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WATCH: Fans cluster around MS Dhoni’s car to get clicked

Dixit Bhargav
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Fans cluster around MS Dhoni's car

Fans cluster around MS Dhoni’s car: Recently, the Indian wicket-keeper batsman was surrounded by his fans after he came out from an event.

An opportunity to catch a glimpse of former India captain and current wicket-keeper batsman Mahendra Singh Dhoni has it in it to entice his plentiful fans to a given place. Given the stature of the veteran cricketer and his loyal fan base, one expects the place to be crowded within no time.

The same was the scenario in one of Dhoni’s recent visit to an event. When the 37-year old wicket-keeper batsman came out of the venue, fans had accumulated in a quantity that had become difficult t control for the authorities.

While some of them were contended by clicking the photos Dhoni’s car, the others seemed to be expecting the cricketer to click selfies with them.

With the first of the two T20Is to be played at Visakhapatnam on this Sunday, Dhoni is currently in India. With Dhoni named in both the T20I and ODI squad, he will have a crucial role to play in the upcoming series.

Positive start in 2018

Coming on the back of a worst year (in terms of number of runs scored) in ODIs, plentiful question marks were raised on former India captain and current wicket-keeper batsman Mahendra Singh Dhoni.

With the ICC Cricket World Cup 2019 on the horizon, the veteran cricketer’s form has undoubtedly become a concern for the Indian team management and fans.

The advent of a new year saw a change in fortunes for Dhoni, who scored three consecutive half-centuries to earn the Man of the Series award in the three-match series against Australia. In the six ODIs which Dhoni has played this year, he has scored 242 runs at an average of 121 and a strike rate of 79.86.

Watch the full video below:

About the author

Dixit Bhargav

Dixit Bhargav

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Born and brought up in Pathankot, Dixit Bhargav is an engineering and sports management graduate who works as a Cricket Editor at The SportsRush. Having written more than 10,000 articles across more than five years at TSR, his first cricketing memory dates back to 2002 when former India captain Sourav Ganguly had waved his jersey at the historic Lord’s balcony. What followed for an 8-year-old was an instant adulation for both Ganguly and the sport. The optimist in him is waiting for the day when Punjab Kings will win their maiden Indian Premier League title. When not watching cricket, he is mostly found in a cinema hall watching a Punjabi movie.

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