As soon as Virat Kohli announced that he will step down as India’s captain from the T20 format after the upcoming T20 World Cup, speculations and debates on who will be the man to replace him.
Kohli’s longtime deputy, Rohit Sharma, who has led the Indian white-ball side in the past in his absence seems to be the frontrunner for the position but the fans and watchers of Indian cricket have not ruled out names who are younger than Rohit and could serve Indian cricket for a long time.
People have flooded Twitter with possible names such as KL Rahul, Rishabh Pant, Shreyas Iyer as long-term replacements of Virat Kohli, but former chairman of selectors have backed Rohit’s credentials and experience as captain to take over the reins from Kohli.
Dilip Vengsarkar, who was the chairman of the selection committee in the year 2008 when both Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli were new to the international stage has backed the former’s candidature for India’s captain based on his successes with India in the past and the Mumbai Indians in the IPL.
“Rohit deserves to be India's next T20 captain because he's done exceptionally well whenever he's been given an opportunity. In 2018, India won the Asia Cup under his captaincy. Besides that, he's been an exceptional captain for the Mumbai Indians,” Vengsarkar told TOI.
Another chairman of the selection committee, who gave Rohit an extended run in the side in the years 2012 when the Mumbaikar was going through a tough phase, saw him as a “fit choice” to replace Kohli as India’s leader in the shortest format of the game.
"Rohit (Sharma) has done a great job while leading the Mumbai Indians. I feel that he's a fit choice to replace Virat as the India T20 captain. Rohit has proved his mettle," Patil said to TOI.
Rohit appears to be the frontrunner to replace Kohli as the skipper himself called him an “essential part” of the leadership group. There is one more T20 World Cup scheduled for the next year and it is likely that the selectors will bank on the experience of Rohit for the big event before placing a bet on young or inexperienced players at the leadership level.