I am not quitting, says Ganguly

Published September 10, 2008

LONDON, Sept 9: Not alien to comebacks, former India skipper Saurav Ganguly insists that he is in no mood to call it quits, for he believes he has another couple of year’s cricket left in him.

Selectors snubbed Ganguly, ignoring him while picking the Rest of India squad for the Irani Trophy, thus putting a question mark over his fate. The left-hander, however, made it clear that he is not throwing in the towel.

The former captain seemed to have come to terms with his ODI exclusion but insisted that he was in no mood to hang up his boots as far as Test and Twenty20 cricket are concerned. “I would like to think I have a couple of years left,” Ganguly said when asked if he would miss cricket once he quits the game. “But I won’t say I’ll miss touring. I’ll miss the cricket, the satisfaction you get from scoring a century or from winning a Test,” the left-hander added.

Asked if he missed not being a part of the ODI squad anymore, Ganguly said: “At the present moment I’m playing Test cricket and Twenty20 in the Indian Premier League.”

“I miss the one-day game but the older players understand we won’t be playing in the 2011 World Cup. So now it is time for the young players to get match experience,” said the former captain who made a stunning comeback to the Indian side after being dropped following his soured relation with the then coach Greg Chappell.

Insisting that he was not playing the game for any financial reasons, Ganguly said age was not an issue with him and he would continue playing both the Test and Twenty20 versions of the game.

“With so much money involved in the IPL you still have to live up to the expectations. It doesn’t matter what age you are, you have to perform. At this stage of my career I am not playing for financial gains, it’s all about the performance.” he said.

Ganguly also shared his view on Sri Lanka’s mystery spinner Ajantha Mendis and said, “He is a very accurate bowler and at the other end we had Muttiah Muralitharan. It is too early to say how Mendis will do in the long term compared to Murali, but there is no question that he will be a big player for them.”

Asked to choose the highlights of his illustrious career, Ganguly said: “There are so many, reaching the World Cup final in 2003, beating Pakistan in Pakistan. Doing well in Australia as a captain in 2003 and beating them in India in 2001. Winning the Test series in England last year was very special,” he added.—Agencies

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