The left-hander is affectionately called "Gabbar" by his Delhi teammates for his hulk like body and enormous amount of power he packs in his shots.
Normally, one finds established cricketers driving their sedans to the practice sessions but Dhawan would arrive at the Feroze Shah Kotla in his sleeveless vests and shorts riding a customised 1000cc motorbike.
One remembers, a former Delhi stalwart who had played a few ODIs for India in the early 80's stunned when Dhawan once arrived on his 'mean machine'.
"Then why didn't you buy a Mercedes?" the dumbfound ex-cricketer again asked.
More From This Section
"Woh bhi khareed lenge sir (I will buy that also sir)," a smiling Dhawan said non-challantly.
Some termed he had a casual approach, whereas others thought that he had the ability to keep things simple, Dhawan has been the topic of discussion in Delhi's cricket circle for a number of years now.
The 27-year-old Dhawan first came into limelight when he scored three centuries in the U-19 World Cup in Bangladesh way back in 2004. Some of his U-19 teammates like Suresh Raina, R P Singh, Dinesh Karthik all donned the national jersey much before and it became an agonising wait for the affable man.