The Indian cricket board on Thursday made former skipper and spin
great Anil Kumble the national coach for a one-year term, ending a
16-year tradition of giving foreigners the role.
He becomes the first home-grown coach after a string of foreign
coaches since Kiwi John Wright’s appointment in 2000. The legendary
Kapil Dev coached the team before Wright.
“It’s a huge responsibility, ready to take this role. Coaches come
later, it’s always players first. Strategy will be to win,” said Kumble,
who led India in 14 Tests.
Shastri, who has been the sole head of the team since coach Duncan
Fletcher of Zimbabwe left after the 2015 World Cup, was the early
favourite. But it turned out to be a tight race once Kumble, with
support from the cricket advisory committee tasked with selecting the
coach, came into the picture.
But the final choice underlines the weight of the advisory panel,
especially former skipper Ganguly who heads the Bengal unit and the
board’s technical committee.
BCCI chief Thakur said his appointment will be for a year and reviewed after that.
The short stint is unprecedented because previous India coaches got at least a three-year term.
Regarded highly for his on-field acumen — he is also the
International Cricket Council’s (ICC) cricket committee chairman —
Kumble’s experience is restricted to being a mentor to Mumbai Indians,
when they won both their IPL titles.
The BCCI, rather than the chief coach, will pick the support staff
for the West Indies Test tour in the first week of July — a move seen as
a signal for Kumble that he will have to work hard to establish
himself.

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