India, Aug. 25 -- Cheteshwar Pujara's retirement from Indian cricket marks the end of an era in many ways. First Ravichandran Ashwin, then Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, and now Pujara. The mainstays of the Indian team from the time when MS Dhoni was India's captain are calling time, and we are feeling old already. Ajinkya Rahane is the only remaining figure from that era, but his stepping down as Mumbai captain is a sign of things to come. Pujara redefined Indian cricket in more ways than one. When the great Rahul Dravid rode into the sunset, leaving a big hole in India's middle order, up stepped Pujara and became the Test team's No. 3 for 10 years. In a Test career spanning 15 years and 104 matches, Pujara became an all-time batting great, ...