Bhīṣma’s Appraisal of Pāṇḍava-Alliance Warriors (Śikhaṇḍin, Dhṛṣṭadyumna, and Allied Kings)
न तृतीयो<स्ति राजेन्द्र सेनयोरुभयोरपि । य एन॑ शरवर्षाणि वर्षन्तमुदियाद् रथी
na tṛtīyo 'sti rājendra senayor ubhayor api | ya enaṁ śaravarṣāṇi varṣantam udiyād rathī | mayā athavā droṇācāryaḥ hī dhanañjayakā samānaṁ kartuṁ śaknoti | rājendra! ubhayasenayoḥ tṛtīyo na kaścid evaṁvidho rathī, yo bāṇavarṣaṁ kurvāṇam arjunaṁ prati gantum arhati ||
Bhishma said: “O king, in either of the two armies there is no third warrior. Only I, or Drona, can truly stand against Dhananjaya as he advances, showering arrows. O lord of kings, besides us there is no chariot-fighter who can go forth to meet Arjuna when he is pouring forth that rain of shafts.”
भीष्म उवाच
The verse underscores a martial-ethical assessment: true capability must be acknowledged without envy or exaggeration. Bhīṣma frankly ranks warriors by merit, implying that dharma in counsel includes honest appraisal of strength and limits, even when it concerns an opponent.
In Udyoga Parva’s pre-war deliberations, Bhīṣma addresses the king (Duryodhana) and evaluates the battlefield reality: when Arjuna advances in full force, only Bhīṣma or Droṇa can credibly confront him; no other chariot-warrior in either army can.