Chandrakant Pandit, man with the Midas touch

Alex Ferguson of Indian domestic cricket.

That’s how Chandrakant Pandit was hailed in the last week of June when Madhya Pradesh — with Pandit as its head coach — won its maiden Ranji Trophy crown since making its Ranji debut in 1950-51.

The diminutive Pandit has enjoyed unprecedented success in domestic cricket and perhaps it would be better suited to compare him with new-age genius football coach — “Pep Guardiola of Indian domestic cricket” than the Manchester United legend. Sir Alex’s triumph was in his continuous reinvention of the United team during his 27-year reign.

Guardiola, a member of the Barcelona Dream Team in the 1990s, as a coach first guided his alma mater to glory and then repeated the story with Bayern Munich in Germany and Manchester City in the Premier League.

Pandit’s career path has been quite similar. A product of late Ramakant Achrekar’s factory of shrewd cricketers, Pandit excelled as a typical Mumbai cricketer. Despite dominating the domestic circuit as a batter-wicketkeeper, he never really cemented his place in the national setup.

But post retiring as a cricketer in 2000-01, after a two-decade career, Pandit found his true calling in coaching. And the results are for everyone to see. Over the last two decades, Pandit has been the head coach of six Ranji-winning teams with three different State units. He has been at the forefront of leading the underdogs’ movement in the Ranji Trophy.

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Just like Guardiola, he tasted success with his home team, helping Mumbai win successive Ranji titles in 2002-03 and 2003-04. After sowing the seeds of success in Maharashtra, Rajasthan, and Kerala, Pandit returned as the Mumbai head coach to help the domestic giant lift its 41st title in 2015-16. That season revived the Pandit magic. Including that final, Pandit has now been involved in five of the last six Ranji finals. He has won four of those five finals — the rare loss came in the 2016-17 final that Mumbai lost to Gujarat.

His legacy is underlined by the fact that after leading Vidarbha — considered among the also-rans of domestic cricket till then — to successive titles in 2017-18 and 2018-19, Pandit has repeated it with Vidarbha’s neighbouring outfit Madhya Pradesh.

It was surreal to see Pandit at the helm of Madhya Pradesh’s march to victory after he had failed to cross the line as the MP captain in its only previous final in 1998-99.