Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Opener then, finisher now: Evin’s new role

- Somshuvra Laha somshuvra.laha@htlive.com

KOLKATA: Throughout his T20I career, Evin Lewis has opened the batting for West Indies. In ODIS too, he has opened in an overwhelmi­ng 50 out of 54 matches. An assimilati­on of some of the biggest hitters in the world, the Indian Premier League (IPL) however calls for a fresh approach to every position, be it in batting or bowling. Lewis knew that, adapted at No. 4 and scored an unbeaten 55 off 23 balls to guide LSG to their firstever win in the IPL, against CSK, on Thursday.

“I had this chat with him (Lewis) before the first game,” LSG captain KL Rahul told Star Sports at the post-match presentati­on. “I said: ‘Me and Quinny will be opening, you might have to bat at three. When spinners are bowling I think you’ll be really, really dangerous’. He said ‘it doesn’t matter’. Spinners or fast bowlers, he knows one way. But I think he’s worked really hard on his batting from the last time I’ve seen him. His timing has gotten a lot better and he’s hitting all over the park.”

If there’s one thing Lewis does well, it’s hitting the ball hard. Only last year did he cap a remarkable season with the St Kitts and Nevis Patriots in the CPL, aggregatin­g 426 runs in 11 innings with a strike rate of 163.21. This also included a tournament-best tally of 38 sixes, bettering the record held by Chris Gayle (Jamaica Tallawahs) since 2016. Among Lewis’s several blistering knocks in the CPL, one match particular­ly stands out from the 2017 season. Asked to chase Barbados Tridents’ 128 to seal the second spot on the table for the Patriots, Lewis pummelled the bowling to score 97 off 32 balls. Ninety of those runs came in the form of 11 sixes and six boundaries. Gayle, his opening partner, ended on an unbeaten 22 off 14 balls.

For a batter who revels in opening, it can be mighty difficult adjusting to a new position. But the IPL has given us quite a few examples of openers turning prolific middle-order bats. Rahul had done it for some time, Sanju Samson too. Even Gayle (he batted at No. 3 and 4 in 19 out of 141 IPL innings) had scored 99 in the 2020 IPL coming at No. 3 for the erstwhile Kings XI Punjab. Devdutt Padikkal, who used to open for Royal Challenger­s Bangalore, batted at No 4 for Rajasthan Royals in their season opener against Sunrisers Hyderabad, slamming 41 off 29. “It (batting at No 4) was an interestin­g experience,” Padikkal later said.

Nothing is permanent though. Take Robin Uthappa’s case, for example. Despite opening for India in his ODI debut, there was no way he could have opened the batting in the 2007 T20 World Cup with Virender Sehwag and Gautam Gambhir in the squad. But when both openers fell early, Robin scored a fifty at No. 3 to propel India to 141 in their group match against Pakistan. Uthappa has opened in nearly half of his IPL career—bulk of them coming in his stint at Kolkata Knight Riders—but since then has adapted superbly to become CSK’S go-to man at No. 3.

 ?? BCCI ?? Evin Lewis.
BCCI Evin Lewis.

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