Why Kohli's side is the best Indian ODI team ever

Looking at how they have performed against top-rated opposition bears out the claim

Kartikeya Date24-Jul-2019In sport, teams that compete hardest and longest win most often. This is not a matter of “heart” or “courage” or “fighting spirit”; it is about technical quality. Better teams tend to win more because they have fewer average players. Players and teams covet results in Test cricket and consider it the most challenging format precisely because the length of the contest more or less guarantees that the better team wins. In football, clubs covet league titles because it is hard to win a league simply by having a handful of good days.Nevertheless, public perception of sporting teams is largely about moments. Teams are remembered for the memories they create. The eve of the 2019 World Cup final marked an anniversary of a famous Indian win in a triangular tournament in England featuring England and Sri Lanka in 2002. That was the only final Sourav Ganguly’s team won out of 15 (they lost ten). And yet, if you took a poll to find out which image from that era lingers in the public memory, Ganguly’s shirtless celebration on the Lord’s balcony on that July evening 17 years ago will be a popular answer.ALSO READ: ‘You can’t become a good spinner if you don’t get over the fear of getting hit’ – Kuldeep YadavThat Indian team, which came together after the match-fixing scandal of the late 1990s, is credited with restoring the faith of Indian fans in the game. It was also the first team of the mass cable-television era in India. The first glimpses of the enormous potential of TV revenue, and the subsequent shift in power in the world game to the subcontinent, came about in that era. Ganguly’s Indian team remains a popular side.Performance in knockout matches is an imperfect measure of a team’s quality, but these games are a good place to begin, because on average in any tournament, the quality of opponent is likely to be better in the knockout games than in the preliminary ones. The table below provides a snapshot of the Indian ODI side in knockout games. It illustrates the distance between public perception and the cricketing record.