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Why success at Champions Trophy is important for Dhoni

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March 13, 2017 20:44 IST

MS Dhoni's will power and game-analysing sense are the two qualities that make him special, feels his childhood coach Keshav Banerjee

IMAGE: MS Dhoni's will power and game-analysing sense are the two qualities that make him special, feels his childhood coach Keshav Banerjee. Photograph: BCCI

The Champions Trophy, to be held in three months' time, would decide the fate of India's most successful cricket captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni, his childhood coach Keshav Banerjee believes.

"At the moment, his sole focus is on the Champions Trophy. If he's successful there, I think he would go on till the World Cup 2019," Banerjee said at the launch of an under-14 cricket tournament in Kolkata on Monday.

One of the best finishers of the world, Dhoni still has a sharp brain despite the drop in success ratio, Banerjee felt.

"It's natural that with age, you would not hit the same strike rate. But his will power and game-analysing sense are the two qualities that make him special. He's out there playing domestic one-dayers (Vijay Hazare Trophy) to keep himself in shape ahead of the Champions Trophy."

Having surprised everyone by calling it quits from Tests Down Under in late 2014, Dhoni stepped down from limited overs captaincy in January.

"He never liked to be pushed so he called it quits before anyone could point fingers at him in the Tests format," Banerjee said.

"He never kept anyone in the loop, even his best friend or parents did not know when he quit Tests."

Banerjee seemed unhappy with the way Dhoni was removed as skipper of Rising Pune Supergiants for the Indian Premier League season 10.

"It appeared to me a decision by the team owners as Dhoni did not have any choice now but to play this season (with Chennai Super Kings being suspended)," he said.

Banerjee's role in shaping up Dhoni's early days as a cricketer was well documented in the biopic MS Dhoni: The Untold Story.

A cricket coach at Dhoni's alma mater, Jawahar Vidya Mandir at Shyamali in Ranchi, Banerjee persuaded a then class VI football goalkeeper to become a wicketkeeper. The rest, as they say, is history.

"He was known by his punctuality, discipline and he's still the same, has not changed a bit," he said.

Having seen Dhoni rise from the school level, Banerjee urged the BCCI to encourage cricketers in under-14 age group.

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