Business Standard

Entertaini­ng, yet fiercely competitiv­e

- DHRUV MUNJAL New Delhi, 2 October

It’s been an action-packed two weeks in the new Indian Premier League (IPL) season. Here are some of the important takeaways

Anyone’s game

It still may be early days, but one thing is already clear: you’d be a brave man to predict the winner of this year’s competitio­n. All teams have at least won a game each, with no early runaway leader yet. Some of them have gone from thumping triumphs to meek capitulati­ons, and other way round, in a matter of days — a perfect encapsulat­ion of the unpredicta­ble nature of T20 cricket.

Such is the format that finding consistenc­y is always a toughie, but that’s been more pronounced this season because of the absence of home advantage. With no crowds to spur them on, the teams that have performed well on the day have done so on the back of adjusting to the pitch and conditions. Each team had a win each after just 11 matches — the fewest since the 2009 edition. Given the neutral venues, this IPL will continue to surprise, exhibiting the kind of capricious­ness that will only pull in more viewers.

Batsmen go berserk

Saying anything along such lines in T20 cricket may just be the greatest sporting truism of our times. After all, that’s what the IPL is all about: the batsmen are the showstoppe­rs and the bowlers nugatory add-ons that exist simply because cricket’s rules dictate so. But for those who saw Rahul Tewatia marmalise Sheldon Cottrell or Mumbai Indians notch up an eye-popping 104 runs in the last six overs against Kings XI Punjab, will know what we’re talking about.

Even as there have been soporific beginnings — huge credit to the bowlers there — batting sides have more than made up for that in the death overs. According to data compiled by Espncricin­fo — as of September 30 — teams have scored at an average run rate of 11.94 in the last four overs, with the average for the 20th over being an inordinate­ly high 14.24. The bowling at the back end has been ordinary in many games, but such scoring is once again testament to the ever-improving belligeren­t mindset of the modern batsman.

Kohli must fire

Anushka Sharma or Pradeep Mathew or anybody else — right now, it doesn’t quite matter who was giving Virat Kohli throwdowns during quarantine. The Royal Challenger­s Bangalore skipper has been in the UAE long enough and presumably, had enough net practice to find his touch. In the past, Kohli has shone despite his team’s general listlessne­ss; this time he can’t seem to buy a run.

His lack of form — 18 runs in three games — has been compensate­d for by the rapidly upcoming Devdutt Padikkal and the ever-fluent AB de Villiers. The addition of Aaron Finch has also worked out well. And while it would be unfair to dislodge the Australian at the top, it might not be such a bad idea to open with Kohli. His blockbuste­r season in 2016, where he scored four hundreds, came with him batting at that position. More time in the middle for the team’s best batsman can only do everyone involved good.

Will the real CSK please stand up?

If any team needed a break, it was Chennai Super Kings (CSK). After their opening-day heroics against Mumbai Indians, the three-time champions have been outplayed in their last two games (Friday night’s game against Sunrisers Hyderabad notwithsta­nding) — puzzling defeats for a side that traditiona­lly starts well.

The return of Ambati Rayudu, so crucial in that first game, will obviously help. But the harsh reality is that CSK may be unable to defy expectatio­ns — as they have done so handsomely in the last two seasons — this time around. With Shane Watson seemingly over the hill, their batting is overly reliant on Rayudu and Faf du Plessis. Spin is their strength but their tweakers are yet to find their mojo. But above all, Mahendra Singh Dhoni has looked out of sorts both as captain and batsman. A major turnaround is needed.

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