“The cricket must be continued”: the star of India winner of the World Cup on the retirement of the Virat Kohli-Rohit Sharma test

The former India cricket player and the hero of the 2007 T20 World Cup, Sharma, believes that the test pillars Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma, who recently offered a farewell to the format, still have enough in their tanks. A little more than a month before the Indian tour in England, Maestro Virat’s striker submitted in the format the test format with a sincere note on Instagram last Monday, a few days after his longtime compatriot Rohit retired from the format. While looking at the future, he admitted that their departure had left a void, but the strength of the bench suggests that India would recover from the massive loss.
“Son (Virat Kohli) Fitness and the performances do not indicate that it was time. I think he should have played, and even Rohit should have.
Joginder cited Australia as an example and said that the Ample Greens still had the reputation of being one of the best in the world, even after the retirement of “Great”, and added, “even Australia is considered one of the best teams, even after the retreat of great players”.
The 14 -year -old Virat trip to the whites transformed India into a machine producing machine. He infused the assault and culture of physical form in a team riddled with young people and experience. In a career that has redefined requests from the game, Virat scored 9,230 points to an average of 46.85, with 30 centuries and 31 years fifties, and ended as the highest fourth in India in format.
Rohit called him a day in the test format, ending his illustrious career with 4,301 points at an average of 40.57, 12 centuries and 18 half-century in 67 tests.
The retirement of Virat of the red ball cricket marked the continuation of the trend of the exodus of the test format in the Indian configuration. Before the Indian Bigwigs that strike, the illustrious Ravichandran Ashwin front line called it a day on his international career halfway from the Border-Gavaskar trophy in Australia.
(With the exception of the title, this story has not been published by NDTV staff and is published from a unionized flow.)
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