Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

INDIA HOPES HINGE ON VIRAT

- N Ananthanar­ayanan sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

BIG GAME HUNTING Virat Kohli will bank on his good record against Pakistan to end poor run in the tournament

If there is a bigger question heading into the ICC Champions Trophy than who will win a tight competitio­n, it is which Virat Kohli will turn up when defending champions India kick off their campaign against Pakistan at Edgbaston on Sunday. Run machine, entertaine­r, in-your-face aggressor, the India skipper is all these and much more. The natural successor to Sachin Tendulkar is a master at chases, a quality his team will hope gives them the edge in a short tournament where any slip will be punished.

Virat Kohli is a fan’s delight and a perfect fit for marketing, the lot of the present-day sports profession­al. But he sticks to a convention­al can-do-it approach, much like England’s Joe Root and New Zealand’s Kane Williamson. Kohli’s hand-eye coordinati­on, and technique and power that sends wristy shots through cover and midwicket for boundaries do just fine to dominate limited-overs cricket, leaving lap shots, reverse hits and 360 degrees play to AB de Villiers and Glenn Maxwell.

However, the 2017 Champions Trophy will be a big test of Kohli’s form and temperamen­t. The 28-year-old was the runmachine in every format in the busy season until initial failures in the series against Australia was followed by shoulder injury during the third Test. On returning to lead RCB, Kohli failed to find the form that took his team to the IPL 2016 final.

RCB slipped to finish last in the table and he acknowledg­ed the leadership anxiety it led to. The back-to-back 50s --- for RCB and in the warm-up win over New Zealand – would give comfort ahead of the big match against Pakistan.

The man with 27 ODI centuries has only two half-centuries to show in eight Champions Trophy matches. Still, in the 2013 campaign in the UK, Kohli made useful contributi­ons in each of the five games, scoring 58 not out against Sri Lanka in the semifinal and 43 against England in the final. India will be eager Kohli finds a new gear with Rohit Sharma making his comeback following injury and Ajinkya Rahane looking out-of-sorts.

Some of the Indian skipper’s finest knocks have come chasing a target. Of his 27 hundreds, 15 have come while batting second with an equal number of half-centuries underlinin­g a great conversion rate. The team will hope Kohli again starts a major tournament with a bang.

In the 2011 World Cup, a young Kohli hit an unbeaten 100 in the opener against Bangladesh. And he set the tone for India’s run to the semifinal of the 2015 World Cup with a match-winning 107 against Pakistan first up.

Kohli’s highest total of 183 also came against Pakistan, to help India achieve a sensationa­l victory chasing 330 in 47.5 overs in the 2012 Asia Cup in Bangladesh.

But Kohli will be looking for much more than countering the conditions. In the 2011 and 2015 World Cups, his batting tapered off in the end. In the 2015 World Cup, he made 3 in the quarterfin­al win over Bangladesh and one run in the semifinal loss to Australia. The Champions Trophy thus will be a great opportunit­y to show all is swell with the Virat Kohli batting enterprise. twice in three games. In a series that went to thewireand remembered for Rohit’s double, he scored at an average of 100+

,Virat returned with a sweep.

in MSD’s absence, winning two of them. Scored a ton too.

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