Hindustan Times (Jalandhar)

‘Felt like a club batsman alongside Yuvi’

India captain Virat Kohli praises Yuvraj for his shot making and approach to match

- HT Correspond­ent sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

BIRMINGHAM: India captain Virat Kohli praised Yuvraj Singh’s “game-changing” quality after seeing his side launch their ICC Champions Trophy 2017 title-defence with a 124-run rout of arch-rivals Pakistan at Edgbaston on Sunday. He added that in front of Yuvraj, he felt like a club batsman.

Of the four batsmen that came to the crease as India piled up 319 for three in their rain-reduced 48 overs, three -- Rohit Sharma (91), Kohli (81 not out) and Shikhar Dhawan (68) -- all made more than Yuvraj’s 53.

Yet the way the experience­d left-hander -- Sunday’s match was his 297th one-day internatio­nal -- took just 32 balls to score his runs saw the 35-yearold named man-of-the-match.

His speed of scoring gave Kohli, who initially struggled for fluency, time to find his touch during a third-wicket partnershi­p of 93 in 59 balls that took a game of several rain interrupti­ons away from Pakistan.

In the end, Kohli was in complete command as India scored an astounding 72 runs in their last four overs, with Hardik Pandya hitting three successive sixes off left-arm spinner Imad Wasim just before the innings ended.

‘CLUB BATSMAN’

Yet some of Yuvraj’s shots were breathtaki­ng, particular­ly the way in which he drove a near yorker from paceman Hasan Ali down the ground for one of his eight fours.

“Yuvi’s innings, I think, was the game-changing innings,” Kohli told reporters.

“I felt like a club batsman while playing alongside Yuvi, the way he was hitting the ball. He took the pressure off me and played the way only he can.”

It might all have been so different had Pakistan not dropped two relatively straightfo­rward catches when Yuvraj was on eight and Kohli on 43.

But there was no denying the way India rose to the occasion in front of a capacity crowd as they recorded their seventh straight win over Pakistan at an Internatio­nal Cricket Council global event. “The way we played and the confidence we showed was very pleasing, the guys were raring to go and willing to take up the pressure,” said Kohli.

MASSIVE WIN

“From a team point of view this was a massive win for us at the start of a big tournament.”

Pakistan, by contrast, wilted in what is cricket’s most highprofil­e fixture, with an estimated television audience of a billion in addition to a capacity crowd of 24,000 that created a raucous atmosphere.

This was Pakistan coach Mickey Arthur’s first involvemen­t in cricket’s fiercest rivalry, with Sunday’s match taking place in Birmingham --- a city with one of the largest Asian population in Britain.

‘TAKE THE BLAME’

The South African, in common with players from both sides, had tried to downplay the fixture as no more important than any other game. But that message did not get through to several members of Arthur’s team, with paceman Wahab Riaz losing the plot completely during a wicketless return of none for 87 in 8.4 overs which ended when the left-armer fell in his delivery stride and went off with an ankle injury.

Some of Yuvraj’s shots were breathtaki­ng, particular­ly the way in which he drove a near yorker from paceman Hasan Ali down the ground. VIRAT KOHLI, On Yuvraj Singh’s knock

 ?? REUTERS ?? Watched by skipper Virat Kohli (right), Yuvraj Singh acknowledg­es the crowd after completing his halfcentur­y against Pakistan at Edgbaston on Sunday.
REUTERS Watched by skipper Virat Kohli (right), Yuvraj Singh acknowledg­es the crowd after completing his halfcentur­y against Pakistan at Edgbaston on Sunday.

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