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Sorry, but the captain’s apology is now part of the game

Sorry, but the captain’s apology is now part of the game

Posted on December 2, 2025 By admin


India’s stand-in captain Rishabh Pant at the toss before the start of the second Test cricket match between India and South Africa
| Photo Credit: PTI

Captains apologising for team failures is approaching the status of a cliché in the modern game. It is undoubtedly a noble gesture, this acceptance of responsibility. It is both theatre and therapy. It is good PR, and a way of restoring the bond between team and fan, a reassurance that disappointment is shared, and nobody hurts alone.

Following England’s surrender in the opening Test of the Ashes series, skipper Ben Stokes said, “I could have been a lot better as captain. I wasn’t as clear as I normally am.” In India, Rishabh Pant said after losing to South Africa, “Sorry we couldn’t live up to expectations this time… we will work hard, regroup, refocus and reset to come back stronger and better as a team and individuals.”

The captain’s apology, like the switch hit or data analysis, is an aspect of contemporary cricket. England skipper Douglas Jardine was unrepentant after the Bodyline series in 1932-33, while his fast bowler Harold Larwood was asked to apologise by his cricket board. He didn’t, saying he was following his captain’s orders (as an aside, this is an example of cricket’s class system where batters are the aristocrats and bowlers the plebeians).

It is not unusual for defeated captains and players to feel they have let down their supporters and resolve to do better the next time. This is human nature. Some articulate their thoughts, others save them for their memoir, where time and ghostwriters allow them to settle on a happy choice of words.

Get it right

Nothing is permanent in sport. Not form or fortune, or indeed public affection. A captain who apologises too often becomes a caricature. One who refuses to apologise at all becomes a villain, while one who apologises just enough is mythologised for taking responsibility. Captains have to get the ‘just enough’ right.

The more frequently captains apologise, however, the less we expect them to actually mean it. We subject the apology to the kind of analysis otherwise reserved for the captain’s footwork at the crease or his delivery stride. Was the tone suitably sombre? Did the captain place the burden of failure on his own shoulders while subtly suggesting that the bowlers might want to learn where the stumps are or the batters where their feet ought to be?

Will the apology soon become performative art, like those interviews where bowlers say profound things like putting the ball in the right areas? A few more apologising captains and we will get there, even if most fans can sniff out a merely ritual apology.

Do apologies actually change anything? The fan is usually willing to meet a captain halfway and forgive him. After all, anything else would be churlish. But in recent years, the apology is slipping from admission to routine, from candour to necessity. That’s not to say captains don’t feel bad or responsible after a defeat. Of course they do. And sometimes they break down publicly (most famously the Australian captain Kim Hughes before he announced his retirement in the middle of a series), or more often privately in the dressing room or at home.

Cultural housekeeping

Every captain who, after a defeat, apologises on television or in newspaper interviews or on social media (like Pant) is not speaking just to the present. Past collapses, overheated expectations, and a fan culture that swings between devotion and outrage are all rolled into what he says. Here, the apology is less an expression of personal guilt and more an act of cultural housekeeping — clearing the emotional debris so that everyone can move on to the next match without drowning in unresolved disappointment.

In the end, the apology is neither a moral requirement nor a PR necessity. It is simply the price of leadership in a world that craves certainty, that wants someone to take responsibility in sport because there is so little happening elsewhere in politics or business. Sport is always making up for what we lack in real life. The team may fail together, but the captain must fall alone.

It is lonely at the top, and gets lonelier when this happens. The captain needs to know that fans won’t turn away. An apology then is the bridge to empathy and reconnection.

Published – December 03, 2025 12:40 am IST



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