I have no idea what you just said? ^^ Anyhoo, not my favorite player. I like explosive players like Sharma, Gayle and De Villiers, but you have to acknowledge the master when you see it.
Wish someone wrote such laud about our own players! Sigh.... *puts on chastity belt*
Before he made it big in Ind side, I saw him in IPL for RCB (Ipl used to be free on UK ITV4). You get a cibe seeing a playing and about his worth ethic. I saw something like what Aussies had 1999-2007, such willingness and determination to succeed and work harder and never get easily satisfied (which our so called tigers get easily belly full after a knock, few wins, or series win after all that happy lovely celebrations, and thw rewards comes their ways like flats and cars). No wonder why he is succeeding and successful and delivering always, consistently.
The King makes Kohli excellent, is his mentality. Despite what one might feel about his aggression and attitude, he has the right battinf mentality, and he should and example for rest of Asian cricket batsmen to see and learn how to go on about an innings or match situations.
A quality, hard working, always eager to go the extra mile in terms of working at his game. World Class player.
__________________
Self-respect is the fruit of discipline; the sense of dignity grows with the ability to say no to oneself- AJH| Don’t disrespect your life by living aimlessly – set goals and work hard to attain them.
Kohli is guilty of excessive pride, not hypocrisy. He has confused being the captain of the Indian cricket team with being Captain India. He believes that unconditional admiration for him is a necessary condition for being a patriotic Indian. The truth is that the very notion of an "Indian" cricket team is possible only because Indians over a century and a half ago fought to imagine themselves into a united nation. It wasn't given to us; generations of Indians dreamt it into being. In that sense, the profile of the Indian cricket team and the stature of its captain are figments of the Indian public's collective imagination. It's not for Kohli to demand its allegiance or certify its patriotism; it is this cricketing public's prerogative to extend or withhold its support. It can choose, should it find cause, to stop believing in Kohli and his team, in the way that the Australian public chose to withdraw its faith in and support for Steven Smith and his cheating men.