Sourav Ganguly shares details of fixing turmoil in Team India, reaching out to Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid

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The turn of the millennium was arguably the darkest chapter in Indian cricket history. Hit by a catastrophic match-fixing scandal in 2000, public faith in the sport had plummeted to an all-time low. It was during this period of absolute turmoil that a 27-year-old Sourav Ganguly was handed the captaincy, tasked not just with winning matches, but with restoring the integrity of a broken game.

In a recent appearance on Raj Shamani’s podcast, the legendary former captain opened up about the sheer disbelief, nervousness, and behind-the-scenes conversations that shaped the resurrection of Team India.

Sourav Ganguly reveals confronting the dressing room shadows with Sachin Tendulkar and Rahul Dravid

When Ganguly assumed the leadership role, the dressing room was clouded with suspicion. Yet, for a young Dada, the reality of match-fixing and betting was entirely foreign. Speaking candidly on the podcast, Ganguly revealed that he was so disconnected from the illicit underbelly of the sport that he had to actively seek validation from his most trusted seniors.

The issues that the Indian team faced just before I became captain, betting, match-fixing, I didn’t even know about these things,” Ganguly admitted. He recounted pulling aside stalwarts like Sachin Tendulkar, Rahul Dravid, and Anil Kumble to gauge the ground reality.

I kept asking Sachin and Rahul, ‘Does it actually happen? Has anyone approached you?’ Because no one had approached me. So, I spoke to Sachin, ‘Tujhe kisi ne poocha?’ (Did anyone ask you?) He said no. Asked Anil too, he said, ‘No. Nobody asked me.’ So, I wasn’t too sure what it even was,” Ganguly shared.

This internal vetting process was crucial. By establishing that the core nucleus of the team was clean, Ganguly could shift his focus entirely away from the paranoia of the scandal and toward the mammoth job at hand: rebuilding a competitive cricket team from scratch.

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Overcoming nerves and managing Indian cricket’s titans

Taking over the captaincy at 27 is a daunting task for anyone, but for Ganguly, the challenge was compounded by a unique dressing room dynamic. He was suddenly charged with commanding icons like Mohammad Azharuddin and Tendulkar, men who had previously been his own captains.

The former BCCI President vividly recalled the intense anxiety he felt ahead of his very first assignment in Kochi. On the eve of the match, the pressure of addressing a dressing room full of legends weighed heavily on him.

I still remember telling [my wife] Dona that many of these guys had been my captains. How was I supposed to tell them what to do and what not to do? To cope with the nerves, he opted for brevity. “I told her I would keep the meeting short because the longer it went on, the more I’d have to speak. So we wrapped it up in about 15 minutes,” Ganguly confessed.

The strategy worked flawlessly. India won the opening match in Kochi, and in the subsequent game in Jamshedpur, Ganguly led from the front with a blistering century. On-field success quickly silenced any lingering doubts, laying the foundation for an aggressive, fearless era of Indian cricket that would eventually culminate in the historic 2003 World Cup final run.

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