Mark Wood expects return to peak fitness by the time cricket resumes

Seamer says, ‘I don’t feel like it would take me that long,’ to be back to best after enforced layoff

Alan Gardner07-May-2020Mark Wood knows plenty about enforced breaks from cricket. Since his England debut in May 2015, he has played 15 out of 69 Tests for England, alongside 59 limited-overs internationals from a total of 145. In that time, he has helped win an Ashes series, claimed a World Cup-winners medal and bowled some of the fastest spells by an Englishman, so it’s understandable that people have been left wanting more.Injuries have been woven into the fabric of Wood’s international career, but they have not managed to take the edge off his bowling or his eagerness to get back into the fray. With the sporting world, and normal life in general, in abeyance due to the coronavirus, Wood has been able to quietly work his way back to fitness from a side strain sustained in South Africa earlier this year, as well as enjoy some of the benefits of fatherhood after the birth of his son in October.Extended time with the family is a rare luxury for most England cricketers, but Wood and his team-mates may soon have to contemplate being away from home for a two-month stretch during summer – something Wood has said he would be willing to do – if ECB plans to host series against West Indies and Pakistan come to fruition. At which point attention will turn once again to fitness, and the rather more unusual demands of returning to full-tilt competition after more than six weeks in lockdown.ALSO READ: If the game is compromised, then it shouldn’t be going ahead – Joe Root”I don’t feel like it would take me that long,” Wood says. “I’ve managed to maintain a level of fitness, I’ve got a bike in the house, I’ve been doing some running and I have weights in the garage. I’ve been trying to tick over and trying to strengthen the area in my side – I hope the time off has helped that – and then it’s a little bit of build-up back into bowling.”I’m not saying I’m quite a Jimmy Anderson, who gets into his groove nice and easy and seems just to be at the top of his game like a magician. He seems to just rock up and hit the top of off stump. I’m not quite like that but, having had these experiences, where I’ve had long periods off and come back determined to be better I’m confident I can do that again.”After playing a starring role in England’s comeback in South Africa, bowling consistently above 90mph in back-to-back Test wins in Port Elizabeth and Johannesburg – where he claimed career-best match figures of 9 for 100 – Wood suffered a recurrence of the side strain sustained during last year’s World Cup final. He was subsequently ruled out of the tour to Sri Lanka, which was aborted in mid-March as the coronavirus pandemic escalated.

“We’d all hate to bring things back to families, to cameramen or people working at the ground, the management. It’s important everyone is safe.”Mark Wood

Wood has spent his time in lockdown changing nappies and introducing son Harry to , as well as showing a knack for lip-synching in TikTok videos with his wife Sarah. Always quick to lighten the mood – as he did on debut when riding his imaginary horse on the outfield at Lord’s – Wood has been encouraged to see himself as England’s “smiling assassin” by coach Chris Silverwood, as he competes with the likes of Jofra Archer and Olly Stone to add extra pace to the attack.”The philosophy of Chris Silverwood, trying to have fun and enjoying it, I think brings out the best in me,” he says. “I’ve enjoyed it with ‘Spoons’, where he’s basically told me to go out there and try and have as much fun as I can, play with a smile on my face, be that smiling assassin when I’m bowling. I really enjoy having that sort of relaxed atmosphere. Having that rotation in the squad, having Stoney and Jofra as friendly competition where we can all push each other as fast bowlers I think is good for the team and certainly good for me.”It’s something I spoke about when I went away with the Lions [in 2018] with Kevin Shine, my cricket had sort of stood still for a little bit. He said ‘When I first saw you this is what you were like’, and I had a meeting with Spoons about it and he summed it up perfectly. He said, ‘I want you to be a smiling assassin’, and since then that’s stuck in my mind. It’s something I think fits well.”Mark Wood is used to time out of the game and returning better than ever•Getty ImagesThere are currently more weighty issues to be dealing with, as the ECB tries to plot a route through the summer that will involve playing international cricket behind closed doors – but Wood said the players were willing to put their trust in Ashley Giles, the managing director of England men’s cricket, and chief medical officer, Nick Peirce.”We’re all willing to get going as long as the environment is safe, that’s the main thing,” Wood said. “We’d all hate to bring things back to families, to cameramen or people working at the ground, the management. It’s important everyone is safe. I know everybody’s desperate to get going but the bigger picture is still what’s going on on the frontline with key workers, the doctors, people like that. We’re desperate to get cricket up and going but at the moment there’s bigger things out there.”Time away from the game has allowed an appreciation of those “bigger things”, though Wood laughs at the irony of being fully fit only for a global shutdown to deprive him of further playing opportunities.”I’m going to get injured aren’t I? A week after all this has ended I’m bound to get injured. First net my ankle’s gone. Nobody saw this happening after we came back from South Africa but from my own point of view it’s been nice to spend some time with my son and seeing him develop, having a bit of time with him. I’ve mentally enjoyed not thinking about cricket and diving into family life with him. Then as soon as cricket starts again I’ll dive back mentally into that.”

Australians at the IPL, week two – Smith v Cummins, Pattinson v Finch and Watson finds form

There have been some lively head-to-heads over the past week in the IPL

Andrew McGlashan05-Oct-20202:36

What ails Glenn Maxwell at the IPL?

Team-mate battlesThere were a couple of full-throttle head-to-heads between Australia (and state) colleagues this week. First of all limited-overs captain Aaron Finch went up against James Pattinson when Royal Challengers Bangalore played the Mumbai Indians. Finch’s final tally of 52 off 35 doesn’t quite tell the story of his two-over duel with Pattinson, who struck Finch a painful blow in the box, edging over slip and almost finding fielders three times.A couple of days later there was another compelling (if brief) confrontation between Steven Smith and Pat Cummins. Smith, who started the tournament with back-to-back half-centuries, was worked over in the space of five balls: he defended the first, was beaten by the next two, played an ugly swipe over mid-off and then nicked a wild heave to leg. Cummins would go on to bowl three consecutive Powerplay overs for just 13 runs – a key part in Kolkata Knight Riders’ big win.

Pattinson keeps chipping inThe pace bowler is building up a very solid IPL campaign. While his eventual figures of 0 for 51 against RCB were his second-most expensive in T20, he bounced back with a brace of important performances to help Mumbai Indians sit top of the table after wins against Kings XI Punjab and Sunrisers Hyderabad. In the first of those matches he took 2 for 28 including the key scalp of Nicholas Pooran who was Kings XI’s last chance of salvaging the match. Then against the Sunrisers he removed Australia team-mate David Warner to end any hopes of the target being chased down. After five matches Pattison was among the second group of leading wicket-takers with seven scalps – the fact his team-mates, Jasprit Bumrah and Trent Boult, have seven and eight respectively a key reason for Mumbai’s strong position.Aaron Finch goes down after taking a blow from James Pattinson•BCCIMaxwell struggles to get goingGlenn Maxwell came into the IPL having played one of the finest innings, the century that helped seal the ODI series against England. However, he hasn’t quite been able to kick his tournament into gear yet. He came under scrutiny this week for his innings of 11 off 18 balls against Mumbai Indians when chasing 192. It’s worth noting he came in with the chase in a difficult spot at 60 for 3 in the eighth over, but when he departed in the 15th the asking rate had blown out to 17 an over. Overall, his IPL batting average of 22.46 is considerably down on his career number of 27.16, although the strike-rate is actually up a fraction at 157.84 compared to 153.34Watson helps CSK back on trackShane Watson has an outstanding IPL record – he is the fourth-leading run-scorer among overseas batsmen behind Warner, AB de Villiers and Chris Gayle – but after a quiet start to this edition, and Chennai Super Kings’ overall struggles, there were rumblings about whether he remained the right man to open the batting. That was put to bed, at least for now, with a thumping 83 off 53 against the underperforming Kings XI as part of an unbroken opening stand of 181 with Faf du Plessis – just four short of the IPL record opening partnership of 185.

Around the teamsWith Dwayne Bravo being fit again for CSK, Josh Hazlewood lost his place in the starting line-up. Adam Zampa was brought into the RCB side and was given a tough start with 1 for 53 against Mumbai Indians (although RCB prevailed in the super over) and was part of another victory against the Royals. Marcus Stoinis hasn’t been able to recapture the impact he had on the opening game for the Delhi Capitals.Warming the benchAlex Carey, Nathan Coulter-Nile, Chris Green, Daniel Sams, AJ Tye and Chris Lynn continue to be in the dugout for their franchises.Performance of the weekFor his two consistent back-to-back displays to put Mumbai top of the table, it’s James Pattinson. Albeit used in a different way, he’s doing a fine job of filling the shoes of Lasith Malinga

Which bowlers do you use to attack MS Dhoni in a tight chase?

MS Dhoni comes in with CSK needing 40 off four overs. Which bowlers try to defend your team’s score?

ESPNcricinfo staff25-Sep-2020Hot SeatScenario: You are captaining a team against the Chennai Super Kings. Chasing 170, they are 130 for 3 after 16 overs, and MS Dhoni has just walked in. At the other end is Ambati Rayudu. You can pick three bowlers from any one IPL team to bowl the last four overs (one has to bowl two). Whom do you pick and what order do you bowl them in?Shashank Kishore:
Dhoni takes his time against spin early on, particularly legspin and left-arm spin. So I’ll slip in a quick over from Axar in the 17th. Over the years, Patel has learnt to slow it down nicely, varying his lengths better and getting the ball to dip because of his height. So I’ll back him to concede only four or five runs. Then I’ll go for Rabada to deliver the 18th and 20th. This leaves me with one over in the middle. Anrich Nortje is still an IPL rookie, so I don’t want to put him under immense pressure. I’ve held R Ashwin back to bowl one at the end. Not only is he capable of control, he’ll also keep Rayudu on his toes and prevent him from backing up early at the non-striker’s end.Gaurav Sundararaman:
Dhoni has never scored a boundary off Narine in the history of the IPL. He struggles to get him away, so I will give Narine two overs. Forty from four overs is not a tough ask, but the two overs from Narine will possibly only go for a maximum of 12 runs, as Dhoni will look to target the other bowlers. Ferguson and Cummins, with their 140kph-plus deliveries, have a good chance to negate Rayudu and Dhoni and defend the remaining 28 needed from two overs. Narine will bowl overs 17 and 19, Feguson will bowl over 18, and Cummins the last over.Matt Roller:
There’s no question that I’m going for Mumbai Indians, given Bumrah’s record against Dhoni. Since the start of the 2017 IPL, Bumrah has bowled 44 balls to him, conceded 39, and dismissed him twice. So Bumrah bowls the 18th and 20th. I don’t love Mumbai’s other death-bowling options – they have used Trent Boult and James Pattinson there this season – but they are still the team to pick. I’ll sneak in an over of Pandya early: it would be uncharacteristic for Dhoni to attempt to hit early boundaries against a left-arm spinner. Also, Pandya dismissed Rayudu in both 2018 and 2019. I expect them to attack whoever bowls the 19th, knowing scoring options are scarce off Bumrah, and McClenaghan thrives when he feels like he has been written off. Depending on the pitch, he can either attempt yorkers from around the wicket or bowl back of a length with changes of pace from over the wicket.Sheldon Cottrell can trouble the two batsmen with his left-arm angle and his height•BCCIHimanshu Agrawal:
Assuming Rayudu has batted for at least a few overs, he is in a better position than Dhoni to attempt the big hits. Knowing Dhoni, he will be happy to let Rayudu go for the boundaries while he takes singles. To defend ten an over, you need a subtle mix of slower balls, cutters and yorkers. And the Kings XI’s seamers can provide that mix. Jordan, perhaps the most underrated death bowler presently, brings sharp pace, variations and pinpoint yorkers. I will back him to bowl the 17th and 19th overs. Shami is a skiddy bowler who can exploit Dhoni’s weakness against quick short balls. Since 2018, Dhoni has scored only 24 runs off 18 short balls bowled by right-arm fast bowlers that arrive within the stumps. While Shami can leak runs, he has taken 16 wickets at the death since 2018 at an average of just 16.06. He will bowl the 18th over, leaving the 20th for Cottrell, who can use his height, left-arm angle and scrambled seam to restrict the batsmen. Hopefully, he will have 12 or more runs to defend.Sreshth Shah:
I’d have Pandya bowl the 17th over, with protection at deep point, deep extra cover and long-off. Rayudu has scored only 28 runs in 25 balls against Pandya, and Dhoni 17 in 19. There is a risk of a left-hander such as Sam Curran or Ravindra Jadeja coming in next if Pandya gets a wicket, but it’s best to live in the present. Bumrah comes in for the 18th, and for him, the field will be packed on the leg side, and third man and fine leg will be on the boundary line. I’d ask him to bowl those hard lengths that come zipping into the body, so that both batsmen are forced to use the horizontal bat. The 19th is the trickiest over, and I’ll entrust it to Boult. He’d have protection all through the leg side again. Boult should go for the yorkers tailing back into the right-hander, and hopefully not offer any full tosses. If he throws in a bouncer or two, both batsmen will not be waiting to get on the front foot during his delivery stride.

Vikram Rathour, India's batting coach: 'Failure teaches you that nothing stops. That liberates you, actually'

Ahead of the England series, Rathour talks about getting the most out of a player’s natural game, and looks back at the Australia series

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi04-Feb-20215:25

Vikram Rathour: ‘Pant doesn’t think that he’s done something special’

When 36 all out happened, Vikram Rathour, India’s batting coach, did not go into hiding. If anything, the former India opener and national selector, saw it as freeing. In this interview, conducted during India’s six-day quarantine ahead of the England Test series, he goes into detail about his philosophy, particularly the importance of imbuing a better sense of match situations in his senior batsmen while not hampering their natural styles of play.You took over from Sanjay Bangar in September 2019. Back then what were the challenges you thought you would need to work on?
At that point the middle order was not really settled in the shorter format, especially. We were still looking for somebody to establish themselves. When I came in, Shreyas Iyer and Manish Pandey were the guys who had just gotten into the team and were still looking to establish themselves.[Back then] touring abroad, travelling to the SENA [South Africa, England, New Zealand, Australia] countries, traditionally we hadn’t done that well as a batting unit, so that was one area of concern.Also, openers when we are travelling. And even the tail, the late-order batting, was a concern, and still is an area we can work on and improve in.You have had two overseas tours since then – New Zealand and Australia – with contrasting results. From the batting unit’s perspective, what was the key difference between the two?
New Zealand was challenging conditions again. The ball seams a lot, a lot of grass on the wicket. That being my first [overseas] tour, my analysis [in hindsight] was that there was a lot of talk – this is what to expect, this is where the ball is going to be, this is what the New Zealand bowling attack will be looking to bowl at. But I don’t think we really prepared that well – there was hardly any time to actually practise those things. So that is where this Australian tour was a little different.

“Data is something that gives you some information, but how you read it, what you want to share with the batsmen, that is a completely different question”

The lockdown [in 2020] gave me time to prepare really well. We had a lot of discussions during the lockdown period, where we went through the areas we expected the Australian bowling unit to be bowling at us, how we have done in the past few series, what to expect this series, so we wanted to start practising for that [right away] rather than in Australia. We did really prepare better for this tour.How big are you on data?
This is something I’m getting used to. In our time, there was hardly any data provided. I did a bit of coaching, [then] became a selector, and there again, there were numbers we were dealing with, but not looking at real data.I’ve bought into it. I am spending quite a lot of time with my analyst, looking at various things. But data is something that gives you some information. How you read it, what you want to share with the batsmen, that is a completely different question. So you really need to learn what to take out of it, the information it is providing you.Related

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So where has data helped you? Let’s take the example of the batsmen on one of the tours.
When we looked at the numbers, or the way we have batted in the past couple of series in Australia, how Virat [Kohli] or Ajinkya [Rahane] or [Cheteshwar] Pujara have scored their runs, I was pretty certain that if this is what the [Australian] bowling unit is also looking at, they would not give us too much room outside off stump because most of our runs were scored square of the wicket.So that was the question put to the batsmen: if this is what a bowler is looking at, what are the areas they’ll be looking to bowl? They’ll be coming straighter, they’ll be coming with tighter lines, with straighter fields. And if that is what they’re doing, how are you going to deal with it? That is where data was pretty useful. Because that is exactly what happened this series – we hardly got anything outside off stump.And we were better prepared for that. Somebody like Pujara, he knew after our discussions that they were going to come in to him, bowl the short ball maybe into his body. And that is what he was preparing for.Rathour (right) took over as India batting coach in 2019•PTI Do you now feel after the Australia series that you have this familiarity with the batting unit, that they understand where you’re coming from and your approach?
Fortunately, I was a [national] selector before this. So I knew all of the guys, I had spent time with them. Once you become a batting coach, again you still have to understand the batsman – everybody reacts differently, everybody wants similar information, you have to give it to them differently. Everybody is expected to deal with that information differently. So that is what you need to learn. But, yeah, I’m more settled now.When you become a coach, the aspect you start focusing on is more tactical and technical: where their head is, where their feet are, how they are moving, how they are responding to different situations.Asking a lot of questions – if a certain shot was played, why they played that shot, what were they thinking when they played that shot, and trying to understand their mindset while they were doing that, whether they have done well or done poorly. So just trying to understand their mindset and their game plans.Let’s talk about Rohit Sharma’s stroke in the Sydney Test, which generated debate. He did not regret that pull shot; that is one of his signature shots, which comes naturally to him. When you sat down with him, talking about the stroke, can you tell us what you two discussed?
He played two shots, actually, which were discussed: one was the pull shot and the other one was against Nathan Lyon, where he got caught at long-on. You are right, that these are the shots he plays, and he plays them pretty well, so as a coach you want him to back his strengths. The only discussion I had with him was that having a strength is a great thing, but knowing when to use it [is equally important]: what the situation of the team is, what the bowlers are trying at that moment. So your game plan is different from your strength. I was okay with his pull shot, to be very specific, because that’s a shot he plays with instinct and plays really well.The other shot he played against Lyon, the discussion we had was that he picked maybe the wrong ball. So he wanted to go over the top – I’m okay with that because he plays that shot really well again, but Lyon, the moment [Rohit] stepped out, he bowled the ball into his body. He didn’t give him room to free his arms. So that is the time as a batsman you need to be more specific.

“If your mindset is clear, if you keep making the right decisions, picking the right balls, you can still score runs. And those things are more important at this level than only technique”

Cricket is a premeditating sport, where you plan “this is what I’m going to do if a certain bowler bowls there.” But then be specific with that: that I’ll go over the top only if the ball is in this area. In case he pulls it into you or into your body, you should still be ready as a batsman to just block it or play it along the ground. So that’s the only discussion I had with him.So like the pull shot, if it’s below your shoulder, I’m okay with you going for that pull shot and trying to keep it down. But the moment it goes higher, you need to be able to get out of it. On certain days the shot will be on, but you’ll execute it poorly and still get out, which you should be okay with.Can you talk about this with an example?
I’ll give you an example: like Rishabh Pant in the first innings of the Brisbane Test. He got out playing a cut shot, which he was trying to keep down and got caught at gully. So there could be criticism for that shot, but I thought it was on because [Australia] didn’t have a deep third man at that point. And Rishabh is somebody who plays his shots. That’s his game. We want him to play shots.He is somebody who is looking for runs all the time. At that time, I thought the execution was poor. He should have looked to play it over the slips and slash it hard so that it would have gone to the third man. Otherwise, I thought the idea of playing that shot was correct. That was a ball that was wide and short, but he tried to keep it down and that’s the reason it went to the gully fielder. So the discussion [with him] was that the shot was on, but maybe you could have gone over the slips, rather than trying to keep it down.What about Ajinkya Rahane in the second innings?
I have always believed that batting is about scoring runs. So you should be looking to score runs at all times. But again, what shots are on? Is there a need to play that shot? And I think he himself realised that maybe he picked the wrong ball to play that shot – it was too close to him. So these are the things that you need to learn as a batsman and you need to keep working on.”Your game plan is different from your strength. I was okay with Rohit’s pull shot, because that’s a shot he plays with instinct and plays really well”•Getty ImagesIs temperament more important than technique in Test cricket?
Any day. Temperament combined with game plans. Technique is an important aspect, but a lot of people give it too much importance. They put everything on technique, which I don’t believe in. Cricket is about handling pressure, making the right decisions, picking the right balls to play your shots, which are the bowlers you can score against, what are the areas, where are your singles, where are your boundaries… All of this comes under game plans and tactics.Technique is important, yes. But again, if you can keep the other aspects of your batting very clear, if your mindset is clear, if you keep making the right decisions, keep picking the right balls, you can still score runs. And those are the things that are more important at this level than only technique.It feels like India changed in terms of temperament in this series in Australia, where they came close in Sydney and then successfully chased 300-plus in Brisbane. Whereas in 2018, virtually the same batting unit failed to chase 194 at Edgbaston and 245 in Southampton.
Keeping it simple, that’s what we’ve tried in this series: playing sessions not looking to win, not looking at the results. I mean, all the coaches keep talking about focusing on process and not on results. All the talk throughout, after being 36 all out [in Adelaide], or after winning the Test [in Melbourne] was only on building up partnerships, playing the sessions well, looking to score runs without taking too many risks. The message going out all the time was, let’s not worry about results, results will take care of themselves if we keep batting and doing things correctly.Did you have to go into hiding after 36 all out?
Not really. It was disappointing. I really believe that we prepared well for the series. And then that came as a shocker, actually. You couldn’t really explain what happened. And it happened so quickly, there was hardly any time to reflect on what was happening. Even after looking at it, how the wickets fell, you couldn’t really find any faults – there were hardly any bad shots, there was no loose cricket, there was hardly any tentativeness. You just kept getting out. So again, the discussion was don’t worry, don’t let the doubts creep in at this stage. We’ve done well, we prepared well. So keep backing that preparation and better your methods, your techniques and your game plans. And hopefully, things will improve. And they did.

“Ultimately it boils down to you handling pressure, making the right decisions in the middle. And that has nothing to do with what you see on the screen. That’s all inside you”

Virat Kohli said in his post-match comments that possibly the only thing he thought could have changed would be intent. How do you define intent in that context and in general?
This is the discussion I had with Virat as well, where he felt the intent could have been better, but the point was that everybody got out playing five, seven, nine balls, so there was hardly time to show any intent actually (). You were just looking to get set, which is the way it should be, but people just kept getting out. We were not really tentative. We just got out.For me, intent is what you are looking to do on that specific day. Intent for batting should always be looking to score runs. But while scoring those runs, if somebody is bowling a good spell, if the ball is swinging, you should be able to defend, you should be able to leave those balls. Looking to score runs is the intent, but then defending is also intent.Like what Puji [Pujara] did in Brisbane – there was a lot of intent behind that. He was letting the ball hit him and not looking to poke at it, so that he doesn’t edge, it doesn’t hit the gloves and go up.Tell us a bit about Prithvi Shaw. An opener who is as talented as his former Under-19 partner Shubman Gill.
Without a doubt he [Shaw] is one of the more talented guys that we have in our team. There was a lot of talk about his technique and all that stuff. But my discussions with him were to bat more, train harder. Keep backing that and keep enjoying cricket, don’t overthink. You have to understand, at that age – he is what, 21 or 22? – he just had one poor game actually, and after that he hasn’t played.Keep backing your ability, keep backing your strengths. He’s a strokeplayer, so never to have any doubts or second thoughts about that. That is how he plays. There are a few things he needs to work on in a technical aspect as well, so he has been suggested those changes and he has been working on them. Hopefully when he comes back, he’ll come back a better player.Everyone from Ricky Ponting to Sunil Gavaskar dissected his technique, from his trigger movement to his bat coming across. Are those part of the technical elements you are working on with Shaw?
There was a lot of talk of him playing the ball away from the body. With him, the feet were not coming along. So he was stationary and the bat was going away towards the ball. The thing he needs to do is to move his feet as well: they need to be next to the ball, closer to the ball. That’s the only suggestion I’ve given him. For me, his initial [trigger movement] was a little late, so he was still halfway through it when the ball was delivered. And that was the reason he was getting late on the ball. He needs to do his initial movement a little early, so that his final movement is done in time. And he was doing that in nets and he was looking much better.”Even after looking at how the wickets fell, you couldn’t really find any faults – there were hardly any bad shots, no loose cricket. You just kept getting out”•Getty ImagesAfter India lost the series in England in 2018, Sanjay Manjrekar wrote that Indian selectors can look at playing batsmen at home whom they feel have the talent to perform overseas. Do you agree?
It is a tough one, because I’ve been part of the selection panel. How do you know what will work and what won’t? It is not that easy to assess. The way Prithvi Shaw was batting, at one point he looked like scoring runs everywhere. The way Mayank [Agarwal] has batted – how do you know that [his game] won’t work on overseas tours? Because people with different kinds of techniques or unorthodox [players] have still gone on and scored runs everywhere. Ultimately it boils down to you handling pressure, making the right decisions in the middle. And that has nothing to do with what you see on the screen. That’s all inside you – how you’re dealing with pressure or what decisions you are making, what balls to pick. What we see on television, or in front of us, is basically just the technical part. So to base your decision on that, that this guy will score runs abroad, is a little tough.Let us talk about Gill. Would you say clarity of thought is his biggest asset?
Yes, I believe that. He is extremely, extremely clear with what he wants, how he wants to do it. And that’s very unique for somebody at his age [21]. I saw him the first time when I was coaching Himachal Pradesh. We played a game against Punjab in the Vijay Hazare Trophy in Alur [Bengaluru], and he scored a hundred in that game. You could see and know that this guy is special.In the nets also he looks different, he looks extremely assured. Very comfortable against pace, against short balls.Talking to him, you know he has a very calm head, is very clear with what he wants, how he prepares, that he has the game. So it was just about when we could give him an opportunity to get into the team. He might have played in Dharamsala against South Africa [in 2020], to be honest, but it was rained off. And after that this Covid thing happened. We were a little worried about him actually, that this was the opportunity where he might have played. And once we come back and if, say, Rohit and Shikhar [Dhawan] and KL [Rahul] are there and Mayank is doing well, there was a chance he might not get an opportunity to play, but fortunately for him, he did get that opportunity and he has grabbed it.

“Mentally, the batsmen are ready now [for England]. They have started visualising, they have started planning their game, how to stand if the ball is going to reverse, which are the areas to score”

What have you spoken about with Pant?
It has just been on his game plans. That’s the only area he needs to work on or get better at. He is an extremely intelligent guy, who knows everything, who is street smart, who understands his game, what the bowlers are trying to do. The only discussions I have been having with him, and the area I still believe he can get even better at, is shot selection – the right balls that he needs to pick to play those shots.He’s a strokeplayer, we all know that. We want him to play shots. We want him to do what he does. What I was talking about earlier, about Rohit also, having a strength or having a method of playing, doesn’t mean that you have to play it every time. You still need to pick the right shot for that moment, looking at the opposition, looking at the conditions, looking at the situation the team is in. And in this series, Pant did that well.I’m just reminding him all the time that the previous two good innings that he played, he played 30, 35 balls with six, seven runs on the board: you got set first and then you went on to play your shots. So he just needs to remember this method. We want him to play shots.We saw you hug Pant tight after the Gabba win. Can you talk about what you told him then?
It was just, “Well played, boss.” He really, really played well and won the game for the team. So it was a job well done.And that’s the kind of batsman we want Rishabh Pant to be: somebody who takes the bowling on and puts pressure on the bowling side. And while doing that, of course, there’ll be some mistakes made, but as long as he is trying to learn from them, we are all happy.What did he tell you? What does he want to improve on?
At the time, nothing, but otherwise he is a very [carefree] kind of a character. I had a chat with him today and I was asking him how it has been since he has come back after winning the series for the team. And he is saying, “Has anything changed? Not really.” He doesn’t believe that he has done anything special. This is how he plays and this is what he should be doing. As far as improvements are concerned as a batsman, he wants to become a finisher for India in all formats.”That’s the kind of batsman we want Rishabh Pant to be: somebody who takes the bowling on and puts pressure on the bowling side”•Associated PressOne thing you have noted elsewhere is how you want the Indian tail to become consistent and stronger. The partnership between Washington Sundar and Shardul Thakur, where they played time and scored runs in the first innings at the Gabba is a good example. Ravi Shastri said it broke Australia’s back and put India in command. What have you been focusing on with the lower order?
I felt that in the past couple of series the tailenders had done pretty poorly against Australia in Australia. It is not easy, to be honest, the kind of bowling they faced is not easy: three bowlers bowling 140-plus and short at you. The only thing I discussed with them is to try and spend more time, don’t look to throw your wicket, don’t look to play crazy shots and get out. After that discussion I could see the change in the attitude. The more practice you give them, the more comfortable they feel in the middle. That again is one area we still need to keep working on. The focus will then be on handling short balls.How important is that Hardik Pandya start bowling?
If he starts bowling, he will get into the team. The team requires him to bowl, especially when we are touring. I am talking about even in Test cricket – if he starts bowling, that will be extremely useful. In the past few months he has shown how much he is improving as a batsman. He has done really well as a batsman in ODIs and T20s. He is somebody, again, who is capable of winning you a Test match, in any situation, against any bowling attack. You need those kind of match-winners in your team.What is your aim during the England series?
This is an important series. We are playing against a really good team, which has done well in Sri Lanka, they have already shown that. As the batting unit, the change [for India] will be playing spin bowling a lot more and maybe dealing with reverse swing a lot more. These will be two areas of focus in whatever practice [time] we have. Unfortunately, we don’t have enough time and will be only getting three days of practice before the first Test.Preparation remains the key. I have already had this discussion [with the batsmen] so mentally they are ready now, they have started visualising, they have started planning their game, how to stand if the ball is going to reverse, which are the areas to score. That is important. If they start thinking now, it still gives you time to be ready before the game starts.Was it good for you that 36 all out came early in your career as batting coach?
Yeah, I know. I was joking with Ashwin also, that that was done deliberately to build the series up. After that everything felt better. Because you keep worrying what if this happens, what if that happens. So failures, at times, teach you that nothing stops. Even after getting 36 all out, life did not stop, we did not stop laughing. The next night we had a team dinner, a lot of laughter, a lot of fun. That liberates you a little actually. You know that you can’t get worse and you have handled it pretty well. Whatever happens, you can deal with it.

Azhar Ali and Mohammad Rizwan exemplify Pakistan's transformed outlook

They lost most of their top order cheaply, much like in the first Test, but this time they did not retreat into their cocoons

Danyal Rasool03-Jan-2021At Bay Oval last week, Pakistan spent 102 and 123 overs at the crease in their two innings. They barely lasted until the second new ball here in Christchurch, and yet this might just be Pakistan’s most satisfying day with the bat away from home for the best part of two years.New Zealand might have won the toss and chipped their way right down to the lower middle order as early as lunch, just as they did at Bay Oval. They may have struck with the new ball, removed the openers cheaply and effected a mini-collapse, as was the case in the first Test. And New Zealand’s big-name, in-form batsmen are yet to get their go on a surface that’s a bit more playful than the one in Mount Maunganui.

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However, Pakistan’s contentment will stem not just from the reasonably competitive position they close the day out on, but from how effectively they executed a vastly different approach to the one they took last week. There appeared to be acceptance for the somewhat radical idea that time at the crease against New Zealand’s greatest-ever bowling attack – though they were without Neil Wagner here – invariably comes with a death sentence. Having come to terms with that, the visitors decided a slightly shorter life expectancy was a reasonable price to pay for more runs on the board.Committing to that approach in theory is one thing, but actually going out and doing it? Misbah-ul-Haq’s Pakistan have not developed a reputation of caution over abandon for nothing. Today, however, even when Tim Southee trapped Shan Masood in front early on – the doomed review providing an extremely brief stay of execution – Pakistan did not retreat to the comfort of their cocoons. A quicker pitch, where the ball came onto the bat much better than it did at Mount Maunganui, contributed to their scoring rate, but there was also more urgency and opportunism about Pakistan’s batting.Azhar Ali is a man whose need for runs was so exigent Pakistan took the captaincy off him while he continues that quest, and one not especially known for flamboyance. Up against a bowling attack in the form of their lives, though, Azhar resolved to keep an eye out for opportunities to keep the scoring rate ticking. It was an innings that personified modern, positive Test-match batting, with barely a false shot even as Pakistan began to push the run rate up to four an over post-lunch.The dangerously probing seaming deliveries that hovered around off stump still received the respect they deserved, but like a boxer looking to make every moment count, Azhar got in a jab of his own every time New Zealand dropped their guard. When they went full, according to ESPNcricinfo’s data, Azhar scored 17 off 20. The two full-tosses he was presented with were duly put away for fours. When the lines were straighter – on the stumps or straying down leg – he scored 40 off 60.And even when the hosts were on the money, as they were for much of the day, he took care to play behind the wicket with soft hands, which meant the ball didn’t carry to the slips, often finding a gap through which to run along into the vacant third-man area.Mohammad Rizwan has now made five successive half-centuries in Test cricket•AFP via Getty ImagesIt wasn’t just Azhar, of course, though his innings and the bold approach he brought to it was likely the difference between a sub-200 total and the 297 they ended up with. Mohammad Rizwan finds himself in the sort of purple patch that comes around once a career if you’re lucky enough, so why wouldn’t you look to ride your luck in it? He wasn’t in the business of respecting length deliveries in the corridor outside off (20 off 19) or fuller ones on the same line (11 off 9). Granted, not all those runs came the precise way Rizwan had been intending, but having begun when Pakistan were stuttering at 83 for 4, his counter-punching knock tempered the spring in New Zealand’s step after lunch.It is time, too, to pay Rizwan his dues now. Never mind fighting off competition for the wicketkeeping gloves, the 28-year-old is at present the best batsman in the side on form. His 71-ball 61 was his fifth successive half-century, and sixth overall; all of them have come in either Australia, England or New Zealand. Moreover, each of the five half-centuries has come when his side has sorely required it, with Pakistan 120 for 5, 75 for 5, 52 for 5, 75 for 4 and now 83 for 4 when he walked in. All this, remember, from someone viewed more as a lower-order contributor than a specialist batsman.In the middle session, when New Zealand, spearheaded by an at times unplayable Kyle Jamieson, were at their most menacing, the visitors scored 130 at nearly four-and-a-half runs an over, and lost just the one wicket in that time. Rizwan set the tone by smashing Trent Boult for 14 in an over, with an additional four leg byes adding to the left-arm quick’s frustrations. When Azhar finally nicked off to Matt Henry – Wagner’s replacement bowled well enough to deserve more than the one scalp – he was seven runs from a hundred in the 63rd over of the innings. At Bay Oval, Pakistan’s score in the first innings at the same stage was 89 for 6.For a Test side further along in its development than Pakistan, adapting from an approach that didn’t work might simply be seen as routine tinkering. But in Pakistan, such shifts can be seismic.New Zealand perhaps still went in at stumps slightly the happier side, but for the tragics who stayed up through the night in Pakistan fearing another 20th-century tribute act, the outbreak of progressive modernity will have been as welcome as it was unexpected.

Nervousness, goosebumps, a dream – Keegan Petersen ready for Test debut

Test captain Dean Elgar singled out the middle-order batter as a player to watch out for ahead of the West Indies Tests

Firdose Moonda07-Jun-2021Finally, South Africa have their KP.No, not the opinionated one with funky hairstyles but someone with the same two initials. Keegan Petersen is also a batter, a self-confessed bringer of “banter, on and off the field” and is set to make his debut on Thursday against West Indies as South Africa play their first series of another new era. He’ll bat in the top five, wants to score runs and rib both his team-mates and the opposition in the future.”I like to believe I am an energetic, positive-energy type of person,” Petersen said, just before the team departed for the Caribbean. “I don’t take things seriously, in a good way. I find a joke in everything and I lighten the mood so hopefully, it rubs off in the right way. And I hope I bring runs.”So will South Africa, after a lean period in which the batters have collectively produced only three centuries in their last eight Tests, crossing 300 just twice in 15 innings. Their problems range from lack of confidence – especially against spin – to an inability to convert starts or build partnerships, but Petersen could be crucial in ensuring that changes.While his presence won’t bring experience in international caps like line-ups of old, his nine years in the first-class game includes an accumulation of knowledge of a range of conditions that South Africa have historically struggled on. Petersen made his name on the slow pitches in Paarl before moving to the flat decks of Bloemfontein and ultimately the more challenging spinning surfaces in Durban, which he believes are the ultimate preparation for the Caribbean. “Kingsmead has prepared me for any slow or turning wicket because that’s all we get in Durban,” he said. “It almost gave me the worst conditions so whatever I get [on this tour], I’ll be prepared for.”

“I’ve been nervous for a while now. It gives me goosebumps thinking about it. I know I will have big boots to fill. Anyone would be nervous. This is what we dream of as kids and eventually when the dream becomes a reality, it gives your system a bit of a shock”Keegan Petersen

His domestic coach, Imraan Khan, agrees. “He is a very determined, smart player who knows his game well. And he’s got a good all-round game,” Khan told ESPNcricinfo. “He is quite a short guy, so he plays square a lot of the time and he has a good game against spin. That’s one of the reasons he came to Durban – to expand his game against spin. He has good footwork, forward and back, and has really developed his sweep shot.”Petersen announced himself at the Dolphins last season with a score of 173 in his first appearance for his new team after three summers with the Knights.It was with the Knight, in the 2018-19 season, that he had first caught the eye of the national selectors. That year, he was the leading run-scorer in the first-class competition with 923 runs at an average of 61.53. Those numbers earned him a call-up to the South African squad for the 2019-20 season – Mark Boucher’s first in charge – but Petersen could not force his way into the XI ahead of Rassie van der Dussen and Zubayr Hamza. Instead, he was mentored by Jacques Kallis, who was working as South Africa’s batting consultant in that period. “He enjoyed being able to absorb information from someone like Kallis,” Khan said.Petersen pulls Chris Woakes through the leg side•Getty ImagesSince then, his numbers have dipped slightly but he remains among the top performers on the domestic scene. In the 2020-21 season, Petersen finished in the top ten first-class run-scorers and averaged 44. He might have played in the festive Tests against Sri Lanka but missed the series for health reasons. He then travelled to Pakistan but again couldn’t get a game. “That bubble was extremely difficult because we were stuck in a hotel on one floor. We couldn’t go anywhere, we couldn’t do anything,” he said. “I hope the Caribbean will be different.”Related

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It already is. South Africa are staying at the Harbour Club and have access to a golf course and a beach, so any sense of claustrophobia has been mitigated. And Petersen is all but assured he will get the chance to play after new captain Dean Elgar singled him out as the likely replacement for the retired Faf du Plessis before the team’s departure. He also knows there are going to be a lot of expectation from him.”I’ve been nervous for a while now,” Petersen said. “It gives me goosebumps thinking about it. I know I will have big boots to fill. Anyone would be nervous. This is what we dream of as kids and eventually when the dream becomes a reality, it gives your system a bit of a shock. I’ve been around, so for me to get a go in the sides means a lot because I know where I’ve come from and I know the journey has been tough and long. This is what we work for.”

Stats – Fakhar Zaman records the highest ever individual score in an ODI chase

All the statistical highlights from the Pakistan opener’s one-man show in Johannesburg

Sampath Bandarupalli04-Apr-20210 Individual scores while chasing in ODI cricket higher than Fakhar Zaman’s 193. The unbeaten 185 by Shane Watson against Bangladesh in 2011 was the previous highest score in an ODI chase. The previous highest score in an unsuccessful ODI chase was 175 by Sachin Tendulkar against Australia in 2009.ESPNcricinfo Ltd194* The knock by Charles Coventry against Bangladesh in 2009, the only individual score higher than Fakhar’s 193 in a defeat in ODI cricket.162 Difference between the top two scores for Pakistan in the second ODI – Fakhar’s 193 and Babar Azam’s 31, the highest difference in an ODI chase. The previous highest difference was 148 by Australia, when Watson scored 185* against Bangladesh in 2011, while the second-highest score was only 37* from Ricky Ponting.ESPNcricinfo Ltd0 Players with a higher individual ODI score in South Africa than Fakhar’s 193. The previous highest was 185 by Faf du Plessis against Sri Lanka in 2017. The Pakistan opener’s 193 is also the second-highest ODI score against South Africa, behind Sachin Tendulkar’s 200* in 2010.Related

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59.56 Percentage of Pakistan’s 324 for 9 accounted by Zaman’s 193-run knock, the highest proportion of runs in a completed ODI innings for Pakistan. Saeed Anwar’s 59.32 % was the previous highest when he scored 194 out of Pakistan’s 327 for 5 in 1997 against India.2 150-plus scores in ODI cricket for Zaman, the first Pakistan player with multiple such scores in this format. His 193 against South Africa is the third highest ODI score for Pakistan. Zaman scored 132 runs in boundaries alone, the most in an ODI innings for Pakistan, surpassing the 126 boundary runs during his 210* against Zimbabwe in 2018.ESPNcricinfo Ltd10 Sixes by Zaman in the second ODI, only the third Pakistan player to hit ten or more sixes in an ODI innings. Shahid Afridi hit 11 sixes during his 37-ball hundred against Sri Lanka in 1996, while Abdul Razzaq also struck ten sixes against South Africa in 2010. Zaman hit six of his ten sixes against Tabraiz Shamsi. Only one player has hit more sixes in an ODI off a single bowler – seven sixes by Eoin Morgan off Rashid Khan during the 2019 World Cup.665 Runs scored by South Africa and Pakistan in Johannesburg on Sunday, the most runs in an ODI between them. The previous highest aggregated ODI between South Africa and Pakistan was 652 runs also at Johannesburg in 2013, during the inaugural pink ODI.

A dreamy, ambitious Ashwin's hard work pays off with a hundred at home ground

“I am just thinking how I am going to recover and sleep through the night,” Ashwin said

Sidharth Monga15-Feb-20212:54

Manjrekar: Ashwin a player who loves responsibility

R Ashwin spent the limited-overs leg of the Australia tour, which he was not part of, working hard on and frustrated with his batting. He was being left out of the side because of Ravindra Jadeja’s added batting advantage. It was not an unreasonable selection call: there was room only for one spinner in away Tests, and of late Ashwin had made a fast descent from could-be-an-allrounder to is-he-a-tailender zone.Consequently India’s last four wickets were offering nothing while players such as Sam Curran and Kyle Jamieson were proving to be the extra depth that beat India in Tests they were competitive in. In 19 Tests leading up to the Australia tour, Ashwin had averaged 15.4 with a top score of 38. The batsman who not long ago could cover up for selection errors – like he did here – had gone missing.Like the earnest competitor that Ashwin is, he felt he needed to prove he was worthy of a place in the side. He would ask batting coaches what he needed to do and would tell them he would do it. Every chance he got, Ashwin worked on his batting, much like he did on his legspin to try and add value to himself as a limited-overs cricketer. His team-mates and coaches have sometimes in the past secretly ridiculed him for being too ambitious, but this was an understandable desperation and ambition.Related

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'Chennai's Super King'

As it is, Ashwin was playing only one format for India, and there too he was now at the risk of being limited to Tests in India only. If not for the injury and concussion to Jadeja in the T20Is, there’s a fair chance Ashwin wouldn’t have played the Adelaide Test. That dismissal of Steven Smith in the first over and then the continued grip on him in Melbourne might not have happened had Jadeja, the better batsman of the two, had not been injured. And it might not have been that unreasonable a selection either.Vikram Rathour, the India batting coach, worked hard with Ashwin, gave him the freedom to try new things, but then concluded that his batting looked fine. He just needed to worry less about the results even though he could understand Ashwin’s concern because it was playing him out of the side.ESPNcricinfo Ltd”He has been very very helpful in terms of trying to explore new options,” Ashwin told Star Sports after his hundred in Chennai, confirming Rathour’s role in his batting turnaround. “As it is I am someone who tries a lot, and he is facilitating me to go out and express myself and explore various options. I’d love to credit him for my batting in the last four-five Tests. He has kept me in the loop, he has said I have been batting very well, and not to overthink it.”In that Adelaide Test, there were signs of the return of Ashwin the batsman when he added 27 with Wriddhiman Saha in the first innings, but again he was part of that horrible collapse in the second innings. Ashwin did feel, though, that he was batting better and that something good was around the corner. The last day of the Sydney Test, all the pain in his back, and the team situation, just took his mind off all the nuts and bolts he was worrying about.In the lead-up to the second Test, all Ashwin worried about with the bat in hand was how to counter Jack Leach, who had got him on the forward-defensive and also on the book foot. It is actually instructive that Ashwin spoke of the whole batting unit looking to find ways to counter Leach, not Dom Bess, who also got five wickets in the Test. Again, Ashwin credited Rathour for working with him on the sweep, a shot he hasn’t played much since he was 19.”After the last Test we were talking about how we are going to counter Leach and probably start bringing the sweep into our game,” Ashwin said. “The last time I swept was when I was 19 years old. And I missed a couple of sweep shots, got dropped from the side and didn’t play the sweep for the last 13-14 years. [I’ve] been practising only that shot over the last week to 10 days. Very very thankful that the plan has paid off. The wicket is such that you can get your runs square. A very very good day.”You might argue that this hundred was not exactly the typical lower-order runs India were after on their trips in England and New Zealand, but it did keep at bay any critics of the pitch his home ground rolled out. Surely they can’t doctor the pitch for both his bowling and his batting? And for a dreamy ambitious boy who grew up playing cricket in the streets of Chennai, to score a Test hundred at his theatre of dreams was extra special.”I am just thinking how I am going to recover and sleep through the night,” Ashwin said. “I am glad it has happened at my home ground. I don’t know if I am going to play another Test here. I don’t know when the next Test will be here.”As Ashwin said, the side has been living a dream over the last two-three months. Why not make it better and knock a home hundred and five-for off the list then?

India need a little Pant-Pandya humpty in their ODI approach

Change of approach from top order in third ODI should enthuse India to aim for 350 every time they find themselves batting first

Sidharth Monga28-Mar-20212:25

Did India get their approach with the bat right today?

Two statistics sum up India’s much-improved approach to batting first.The first one has been mentioned often but it tells you how formulaic India have been: this start of 65 for no loss in ten overs was their quickest batting first in a home ODI since the 2011 World Cup.There was a time when Rohit Sharma and Shikhar Dhawan had mastered the template of opening in ODIs. They set up to bat long with a sedate start as platform, and kept accelerating. Since they started opening together in the Champions Trophy in 2013, 12 pairs have batted together long enough to be able to aggregate 1000 or more runs together. Only opening pairs from Ireland and Scotland have gone slower than Dhawan and Rohit.There are reasons for it. Since 2015, India haven’t had a great middle order, so the top three have had to prioritise the length of their partnerships over speed. Also they have had the bowlers to restrict the opposition, so they can argue they haven’t needed to go quicker.Related

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Both of those contributing factors are changing. Which brings us to the second, a much more incredible stat. Shiva Jayaraman is our in-house genius who can put numbers to approach and intent. He did some digging and found this: since ESPNcricinfo started maintaining ball-by-ball records, there have been over 4000 instances of a team losing three wickets in the space of 60 balls when batting first in ODIs; only once has a team responded with more sixes in the next five overs than the four that India hit in this match in Pune.Even that instance came in the last five overs of the innings when New Zealand didn’t really have a choice but to keep going for it.To keep on attacking when you lose three quick wickets with more than ten overs to go is rarer. Sanath Jayasuriya’s stunning assault on India in the 2008 Asia Cup final is one example. Sri Lanka were 66 for 4 at the end of the 12th over, but Jayasuriya plundered 45 off the next 21 balls he faced in the next four overs. The only other such assault with more than ten overs to go in an innings was by Afghanistan against Canada in 2009-10.Shikhar Dhawan and Rohit Sharma hare across for a single•Getty ImagesThat India embarked on such a stunning and rare counterattack was down to two absolute originals, Rishabh Pant and Hardik Pandya. India had gone from 103 for 0 to 156 for 4 with more than half the innings to go. Pant had already raced away to 31 off 25, but he is also a batsman who has paid with his place in the side for being aggressive when a conservative approach is the need of the hour. He is part of this XI thanks to a blessing-in-disguise injury to another player. It takes special clarity in thought process to respond the way he did: he hit the part-time spinner Liam Livingstone out of the attack, and Pandya joined in by going after the offspinner Moeen Ali.This was not desperate slogging of batsmen with not much choice but to just give it “some humpty”, as Ian Botham famously described how his Headingley miracle of 145 off 149 began. This was a planned assault from batsmen who reasoned they would rather lose with ten overs to spare when going for an above-par score than score below-par and lose in 47 overs. India might have ended with only about a par score in the end, but this partnership of 99 in 11.4 overs meant India would end with a par score even if things went wrong from there.These are special batsmen, who back themselves to hit out from any situation, and they have the skill to do it in most conditions you encounter in ODI cricket. This is no longer the middle order in the intermediary years that used to struggle to match the power in world cricket. A middle- and lower-middle order of KL Rahul, Pant, Pandya and Ravindra Jadeja deserves a more aggressive top order that will bat nearly as fast as these do if it carries on for too long. And they need all the runs now because the two successful nights for their bowlers in this series have been an exception in a largely barren spell for them.This win should serve to give India the confidence that they can aim for 350 every time they find themselves batting first. From evidence of this game, India don’t need a personnel change but slight tinkering in their approach and then some time to fine-tune that approach. If personnel change is necessary, Shubman Gill and Prithvi Shaw would be happy to oblige.But for yet another superlative performance from the returning Bhuvneshwar Kumar, India would have probably lost here too, but they would have done so trying to give themselves a target to bowl at. And even when they failed, they didn’t fall short by a lot.India have batted in a similar manner previously, too, but only when they have been pushed into a corner. This reassurance should make them more inclined to batting with this intent at the start of a series or when they are ahead. We will know for sure in November.

Patience and restraint, the new arrows in Virat Kohli's quiver

The India captain has left nearly 34% of his 124 balls so far – a vastly different approach than what we are used to

Nagraj Gollapudi19-Jun-20213:57

Steyn: Pujara should have created more opportunities to rotate strike

Third ball of the 11th over after lunch on the second day of the WTC final, Virat Kohli moves back and across as soon as Neil Wagner bangs it in short, headed outside off stump. Standing up on his toes, Kohli flashes hard, and is beaten for pace by the 82mph delivery. Bowler and batter stare at each other, exchanging only smiles, no words.Only 16 runs had come from 11 overs in the second session at that stage, which featured half a dozen maidens. Just before the break, India had managed seven runs in eight overs of which five were maidens. That dry phase had started with the fall of Rohit Sharma, followed a few overs later by that of Shubman Gill.Kohli’s response to the short, wide-angled delivery from Wagner was instinctive. Yet, it was an uncharacteristic reaction in what was a masterful display of restraint, which allowed India to get their teeth into a tough job.

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Despite opening for the first time in England, Sharma and Gill showed exuberance in going for runs, which came at a decent clip especially in the first ten overs, as New Zealand’s new-ball bowlers struggled for consistency. But, as soon as the two fell, New Zealand became more disciplined. That made the second session crucial. In any case, overcast conditions, inclement weather, and two outstanding bowling attacks had suggested a low-scoring match, and anything around the 250-mark might be good enough.That was evident in the batters’ approach. Cheteshwar Pujara had played 21 balls without making a run before lunch. The first over of the second session, delivered by Wagner, was a maiden. Kohli was the batter. Kane Williamson threw the ball to Colin de Grandhomme.In their one-on-one duel during the two-Test series in New Zealand last February, de Grandhomme had conceded just one run and sent Kohli back once in ten balls.Virat Kohli got off the mark with a classy drive through the covers•ICC/Getty ImagesHe might be just a medium-pacer, but de Grandhomme’s strength is that he can sneak the ball past the outside edge or rap the pads with seam movement both ways. Immediately into his spell, de Grandhomme got the perfect length: not full enough, but on a spot where the batter might consider the drive. Kohli was beaten by one such delivery early on, one that pitched on middle-and-off, and moved just enough to beat the edge and hit the outside of his back leg. BJ Watling took the catch but there was no bat involved, and Hawk-Eye showed it to be clearing off stump.Kohli managed just four runs from the 21 deliveries he faced from de Grandhomme. In the first Test of the 2018 series against England at Edgbaston, Kohli had faced 27 deliveries off James Anderson without scoring a run. He ended up scoring a century, one of his best.On this day, New Zealand had a short cover and short midwicket for Kohli, but Williamson had left big gaps on both sides for the India captain to pick. Kohli abstained. Standing, typically, a good yard outside the popping crease, he negotiated both the swing and the seam movement, mostly with ease. His other strength, taking a big stride forward, came in handy, too, as he played the ball under his eye line. Firmly.Related

  • Five things India must keep in mind in the WTC final

  • Kohli: 'Win or lose this game, cricket does not stop for us'

There was another change that Sunil Gavaskar, among others on commentary, found in Kohli’s technique that should help him: as and when Kohli makes a back-and-across movement, he keeps the front leg straight, which allows him to deal with the incoming delivery much more efficiently, nullifying the threat of being lbw. There was also the open stance, which allowed Kohli to not just read the line of the delivery better, but also deal with it more effectively.These technical changes allowed Kohli to score runs against the swing, too, mainly square of the wicket. As per ESPNcricinfo’s logs, he scored 25 of his 44 runs in the area between cover and backward point.But what shone through brighter than all of this was Kohli’s patience. As he rushed out with Cheteshwar Pujara after the lunch break, he reminded one of a boxer getting inside the ring. The keenness. But, once he took guard, Kohli was Zen-like. He left a lot of deliveries: nearly 34% of his 124 balls so far. Before tea, Kohli was not in control of only nine out of the 96 balls he had faced, and then seven out of the 30 in the truncated third session.Kohli showed that he could, when needed, be quiet. Along with Pujara and then Ajinkya Rahane, he ensured India would not lose the edge earned through hard work, in the second session. If he can show the same powers of concentration over the rest of the weekend, Kohli might, yet, play the defining role in this WTC final.

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