Hindustan Times (Delhi)

It’s time cricket did away with Man-of-the-Match award

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TILL THE TIME A

TEAM DOESN’T WIN, INDIVIDUAL PERFORMANC­ES COUNT FOR LITTLE. IN THE WC FINAL (2011), MAHELA SCORE A TON BUT SRI LANKA LOST TO US

It was satisfying to contribute to the team’s cause in the last game against Sunrisers Hyderabad. I got the Man-of-the-Match award as well for my effort. I want to make a confession – I am not for awarding man of the match in a team sport and believe it should be done away with.

I know it is a tradition, which has been on for years, but in a team sport like cricket, where there are so many contributi­ons from team-mates, it is unfair to appreciate just one player.

Yes, I scored 90 in 60 balls and was there till the end to see the team through, but it was because my bowling unit could restrict Sunrisers to 142.

CONTRIBUTO­RS

If Umesh Yadav and Morne Morkel hadn’t bowled that initial spell to eject their top-three batsmen, the score would have been higher. Then, there were small but key bowling performanc­es from Shakib al-Hasan, Andre Russell and Sunil Narine to keep the opposition in check. Who can forget the catch by the RussellPiy­ush Chawla combine to dismiss the well set Naman Ojha.

If you remember, I was struggling in the initial part of the knock on Saturday. At the time, Robin Uthappa took up the responsibi­lity and, while I sorted out my innings, kept the scoreboard ticking. These contributi­ons underline my point of a team chipping in for a victory. Isn’t it unfair to pick just one name and make him the hero of the match?

To my mind, till the time a team doesn’t win, individual performanc­es count for little. In the 2011 World Cup final, Mahela Jayawarden­e scored a brilliant hundred but eventually Sri Lanka lost to us.

Today, very few remember his knock but the 90s scored by MS Dhoni and me will forever be etched in memory. It once again emphasises the point that it is the team’s show that matters and not a piece of brilliance by an individual.

There are some who say it is the motivation to do well. For me, the motivation comes the moment you wear a team jersey — school, college, club, state, country or in this case franchise. If someone is seeking motivation after this, he or she is in pursuit of a mirage.

TAKING A DECISION

I have another argument. Even if they want to keep the tradition alive, why not let the two coaches decide the man-of-thematch. The coach of the losing team is the best person to suggest who in the winning team hurt them the most. Who took the Rohit Sharma’s decision to demote himself and push Martin Guptill and Parthiv Patel to open the innings against seamers Barinder Sran and Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar failed. The bowlers found a hint of movement that helped knock out the openers early. Rohit, too, couldn’t stay for long and Mumbai Indians were 43/3 in just the eighth over at the Uppal. With the top-order batsmen failing, Ambati Rayudu ensured he kept one end intact, stroking a composed half-century (54 off 49 deliveries). His innings included three fours and two sixes. Importantl­y, he struck a 63-run partnershi­p with Krunal Pandya, the brother of Hardik. Krunal provided the late fillip, hitting 49 off 28 balls, including three sixes and three fours. Tim Southee was the lone bright spot for Mumbai. The Kiwi began by castling an outof-form Shikhar Dhawan for just two. While none of the other bowlers could follow it up with any more wickets, Southee came back to provide breakthrou­ghs in his second and third spells of one over each. game away from them, simple. I am told as of now it is left to the commentato­rs, but I think if we are to continue with this practice, then let the coaches take a call.

Till that happens, we in KKR will keep chipping in with team performanc­es and not rely too much on individual­s. Today’s game against Kings XI Punjab needs us to come hard as a group. They are a quality side with David Miller as captain. Murali Vijay and Manan Vohra too are in good nick. We have a challenge on our hands but we are ready. Yes, Brad Hogg’s food poisoning bout is over and the ‘youngster’ is available for selection.

DINESH CHOPRA MEDIA

The writer is the KKR captain Notwithsta­nding the early loss of his opening partner, Sunrisers skipper David Warner kept the scoreboard rolling with the attacking display he is known for. He made an unbeaten 90 to help his team win by seven wickets. Warner hit four sixes and seven fours as Hyderabad won in a canter at home.

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 ??  ?? GAUTAM GAMBHIR
GAUTAM GAMBHIR
 ??  ?? Umesh Yadav (left) claimed 3/28 against the Sunrisers Hyderabad on Saturday. AFP PHOTO
Umesh Yadav (left) claimed 3/28 against the Sunrisers Hyderabad on Saturday. AFP PHOTO

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