by leading the team to victory in the ICC Twenty20 World Cup in South Africa. That kind of success can sway others, not him. Remember, he was comple­tely new to captaincy—he was handed the reins when he was nowhere in the picture. And there were big shoes to fill in: Rahul Dravid was captain on India’s previous tour to England,” he wrote.

In addition, Nehra likewise called attention to the manner in which Dhoni didn't change his way to deal with the diversion after the fiasco in England and Australia in the longest configuration of the amusement in the wake of winning the World Cup around the same time. He additionally went ahead to additionally express that him assuming control over the captaincy was a defining moment in Indian cricket.

“Dhoni as skipper was a huge turning point for Indian cricket as well. He knew how to handle pressure, in his own way. When ­India lost a back-to-back Test series to England, 0-4, and to Australia by the same margin in 2011, after winning the World Cup at home, he didn’t buckle or change as a person,” the former Indian pacer added.

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