Rohit Sharma or Hardik Pandya – who ought to lead India at the T20 World Cup 2024? That is one unavoidable issue, which is doing the rounds right now. Rohit Sharma hasn’t played a T20I since the 2022 T20 World Cup, in the mean time Hardik Pandya has progressively seemed as though the person who has arisen as the leader to be captain in the most brief configuration. Nonetheless, Hardik Pandya has been injury-inclined. In front of India Visit through South Africa, if reports somehow happened to be accepted, the BCCI selectors moved toward Rohit Sharma to be the T20I commander.
While Rohit Sharma enjoyed some time off from the white-ball leg of the Visit, he can in any case be qualified to lead India at the 2024 T20 World Cup. Gautam Gambhir has given an extraordinary interpretation of the subject.
The 42-year-old previous player thought that Rohit ought to lead the Indian group in the 2024 T20 World Cup assuming he is in great structure.
“In the event that Rohit Sharma is in great structure, he ought to be driving in the T20 World Cup or on the other hand on the off chance that he isn’t in great structure, whoever isn’t in great structure ought not be picked for the T20 World Cup. Captaincy is an obligation. To begin with, you get yourself chosen as a player and afterward you’re made skipper. A commander ought to have a stable situation in the playing eleven, and the super durable put relies upon the structure,” Gautam Gambhir told ANI in a digital recording.
The 2011 ODI World Cup victor said that age ought not be a model while dropping a player from the crew and frame ought to be the main rules.
“Age ought not be the models why a player ought to be dropped or picked, just structure ought to be the standards. Retirement is likewise a singular choice, nobody can compel him (a player) to resign, selectors have all the right not to pick them but rather at last one can’t remove a bat or ball from a player. Structure is the highest need,” he added.
Rohit had a heavenly ODI World Cup 2023 and assumed a critical part for the ‘Men dressed in Blue’ as an opener. The 36-year-old was the second-most run-getter in the competition. He set the rhythm for India’s innings in matches and scored 597 runs at a strike pace of 125.94 in 11 innings.