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Faster Than The Best Pickpockets: Ravi Shastri On Dhoni's Wicketkeeping

Dhoni bid adieu to international cricket on Saturday, posting “consider me retired” on his Instagram page.
India's MS Dhoni attends a training session at the Rose Bowl in Southampton, southern England, on June 20, 2019, ahead of their 2019 World Cup cricket match against Afghanistan. (Photo by Saeed KHAN / AFP) (Photo credit should read SAEED KHAN/AFP via Getty Images)
SAEED KHAN via Getty Images
India's MS Dhoni attends a training session at the Rose Bowl in Southampton, southern England, on June 20, 2019, ahead of their 2019 World Cup cricket match against Afghanistan. (Photo by Saeed KHAN / AFP) (Photo credit should read SAEED KHAN/AFP via Getty Images)

New Delhi — India coach Ravi Shastri said Mahendra Singh Dhoni was ‘faster than the best pickpockets as wicketkeeper’ and a cricketer who changed the game for all times to come, after the cricketer announced his retirement from international cricket on Saturday.

Dhoni bid adieu to international cricket on Saturday, posting “consider me retired” on his Instagram page. Shastri offered his take on the impact made by the two-time World Cup-winner in his trademark tongue-in-cheek style.

“This man is second to none. And coming from where he did he changed cricket for all times to come. And his beauty is he did it in all formats,” Shastri told ‘India Today’.

“For me what stood out was his stumpings and his run outs. He had such fast hands that he was at times faster than any pickpocket,” he said.

Counting Dhoni’s achievements, Shastri said despite creating an enviable legacy, Dhoni’s calm demeanour made him unique.

“T20 - he has won a World Cup and multiple IPL titles. 50 overs - he has won a World Cup. Test cricket- he has taken India to the number one position in the world. Played 90 Test matches,” he said.

“And he always took life as it came. From his days in Kharagpur to his days as an Indian cricketer he was always in the moment. And in retirement also he has moved on.

“As I said he is second to none,” he added.

The former cricketer said Dhoni set a new bar in wicketkeeping despite not being a “natural”.

″...but (he) was effective as hell. Look at the impact he had...The batsman wouldn’t even realise that Dhoni had taken the bails off and that’s something that added to his aura.

“In any list of cricket’s greatest, not greats but the greatest, you have to include this man,” he signed off.

Dhoni last played for India in July 2019 in the lost World Cup semifinal against New Zealand. He went on a sabbatical after that but remained a subject of intense speculation, which ended with his announcement on Saturday.

He will, however, be seen in action leading the Chennai Super Kings in the IPL from September 19 in the UAE. The event has been moved out of India this year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.