Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Pant broadens his realm with first ODI ton

- Somshuvra Laha somshuvra.laha@htlive.com

Bowling analysts probably have a field day making dossiers on how to stop Rishabh Pant. Plug the pull shot and Pant is basically maimed. Tease him with the leaving delivery, especially in the initial overs, and he is bound to walk into the trap. Premeditat­ed shots make him look desperate but Pant doesn’t care.

And of late bowlers have been trying the wider line outside his arc but Pant still flashes at it hard. Nothing about him seems to be polished, composed or prudent. As long as Rishabh Pant is at the crease, he will score but also keep the bowlers interested. So, drop him at your peril.

Jos Buttler will bear the burden of that reality, having watched Pant score a stupendous century after missing an easy stumping when he was on 18. “When you give players a chance, they will hurt you,” he said after India won the third ODI by five wickets on Sunday to win the series 2-1.

It isn’t easy to analyse what drives Pant. He may give you the image of a compulsive risk-taker but Pant’s strength is also his competitiv­e spirit when the chips are down, something we have witnessed comparativ­ely more in Tests. With India losing four wickets for 72 on Sunday, Pant finally got the time and scope to successful­ly run that template in white-ball cricket.

Unlike what you expect of Pant, he is no smash-and-grab hustler. He bides his time, albeit quite crudely, versions of which we have seen in the IPL where his strike rates have plummeted abysmally at times.

But Pant’s genius lies in reversing that slide with a barrage of runs, like how he plundered five boundaries off David Willey. Quickly forgotten was the fact that Pant was 19 off 28 when Hardik Pandya joined him. By the time Pandya was dismissed on 71 off 55 balls, Pant was on 77 off 88 but he had done the hard yards by then.

Pandya, the more flamboyant half of the 133-run partnershi­p with Pant that resuscitat­ed India’s chase, said Pant’s understand­ing of the overall game held India in good stead.

“Rishabh paced that innings, it was very important for us, that partnershi­p as well and obviously the way he finished,” he said. “We all know what kind of talent he has. When it comes out, it’s very pleasing to the eye. Your heartbeat also goes up but at the same time you are in awe of the kind of shots he plays.”

Of the few things done right on this white- ball tour of England, India’s middle-order stability is probably a memorable high point. Pandya obviously is the allrounder India hope will stay fit enough to keep churning out the runs and wickets.

And now with Pant among runs at a slightly higher position than he usually bats, India know they have more or less sorted the connecting link between a malfunctio­ning top-order and the lower-order. “These guys haven’t batted for a long time in the middle overs, today we got to see that as well from Hardik and Rishabh,” said India captain Rohit Sharma. That Pant took 27 ODIs to score his first hundred may not augur well with the dashing image he has been forced to grow up with. But he also knows the downside of getting out quickly while trying to attack.

It’s clear he wants to finish games. And he is willing to dig in his heels for that, making this version of Pant far more threatenin­g.

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