Saturday, August 02, 2025

The wicketkeeper crisis of early 2000s

After Nayan Mongia retired, the Indian cricket team was in a bit of a Wicket Keeping crisis. They played no less than 9 different wicket-keepers in a span of 5 years. Starting with MSK Prasad, Saba Karim, and ending towards the end with the more charismatic Parthiv Patel and Dinesh Karthik (the only one in the long list that survived beyond a handful of ODI matches). But safe to say the time between the summer of 2000, and winter 2004 was a moment of crisis for the Indian team.

Here's the list: 
  1. MSK Prasad (debuted after Mongia’s injury in 1999) (17 ODIs) 
  2. Saba Karim (34 ODIs) 
  3. Vijay Dahiya: 19 ODIs: October 2000 to April 2001 
  4. Sameer Dighe: 23 ODIs: January 2000 to August 2001 
  5. Deep Dasgupta: 5 ODIs: October 2001 
  6. Ajay Ratra: 12 ODIs: January to July 2002 
  7. Parthiv Patel: 38 ODIs and 25 Tests: Famous for being one of the youngest players in the team, debuting at 18; and sledging Steve Waugh! 
  8. Rahul Dravid (kept as a part-time keeper mainly in ODIs, including the 2003 World Cup) 
  9. Dinesh Karthik: Played his first ODI in the summer of 2004 followed by a test in Australia tour to India in 2004 October / November. 

Funnily I remember most of these players, Deep Dasgupta, Ajay Ratra, Vijay Dahiya and the likes. Why so? I had a knack of collecting player info when they debuted as a way of winning at Cricketer's Atlas (a game similar to Atlas that me and my brother played when we were young) and as you can see there were a lot of wicket keeper debuts when I was a tiny kid trying to beat my elder brother at a game. But I digress.

The crisis continued until MS Dhoni started playing for India. The wicketkeeper who would not only surpass his contemporaries but go onto to be the best wicketkeeper-batsman the country has ever produced, infact even more influential and successful than the stalwarts of the time, Adam Gilchrist and Mark Boucher.

This unique moment of crisis in the Indian cricket team before Dhoni arrived and changed the game forever, has some interesting parallels with the Indian team's current captain crisis. The Indian team has struggled to have a stable captain post Kohli and in the absence of Rohit Sharma for quite sometime now. In T20s we've tried it all, Hardik Pandya, Suryakumar Yadav, Rishabh Pant, Shubman Gill, you name it. ODIs have been stable under Rohit Sharma, but we're staring at a void in tests too. Putting faith in Subhman Gill, but also in the presence of a strong personality Gautam Gambhir as the coach, someone who's not hesitant to shake things. So will Gill be the long run captain? Hopefully. But I wouldn't be surprised if we look around for a bit, until there's someone as good as Kohli or even bigger.

Maybe it'll be a while till we find a stable team combination, and a stable captain, but I find it interesting that the crisis is in some ways similar to other crisis the team's had.

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