Sports


Virat Kohli, an unrelenting gladiator in whites

Virat Kohli, an unrelenting gladiator in whites

By BD Narayankar
New Delhi, May 12 (UNI) When Virat Kohli walked out in whites, Test cricket stood up a little straighter. There was something elemental about his presence - fire in the eyes, command in the stance, and an unwavering sense of purpose. Now, as he steps away from the longest format, Indian cricket bids farewell to one of its fiercest competitors, and Test cricket loses its most passionate modern-day torchbearer.
Kohli’s retirement from Test cricket is not merely the conclusion of a prolific career, it marks the end of an era where one man carried the soul of red-ball cricket on his shoulders, often against the tide of trendier formats.
While the T20 wave swept through the cricketing world with the promise of instant thrills, Kohli stood his ground as the unrelenting gladiator of the five-day game.
Kohli’s Test resume reads like a legend's — 9,230 runs in 123 matches at an average of 46.85 with 30 centuries and 31 fifties, and famous victories overseas.
But to reduce his legacy to numbers would be to miss the essence of what made him great. Kohli was not about accumulation; he was about assertion. Every run was a contest, every century a battle won. His technique was sound, but his spirit was unyielding.
From Adelaide to Nottingham, Johannesburg to Wankhede, he was the heartbeat of India's batting. His 141 in Adelaide in 2014 and his twin centuries in the same match set the tone for a New India - aggressive, fearless, and uncompromising.
His masterclass 254* against South Africa in Pune in 2019 was the longest innings of his career, yet every minute was played with his trademark intensity.
When Kohli took over the Test captaincy, India had begun its journey towards global competitiveness. He turned it into a mission. Under his leadership, India became a team that no longer feared travelling. Series wins in Australia, a near-miss in England, and a consistent dominance at home were all shaped by his vision.
But more than trophies, Kohli instilled a culture, a culture of fitness, aggression, and pride in wearing whites.
He made the yo-yo test mandatory, redefined fielding standards, and placed unwavering faith in his fast bowlers.
For Kohli, Test cricket was not an obligation, it was a privilege. His belief that the format was the ultimate test of skill and character rubbed off on his teammates, many of whom flourished under his stewardship.
Kohli didn’t just captain India. He led them - with fire, with discipline, and with an uncompromising drive that made every Test match feel like a final.
Speak to his teammates and contemporaries, and the admiration runs deep. Behind the aggression and larger-than-life persona was a committed teammate who never let his standards drop. Whether building partnerships with Cheteshwar Pujara on slow turners or charging fast bowlers in hostile conditions, Kohli set benchmarks few dared to chase.
His colleagues remember the grind, the sessions survived, the declarations made, and the shared joy of victories hard-earned. His influence extended far beyond the scoresheet, he was a leader who raised the bar in every aspect of the game.
Kohli’s influence was not confined to India. Across the cricketing globe, he was respected, even revered, as the modern custodian of Test cricket’s soul. While the format struggled for relevance in some quarters, Kohli treated it with near-sacred devotion. He brought fans back to the format, not with sentiment, but with spectacle.
Broadcasters, commentators, and legends alike have acknowledged Kohli’s pivotal role in making red-ball cricket cool again. In him, they saw a generational figure who turned the longest format into appointment viewing. Empty seats filled up when Kohli played. Stadiums buzzed louder when he batted. And sessions once seen as slow burns were lit up by his charisma and combativeness.
There’s a wistful note to Kohli’s exit from Tests. Many had hoped to see him sign off before a packed Eden Gardens or at a sunlit Chinnaswamy, arms aloft after one last century. But true to his journey, there is dignity even in the silence. He leaves not with a bang, but with the weight of gratitude from fans, teammates, and cricket itself.
He exits on his terms, leaving behind a legacy written not just in records, but in inspiration. The format that shaped him, that he served with such devotion, will forever carry his imprint.
In the end, Kohli wasn’t just a great Test cricketer, he was the Test cricketer of his generation. He didn’t just play the game. He embodied it.
And as the whites are folded away, the memories remain: the fist pumps, the middle-session sledges, the long hours under the sun, and the quiet moments after hard-fought victories. Test cricket may find new heroes, but it will never find another quite like Kohli.

Thank you, Virat.
UNI BDN

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