Gambhir Reveals Coaching's Toughest Job: Telling Players They're Benched

Gautam Gambhir has opened up about the emotional challenges of being India's head coach. He revealed that telling quality players they won't make the playing XI is his toughest responsibility. The coach emphasized the importance of honest communication when delivering such difficult news. Gambhir also praised the current dressing room environment for maintaining transparency despite selection pressures.

Key Points: Gautam Gambhir on Hardest Part of India Cricket Coaching Role

  • Gambhir calls player selection conversations his most challenging coaching duty
  • Emphasizes clear, honest communication when dropping deserving players
  • Reveals dressing room maintains positive, transparent environment despite decisions
  • Stresses importance of keeping coach-player conversations private from public scrutiny
2 min read

Head coach Gambhir calls conversations with players who don't make the XI 'toughest job' of his role

India head coach Gautam Gambhir opens up about the emotional challenge of dropping deserving players from playing XI and maintaining team transparency.

"That is the toughest part for me as a coach, and that is the toughest job I have. - Gautam Gambhir"

New Delhi, Nov 10

India head coach Gautam Gambhir revealed that the most challenging aspect of his job as the head coach is dealing with conversations with deserving players who don’t make the cut for the playing XI. The 44-year-old has faced severe backlash lately as fans and pundits criticise his decisions to drop an in-form player from the XI to accommodate others.

In a video interview shared by the BCCI on Monday, Gambhir was asked how he manages conversations with consistent wicket-takers like Arshdeep and Kuldeep when they don’t make the XI. The former cricketer said, “That is the toughest part for me as a coach, and that is the toughest job I have. Sometimes, when I know that there is so much quality sitting on the bench, and I know everyone deserves to be part of the playing XI, but ultimately, you can only pick 11, thinking about what is the best combination to do the job on that particular day.

“But for me, the most important thing is the conversation and the communication as well. The communication needs to be very clear, very honest. Sometimes, obviously, those are conversations to have. If you tell someone that he is not playing, this is probably the toughest conversation for a coach and player as well, because I know that the player would get upset when he deserves to be part of the playing XI.”

Gambhir also mentioned that the environment in the dressing room has been very positive, with everyone maintaining transparency and honesty. He also hoped for the conversations between the player and the coach to stay private and urged people not to jump to conclusions based on the decisions made by the management.

“But if you are honest, if you are straightforward, if you know that what you are saying is from your heart and there is nothing beyond that, some players do understand that. And it's a communication between a player and the coach, and I think it should stay there, rather than people making a lot of outcry and different theories about it. And that something which this group and the support staff have done brilliantly because it has been a very transparent dressing room, and an honest dressing room, and that is something how we want this dressing room to be like,” he added.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
But sometimes I feel he's being too rigid with team selection. Arshdeep has been bowling so well, and dropping him for others doesn't make sense to me. Hope he reconsiders for the next match! 🤔
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Arjun K
This shows why Gambhir was such a successful captain. He understands team dynamics and knows how to handle players. Transparency is key in team sports. Good approach! 👍
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Sarah B
As someone who's worked in team management, I can confirm this is the most challenging aspect. You have to balance individual aspirations with team requirements. Gambhir is handling it well.
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Vikram M
Yaar, this is why we need to trust our coaches more. Everyone becomes an expert on social media. Let the management do their job - they know the players' form, fitness, and team strategy better than us!
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Kavya N
I appreciate his honesty about how difficult these conversations are. It shows he cares about his players as individuals, not just as cricket machines. That's what makes a great coach! ❤️
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Michael C
This is universal in sports management. Having quality bench strength is a luxury, but managing egos and expectations is the real challenge. Gambhir seems to be handling it

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