Simple conclusion of dhoni essay
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Mahi’, as Mahendra Singh Dhoni is popularly known, was born on 7th July, 1 981 to Pan Singh and Devaki Dev at Ranchi in Bihar (now Jharkhand). Dhoni’s parents had moved to Ranchi from Uttarakhand where his father works in a junior management position in Mecon. He has a sister and a brother. Dhoni is a fan of Adam Gilchrist and his childhood idols were teammate Sachin Tendulkar, the Bollywood actor Amitabh Bachchan and the melody queen Lata Mangeshkar.
Dhoni studied at DAV Jawahar Vidya Mandir School, Shyamali in Ranchi where he initially excelled in badminton and football, and was selected at district and club levels in these sports. For his football team, Dhoni was a goal keeper and was sent to play cricket for a local cricket club by his football coach.
Though the had not played cricket before, Dhoni impressed with his wicket keeping skills and became the regular wicket keeper of his cricket club. Dhoni started focussing completely on cricket after 10th standard. He was also good at studies in his school.
During 2000-03, he worked as a Train Ticket Examiner (TTE) in Midnapore district, West Bengal. He was honest and straightforward. But he also had a mischievous shade to him. He and his colleagues scared the night guards by acting as ghosts. This incident even made news the next day.
Dhoni was included in Bihar U-19 squad for the 1998-99 season and later made his Ranji Trophy debut for Bihar in the 1999-2000 season as an 1 8 year old. He made a half century at the time of his debut. In 2004, he became a serious contender for national selection with some stirring performances when the occasion demanded- a rapid 100 which helped East Zone clinch the Deodhar Trophy and an audacious 60 in the Duleep Trophy final.
Later, in his two centuries against Pakistan and in the triangular tournament in Kenya, he established himself as a clinical destroyer of the bowling attacks. Dhoni’s talent was noticed through BCCI’s small town talent spotting initiative. He was seen by PC Podar, the Captain of Bengal in the 1960s, while Dhoni was playing for Jharkhand. Podar immediately sent a report to National Cricket Academy.
In his fifth one-dayer against Pakistan, at Visakhapatnam, he cracked a dazzling 148, followed by a colossal 183 not out at Jaipur against Sri Lanka and in the process eclipsed the highest score by Adam Gilchrist. These innings had Dhoni’s 10 sixes, the most by an Indian in an inning and the fifth highest in ODIs.
He and Mahela Jayawardene set a new world record for the sixth wicket partnership of 218 runs, during Afro-Asia Cup in 2007. In 2012, he became the only captain in ODIs to score a century while batting at number 7. He also became the fourth fastest batsman to complete 8,000 runs in One-Day cricket in 2014.