‘Stop celebrating milestones, celebrate trophies’: Gautam Gambhir’s strong message after India’s T20 World Cup triumph | Cricket News
NEW DELHI: For Gautam Gambhir, there is one idea that outweighs every statistic, every personal landmark and every century celebrated in record books. Trophies matter. Milestones do not.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!The India head coach reiterated that philosophy yet again after India crushed New Zealand by 96 runs in the final to secure their third ICC Men’s T20 World Cup title on Sunday. Even amid the celebrations of a dominant, era-defining victory, Gambhir used the moment to remind everyone what truly counts.
“I think my simple philosophy with Surya has always been that milestones don’t matter. It’s the trophies that matter,” Gambhir said, referring to T20 captain Suryakumar Yadav. “For too long in Indian cricket, we’ve spoken about milestones. And I hope, till I’m there, we’re not going to talk about milestones.”The former India opener, who himself top-scored for the team in two ICC finals during his playing days, did not mince words while addressing the media. His message was clear: stop glorifying individual numbers.ALSO READ: Firm ideas, flexible tactics: How Gambhir helped India tame T20’s fickle nature“Stop celebrating milestones, celebrate trophies,” Gambhir said. “That is going to be important because the bigger purpose of a team sport is to be winning trophies, not scoring individual runs. It has never mattered to me, and it will never matter to me.”According to Gambhir, the current Indian team under Suryakumar has fully bought into that mindset. “I have been very fortunate that Surya and me were on the same page, especially on this front,” he added.He cited the performances of Sanju Samson during the business end of the tournament as the perfect example of the approach. Samson’s explosive knocks — including a 97 not out in the virtual quarter-final and crucial scores in the semi-final and final — were built around team needs rather than personal landmarks.“You can see it in the last three games, what Sanju did,” Gambhir said. “Imagine if you would have been playing for a milestone, probably we wouldn’t have got 250.”Away from the field, Gambhir also brushed aside the noise from social media criticism that has often followed him during India’s highs and lows.“My accountability is not towards any social media,” he said. “My accountability is towards those 30 people sitting in the dressing room.”For Gambhir, the team environment itself is built on something deeper than results — trust.“You pick the team on trust and faith. You don’t pick on hope,” he explained. “And when you pick someone on trust and faith, you don’t lose that after four or five games.”