Modest Dhoni leads by example for expectant India

SYDNEY, (Reuters) – Live in the moment, keep it  simple and work hard.

MS Dhoni

It may not be the most sophisticated philosophy to come out  of India but it is a concise mantra which has served MS Dhoni  well in four years as captain of his country’s cricket team.

As India’s first skipper from outside the main urban  centres, the 30-year-old has already delivered the Holy Grail of  the World Cup and over the next month takes on the challenge of  leading his team to a maiden test series triumph in Australia.

Hailed by master batsman Sachin Tendulkar as the finest  captain he has played under in a career spanning more than two  decades, Dhoni’s leadership is not about rousing pep talks or  even inspired gambles.

“The important thing is that he keeps things simple and not  complicated,” chairman of selectors Krishnamachari Srikkanth  said recently.

What Dhoni does display is leadership by example, no less so  than when he promoted himself up the batting order and hit 91  not out to lead India to the World Cup triumph on home soil in  early April, sealing the dramatic victory with a six.

The wicketkeeper-batsman cut his international captaincy  teeth in the Twenty20 format by leading his country to victory  of the inaugural World Cup in 2007.

There was immediate success too when he took the reins of  the one-day side and led them to a series victory in Australia.  He assumed the test captaincy in 2008.

“I love to be in the moment, I love to analyse things a  bit,” Dhoni said in a recent interview with CNN news channel.

“Very often what is important is to realise what went wrong,  not only when you are losing a series or a game, but also when  you are winning a series. You need to realise which are the  areas you need to work on.”

There have been calamities along the way, of course,  including criticism of his wicketkeeping and his own poor form  when India crashed out of the 2007 50-over World Cup in the  first round.

Subsequently, the biggest setback of his leadership came  when the test team where humiliated 4-0 in England earlier this  year and relinquished the number one world ranking they had  earned in December 2009.

One of Dhoni’s great attributes, however, has been his  ability to keep his head in the midst of the frenzy that often  surrounds the sport in cricket-mad India.

“He is always calm and never shows his frustration,”  Tendulkar said after the World Cup triumph.

“These are some of  the human qualities which have made him such a good captain.”

‘COUNTRY BOY’

Mahendra Singh Dhoni was born in Ranchi, now the capital of  the state of Jharkhand, and grew up playing cricket with a  tennis ball on the red dirt of his home town.

Describing someone from a place with a population of two  million people as a ‘country boy’ might sound absurd to  non-Asians, but that was the reality for Dhoni and his path from  India’s outback to the cricketing elite was one that had been  travelled by very few.

“When I was playing for my school, the only thing I wanted  to do was get selected for the under-16 or the under-19 district  teams,” he said.

“Frankly, I never thought that I would represent my country  one day. Now I’m leading my country, so it’s like a fairytale.

“I never thought I’d do all these things. I lived in the  moment, I kept working hard.”

Away from the cricket pitch, Dhoni keeps a low profile and  enjoys nothing better than returning to Ranchi to be with his  three dogs and collection of motorbikes.

Australia will present him new challenges as captain,  including an often hostile reception from local media, crowds  and even the players, but Dhoni has shown in the past that he  has the cool temperament to deal with them.

“I believe that he’s the best captain in world cricket  today. He’s a leader by example,” South African Gary Kirsten,  who was coach of India from 2007 until after the World Cup, said  upon his departure from the job.

“He expects his troops to be ready for battle. He’s calm and  level-headed. I have never seen him lose his temper. If things  don’t go well, he takes the responsibility.”