Sandy Verma
Tezzbuzz|08-06-2025
Fourteen years after India lifted the 2011 ODI World Cup at a euphoric Wankhede Stadium, a golden generation of Indian cricketers has officially bowed out.
With leg-spinner Piyush Chawla announcing his retirement from all forms of the game, Virat Kohli is now the sole remaining active cricketer from that legendary 15-member squad.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel.Kohli, then a 22-year-old aggressive top-order batsman, played a crucial supporting role in India’s World Cup campaign under MS Dhoni’s captaincy. Today, he stands as the lone bridge between that iconic night in Mumbai and the present era of Indian cricket.
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The retirement of Piyush Chawla on social media brought the spotlight back on the 2011 squad — a team filled with some of the greatest names in Indian cricket history. One by one, over the past decade, the rest have stepped away:
Kohli, now 36, has since scaled incredible heights — captaining India across formats, winning multiple ICC awards, and rewriting batting records. Yet, his presence today serves as a poignant reminder of the passage of time and the fading echoes of one of Indian cricket’s most treasured triumphs.As Team India embarks on new journeys under younger leaders like Shubman Gill, Kohli’s enduring presence becomes more than just statistical — it’s symbolic. The last man standing from a team that gave one of India’s greatest cricketing glory.