நெருக்கடி சூழ்நிலைகளில் மன அமைதி காப்பதை தோனியிடமிருந்து கற்க விரும்புகிறேன்
Virat Kohli (About this sound pronunciation (help·info); born 5 November 1988) is an Indian international cricketer. He is a right-handed batsman and occasional right-arm medium pace bowler. He is the current captain of the Indian team in Test cricket and vice-captain in limited overs formats. In the Indian Premier League (IPL), he captains the Royal Challengers Bangalore. After representing Delhi at various age-group levels and domestic cricket, Kohli captained India Under-19s to victory at the 2008 Under-19 World Cup in Malaysia. A few months later, he made his ODI debut for India against Sri Lanka. Initially having played as a reserve batsman in the Indian team, he soon established himself as a regular in the middle-order in ODIs. He was part of the Indian squad that won the 2011 World Cup. Kohli played his first Test in 2011 against the West Indies at Kingston. By 2013, he shrugged off the tag of "ODI specialist" with Test hundreds in Australia and South Africa.[1] The same year, he also reached the number one spot in the ICC rankings for ODI batsmen for the first time.[2] He has also found success in the Twenty20 format, winning the Man of the Tournament at the 2014 ICC World Twenty20 in Bangladesh. Later that year, he became the top-ranked T20I batsman in the ICC rankings.[3] Kohli was appointed the vice-captain of the ODI team in 2012 and has since also captained the team on several occasions in the absence of regular skipper Mahendra Singh Dhoni. After Dhoni's Test retirement in 2014, Kohli was handed over the Test captaincy. Kohli holds numerous Indian records including the fastest ODI century, the fastest batsman to 5,000 ODI runs and the fastest to 10 ODI centuries. He is only the second batsman in the world to have scored 1,000 or more ODI runs for four consecutive calendar years.[4] In 2015, he became the fastest batsman in the world to 1,000 runs in T20Is. Kohli has been the recipient of many awards such as the ICC ODI Player of the Year in 2012 and the BCCI's international cricketer of the year for the 2011–12 season. In 2013, he was given the Arjuna Award in recognition of his achievements in international cricket.[5] SportsPro, a UK magazine, rated Kohli as the second most marketable athlete in the world in 2014.[6] He is also a co-owner of the ISL team FC Goa and the IPTL franchise UAE Royals.
நெருக்கடி சூழ்நிலைகளில் மன அமைதி காப்பதை தோனியிடமிருந்து கற்க விரும்புகிறேன்
அழுத்தம் தரும் மற்றும் நெருக்கடியான சூழ்நிலைகளில் மன அமைதி காப்பதை தோனியிடமிருந்து கற்றுக் கொள்ள விரும்புகிறேன் என்று டெஸ்ட் கேப்டன் விராட் கோலி தெரிவித்தார். இது தொடர்பாக மும்பையில் நடைபெற்ற நிகழ்ச்சி ஒன்றில் சஞ்சய் மஞ்சுரேக்கர் ஒருங்கிணைப்பில் நடைபெற்ற கலந்துரையாடலில் விராட் கோலி, ரஹானே, ஷிகர் தவண் ஆகியோர் கலந்து கொண்டனர். அதில் விராட் கோலி கூறியிருப்பதாவது: கேப்டன்சியைப் பொறுத்தவரை தோனி ஒரு வரம்பை நிர்ணையித்துள்ளார். அவர் சாத்தியமான அனைத்தையும் வென்றார், ஒருநாள் தரவரிசையில் முதலிடம், டெஸ்ட் தரவரிசையில் முதலிடம், டி20-யிலும் கூட. மற்ற எந்த ஒரு கேப்டன் சாதிக்கவும் அவர் எதையும் விட்டு வைக்கவில்லை.
ஆனால் டெஸ்ட் வடிவத்தில் நான் செய்ய முயற்சிப்பதெல்லாம், நான் முன்பே இது பற்றி கூறியது போல், தோனியிடமிருந்து மன அமைதியை கற்க விரும்புகிறேன். இந்த விஷயத்தில் கடந்த 2 தொடர்களாக மேம்பட்டிருப்பதாக உணர்கிறேன். ஆனால் நெருக்கடி சூழ்நிலைகளில் பதற்றமடையாமல் இருப்பதை அவரிடமிருந்து மேலும் கற்றுக் கொள்ள விரும்புகிறேன். நான் இன்னும் கற்றுக் கொண்டுதான் இருக்கிறேன், நான் துணைக் கேப்டனாக இருந்த போது பல்வேறு சூழ்நிலைகளில் தோனி செயலாற்றியதை கவனித்துள்ளேன்.
Mahendra Singh Dhoni (About this sound pronunciation (help·info); commonly known as M. S. Dhoni; born 7 July 1981) is an Indian cricketer and the current captain of the Indian national cricket team in limited-overs formats. An attacking right-handed middle-order batsman and wicket-keeper, he is widely regarded as one of the greatest finishers in limited-overs cricket.[1][2][3][4] He made his One Day International (ODI) debut in December 2004 against Bangladesh, and played his first Test a year later against Sri Lanka. Dhoni holds numerous captaincy records such as most wins by an Indian captain in Tests and ODIs, and most back-to-back wins by an Indian captain in ODIs. He took over the ODI captaincy from Rahul Dravid in 2007 and led the team to its first-ever bilateral ODI series wins in Sri Lanka and New Zealand. Under his captaincy, India won the 2007 ICC World Twenty20, the CB Series of 2007–08, the 2010 Asia Cup, the 2011 ICC Cricket World Cup and the 2013 ICC Champions Trophy. In the final of the 2011 World Cup, Dhoni scored 91 not out off 79 balls to take India to victory for which he was awarded the Man of the Match. In June 2013, when India defeated England in the final of the Champions Trophy in England, Dhoni became the first captain to win all three ICC limited-overs trophies (World Cup, Champions Trophy and the World Twenty20). After taking up the Test captaincy in 2008, he led the team to series wins in New Zealand and West Indies, and the Border-Gavaskar Trophy in 2008, 2010 and 2013. In 2009, Dhoni also led the Indian team to number one position for the first time in the ICC Test rankings. In 2013, under his captaincy, India became the first team in more than 40 years to whitewash Australia in a Test series. In the Indian Premier League, he captained the Chennai Super Kings to victory at the 2010 and 2011 seasons, along with wins in the 2010 and 2014 editions of Champions League Twenty20. He announced his retirement from Tests on 30 December 2014.[5] Dhoni holds the post of Vice-President of India Cements Ltd., after resigning from Air India. India Cements is the owner of the IPL team Chennai Super Kings, and Dhoni has been its captain since the first IPL season.[6][7] Dhoni is the co-owner of Indian Super League team Chennaiyin FC.[8] Dhoni has been the recipient of many awards, including the ICC ODI Player of the Year award in 2008 and 2009 (the first player to win the award twice), the Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna award in 2007 and the Padma Shri, India's fourth highest civilian honour, in 2009.[9] He was named as the captain of ICC World Test XI and ICC World ODI XI teams for 2009. The Indian Territorial Army conferred the honorary rank of Lieutenant Colonel[10] to Dhoni on 1 November 2011. He is the second Indian cricketer after Kapil Dev to have received this honour. In 2011, Time magazine included Dhoni in its annual Time 100 list as one of the "Most Influential People in the World."[11] In 2012, SportsPro rated Dhoni as the sixteenth most marketable athlete in the world.[12] In June 2015, Forbes ranked Dhoni at 23rd in the list of highest paid athletes in the world, estimating his earnings at US$31 million.