Neeraj Pandey dishes out lesser known nuggets from Mahendra Singh Dhoni's early life
8:16 AM
Posted by Fenil Seta
Neeraj Pandey who has filmed his biopic in Captain Cool's home, school, railway quarters and other real locations, dishes out lesser known nuggets from the cricketer's early life
Roshmila Bhattacharya (MUMBAI MIRROR; August 24, 2016)
Twenty-year-old Dhoni left Bihar for West Bengal in 2001 in search of a job. He landed in Kharagpur, best known for the Indian Institute of Technology and the longest railway platform. The then divisional railway manager of South Eastern Railway, Animesh Kumar Ganguly, was scouting for a wicket keeper-batsman. It took just 60 balls for Mahi, as he is popularly known, to land the job of a Train Ticket Examiner (TTE) in the sports quota and cement a place in the South Eastern Railway cricket team. Over the next three years, the quiet boy would ferociously hit tennis balls around every ground in the city. In the process, he won not just Ganguly's heart but that of his family too.
Dhoni's family moved from Uttarakhand to Ranchi where his father, Pan Singh, worked in a junior management position in Metallurgical & Engineering Consultants India Limited (MECON), moving into the self-sufficient and huge MECON Colony in Shaymali. Dhoni grew up here in the 'M' Block quarters. “They moved houses a few times and one of them overlooked a cricket ground. Dhoni would stand on the balcony and watch matches, never imagining that one day he'd play a Ranji match on the same ground,“ says Neeraj, who has shot in the family home where his parents and brother Narendra live. “He has imbibed his sense of discipline from his father, is really close to his sister Jayanthi and loves dogs.“
India owes one of its sporting heroes to the DAV Jawahar Vidya Mandir, Shyamali, which has always had a strong sports culture. A natural athlete, Dhoni a good student, excelled on the football field and the badminton court, representing his school and his district. He was not particularly interested in cricket then and would only play it in his locality. It was one of his teachers, Keshab Ranjan Banerjee, who first spotted the talent of this sixth standard student during PT periods. He was the goalkeeper of the football team then, agile and diving all over the place, and Banerjee was convinced he could be a replacement for their team's wicketkeeper who had moved to the ninth standard. It was an added bonus that he was an excellent fielder and a batsman who threw his bat at everything. Dhoni played a few matches representing his school in the Ranchi inter-district tournament in 1997. And, once the senior wicket keeper passed out of school, stepped into his shoes.
This entry was posted on October 4, 2009 at 12:14 pm, and is filed under
Animesh Kumar Ganguly,
Interviews,
Keshab Ranjan Banerjee,
Kharagpur,
M S Dhoni - The Untold Story,
Mahendra Singh Dhoni,
Neeraj Pandey,
Neeraj Pandey interview,
Satyaprakash Krishna
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