Rahul Dravid pays tribute to the batting great who turns 60 today
Huge respect
Over the years, when I've travelled abroad, especially to places like Australia I've bumped into some former cricketer who heard I was from Karnataka and asked, "Oh, from the land of the little man, how's he doing?" There's a genuineness to the friendship and huge respect that people feel for Vishy all around the world especially the way he played fast bowling u00e2u0080u0093 that has to be seen to be believed.
From the first time I met him, till today, it's always a pleasure to meet Vishy. There isn't the slightest trace of bitterness in him, he's happy with the person he is and never looks back at the past in a negative way. He hardly ever talks about himself or his cricket and in some ways that's a shame because there's so much we can all learn from him.
I clearly recall a time when he walked up to me, after I'd just played a few Tests, and had a quiet chat. "After every Test you should go back and think about the game you just played, and learn from it. Only then does it become experience. Just by playing a number of matches you don't become experienced," Vishy said, and to this day it's one of the best pieces of advice I've received. A lot of people think the game just came naturally to him and that he just went out there and batted brilliantly, but he's also someone who thought a lot about his game. Vishy was chairman of the national selection panel when I was picked to play for India after the 1996 World Cup, and inevitably there were some doubts raised about whether I was the right choice. I just hope that I haven't let him down. The lifetime achievement award is a deserving recognition of little big man from Bangalore.
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Happy birthday, Vishy!
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