Mumbai vs Mumbai: Rival coaches Pandit and Muzumdar get ready for battle of wits
Bengaluru: Groomed in an unforgiving ‘gharana’ where there is virtually no place for the second best, Chandrakant Pandit and Amol Muzumdar are both as tough as nails mentally. In spirit, they are ‘guru bhais’, having learnt their lessons under the iconic Ramakant Achrekar. Both know how it feels to lay hands on the silverware. When the final of the Ranji Trophy starts at the Chinnaswamy Stadium on Wednesday morning, one can be forgiven for thinking if it is being played between two Mumbai sides. Pandit’s Madhya Pradesh is basically a ‘Mumbai Lite’ or ‘Mumbai Ultra’ in terms of work ethic, vision and plans to accomplish the unfinished job of the ‘class of 98’, led by Pandit himself. Facing them are 41-time champions Mumbai, who boast of India’s most talented bunch of gen next batters in Prithvi Shaw, Yashasvi Jaiswal, Arman Jaffer, Sarfaraz Khan and Suved Parkar. All under 25 and ready to hunt down the MP bowling attack like a pack of wolves with the only bowler of repute being left-arm spinner Kumar Kartikeya, who has been outstanding throughout the season. Goading them to “go for the kill” from the dressing room will be Muzumdar, eyeing his first Ranji Trophy as a coach and looking to stop the doyen of domestic coaches from winning an unprecedented sixth crown with three different states (after Mumbai and Vidarbha). “Amol knows exactly how I think and what my cricketing philosophy is. Vice versa, I have more than a fair idea of how he would go about his job. The Mumbai cricketing philosophy is deeply ingrained in us. “We have both learnt it the hard way,” Pandit told PTI after his men demolished an under-prepared and out-of-sync Bengal in the semi-finals. Muzumdar echoed the sentiments but desperately wanted the arc-light to shift on players. “Me and Chandu are no different. We are actually very same in our upbringing. But this final is about the players who will be out there in the middle and trying to win it for their teams. I believe we coaches should be in the background,” said Muzumdar. But if one talks about being in the background, that is not what Pandit’s second nature is. “I don’t tell any state associations what are my expectations. The state associations that know what are the do’s and don’ts of bringing Chandrakant Pandit on board only gets in touch with me. “And my working principle is simple. Complete trust in me by the establishment and letting me complete freedom to operate if you want results. “I am from Mumbai and in Mumbai, we only call it a good season when we win Ranji Trophy. Anything less than that is considered poor,” you could see the ruthless streak in him. He then smiled and said that not everyone can work with him. “The language I use can be crude at times and I can slap a junior cricketer if I see him out of line. Not everyone can take that. Those who can persist with me, seek my services. Others don’t. “Prithvi is a star today but when he came to me in Mumbai set-up, he had chip on his shoulder. People know that I straightened him up and I can do that with anyone,” he said nonchalantly. There are anecdotes galore about Pandit’s modus operandi and some have reached mythical proportions. When he was with Vidarbha, he apparently slapped a young player and the news reached a high-ranking VCA official, who in those days wielded a lot of power in the BCCI. The official called Pandit and said something on these lines: “Chandu, a slap isn’t enough. I will give you a cane and give that chap 10 lashes till he is disciplined.”