TIL Desk Sports/ Former India head coach Ravi Shastri feels that the rapport that players of his generation shared with journalists was far better compared to what it is with cricketers of current era and the scribes who cover them. Media is a function of the age and times that one lives in and the exponential growth of media houses, electronic and now digital space has made it very difficult for players to remain friends, observed the veteran of 80 Tests and 150 ODIs.
“I think it has changed. It has changed from the time we played the game. The equation we had with journalists was far, far better than the equation you see with the boys today. And I have been part of (the) dressing room for the last seven years,” Shastri said at the launch of ‘It’s A Wonderful World’, a memoir by Khalid A-H Ansari.
The context wasn’t difficult to understand as recently veteran India wicketkeeper Wriddhiman Saha had alleged that he received “threatening” messages from a journalist for refusing to oblige him with an interview. Shastri was one of those prominent former stars who had urged Saha to publicly name and shame the journalist in question. Shastri, a former India all-rounder, said that it’s difficult being under constant spotlight.”I don’t blame the guys though because, the spotlight that is there on today’s players is nowhere like what it was on us.”