None of this bodes well for Singh who now not only has to accept his bête noir as the new face of the party in the state but also his diminishing grip over several party colleagues who, till very recently, lined up before him to pledge fealty. For Singh, who will turn 80 years old by the time Punjab goes to polls in March next year, accepting Sidhu as the new Captain of the team will certainly be a bitter pill to swallow. For over two decades, particularly from 1999 onwards, he has straddled Punjab’s politics as the Congress’s tallest leader. Those who have known him as a politician vouch for Singh’s combative leadership style that often rubs many, including his own party colleagues, the wrong way and as a no-nonsense, unyielding, and often autocratic satrap. For him to walk into the sunset without putting up one last fight to ensure that his legacy isn’t trampled over by a cricketer-turned-politician who joined the Congress less than five years ago, goes against everything that Singh has stood for, despite his public declarations of accepting the high command’s diktats.