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Ricky Ponting and Yashasvi Jaiswal
Former Australian captain Ricky Ponting believes India has the capability to effectively manage the transition following the Test retirement of cricket stalwarts Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma, as the team prepares for their upcoming five-Test series against England starting June 20 at Leeds through August 2025.The new-look Indian Test team, led by Shubman Gill, will face the challenge of proving themselves in English conditions without their experienced veterans. The team has included fresh talent from domestic cricket and IPL, including Dhruv Jurel, Karun Nair, Abhimanyu Easwaran, and Sai Sudharsan.
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"It is always very hard to replace players like that that have been around for so long, that have played that much Test cricket. But if any country can do it and do it quickly, India can because of the amount of young talent that they have," Ponting said in the ICC Review."I have seen it firsthand for 10 years around the IPL, and we have seen the emergence of (Yashasvi) Jaiswal and these sorts of guys who have come into international cricket with India and done really well pretty much straight away," he added.
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"The skill side of it is one thing to replace, and I think India will replace the skill side of it easily enough, but the experience is the big thing that will be missing for them. So now, even with a young captain with Shubman Gill, they will still have some experience with KL Rahul and (Jasprit) Bumrah and these sort of guys," Ponting continued.
"But I think if you look at a rebuilding sort of phase, I think India can cope with it better than most other teams," he concluded.Rohit Sharma announced his retirement from Test cricket last month, ending a career that began against West Indies in November 2013. He appeared in 67 Tests, accumulating 4,301 runs at an average of 40.57, including 12 centuries and 18 fifties, with a highest score of 212.Rohit's Test career saw a significant revival with the introduction of the ICC World Test Championship.
In 40 Tests during the WTC era, he scored 2,716 runs at an average of 41.15, with nine centuries and eight fifties, establishing himself as India's leading run-scorer in WTC history.Quiz: Who's that IPL player?Virat Kohli, who made his Test debut against West Indies in 2011, also bid farewell to the format recently through an Instagram post. He amassed 9,230 runs at an average of 46.85 in 123 Tests, including 30 centuries and 31 fifties, ranking as India's fourth-highest run-getter in Tests.As India's most successful Test captain, Kohli led the team to 40 victories in 68 matches. His leadership was marked by developing India's fast bowling talent and fostering a competitive team culture focused on fitness and aggressive cricket.The team will now rely on a mix of emerging talent and experienced players like KL Rahul and Jasprit Bumrah as they enter this new phase in English conditions.