Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Winning Dhoni's trust key to getting India captaincy: Kohli

India captain Virat Kohli believes he landed the job largely because his predecessor Mahendra Singh Dhoni was impressed with his reading of situations in matches.

Kohli, 31, replaced Dhoni as test captain in 2014-15 and took over the limited-overs reins in early 2017, becoming India's all-format leader as well the team's batting mainstay.


Fielding in the slips, Kohli had easy access to wicketkeeper Dhoni and he felt their chats in between deliveries earned him the trust of the former skipper.

"You start talking to the captain regularly," Kohli told team mate Ravichandran Ashwin in a chat on YouTube.

"I was always in MS's ear, standing next to him and saying 'We can do this, we can do that, what do you think?'.

"He would deny a lot of things but he would discuss a lot of things as well. I think he got a lot of confidence that I can do this after him.

"A large portion of me becoming captain was to do with him observing me for a long period of time. It just can't happen that he goes and the selectors say, 'Okay you become captain'."

Leading the national team of a cricket-mad country is one of the toughest jobs in the game but Kohli is enjoying the responsibility.

"I looked at it this way -- if I'm getting this opportunity, I need to work as hard as I can, because not many people get this chance," said Kohli, who led India to Under-19 World Cup title in 2008.

Kohli led India to the top of the world test rankings in October 2016 where they remained until Australia replaced them this month. India lost in the semi-finals of last year's one-day World Cup in England.

"I was always inclined to taking responsibility (but) becoming captain of India was not even in my wildest dreams to be honest," Kohli said.

More For You

Apple picks Google Gemini for Siri

Apple’s decision to use Google Gemini signals a shift in how Siri and other AI features will evolve across its devices

X handle/Official logos

Apple picks Google Gemini to power Siri, sidelining ChatGPT in AI push

  • Apple chooses Google Gemini over ChatGPT for core AI systems
  • Deal supports next version of Siri across Apple devices
  • Privacy and on-device processing remain central to Apple’s approach

Apple has selected Google’s Gemini models to power its artificial intelligence technology, including Siri, under a multi-year agreement, in a move seen as a setback for OpenAI. The decision hands a major win to Alphabet as competition sharpens in the global AI market.

In a joint statement released on Monday, Apple and Google said Apple chose Gemini after evaluating several options internally. The companies did not disclose financial terms. Apple said Gemini offers the “most capable foundation” for its Apple Foundation Models, while allowing it to keep tight control over how AI features are deployed, as quoted in a news report.

Keep ReadingShow less