MS Dhoni discloses ‘best feeling’ from 2011 World Cup final, catch details!

MS Dhoni is well-known for his astute captaincy, wicketkeeping, batting traits, swift stumping, quick running between the wickets, last ball six, helicopter shots, ICC trophies and so on. His contribution to Indian cricket is so good that it cannot be put in words.

MS Dhoni has 3 ICC trophies as a captain – ICC World Cup 2007, ICC World Cup 2011 and ICC Champions Trophy 2013, the only captain in the history of the sport to do so. Even after giving up international captaincy on January 4, 2017, he still contributed to the team as a wicketkeeper-batsman.

Dhoni’s last ever international appearance came against New Zealand in the ICC World Cup 2019 semi-final. He retired from all forms of international cricket on August 15, 2020. The news was confirmed by MS Dhoni himself through the Instagram post. MS Dhoni has represented India 90 Tests, 350 ODIs and 98 T20Is.

MS Dhoni discloses 'best feeling' from 2011 World Cup final, catch details!

The down-to-earth personality is a huge inspiration to all cricket followers. He has been actively applying his skills and expressing himself in the Indian Premier League. MS Dhoni is leading Chennai Super Kings in the sixteenth edition of the Indian Premier League.

MS Dhoni discloses ‘best feeling’ from 2011 World Cup final

MS Dhoni hit a winning six off Sri Lanka’s Nuwan Kulasekara to help India beat Sri Lanka by six wickets. Meanwhile, former Indian skipper disclosed the best feeling from the ICC ODI World Cup 2011 final. interestingly, it is not match-winning six! Yes, you read it right!

In a recent conversation with host Sanjana Ganesan, and fellow guest and former Aussie batter Mike Hussey, MS Dhoni said, “The best feeling was 15-20 minutes (before the winning moment). We did not need a lot of runs, the partnership was well-placed, there was a lot of dew. And the stadium started to sing Vande Mataram. That atmosphere I feel is very difficult to recreate – maybe in this [upcoming 2023] World Cup, there is a similar scenario, once the stadium, the fans start contributing,” said Dhoni as quoted by ICC.

“You know, it is a very difficult (atmosphere) one to replicate. But it can only be replicated if the occasion is similar to that (in 2011) and there are like 40, 50 or 60,000 people who are singing.” “To me, it was not the winning moment, it was 15-20 minutes ago when emotionally I was very high. And at the same time, I wanted to get done with it. We knew that we will win this from here, and it was very difficult for us to lose. So yes, you know it was more of a sense of satisfaction, job done, let us move on from here,” concluded the former Indian captain.