Hindustan Times (East UP)

In retired out, IPL provides a tactical high

- Somshuvra Laha somshuvra.laha@htlive.com

KOLKATA: It isn’t a fantasy anymore. Neither is it awkward. If you have a slog-overs specialist batter, there is no point keeping him in the wings and hoping for a dismissal. Ravichandr­an Ashwin and Rajasthan Royals have finally made it happen: a tactical retired-out. If there is one aspect of the Sunday night game between Royals and Lucknow Super Giants that impressed more than Kuldeep Sen’s bowling in the 20th over, it was Ashwin’s decision to retire two balls into the 19th over of RR innings.

RR could have stuck with Ashwin. Having joined Shimron Hetmyer in the 10th over at 67/4, Ashwin scored a 23-ball 28 in a 68-run stand and even hit two sixes before deciding to head back to the dug-out. Hetmyer looked flabbergas­ted but not Ashwin or the RR management. It was all part of the plan to unleash Riyan Parag with 10 balls left in the innings. Parag hit eight in four balls and it was more because of Hetmyer that RR ended with 165/6 but IPL had finally given us a peek into what the future may look like. The three-run win put that in neat perspectiv­e.

Retired outs were always within the law but not until now had IPL witnessed it. There have been internatio­nal instances of course, Bhutan’s Sonam Tobgay retiring out against Maldives in the 2019 South Asian Games being the first instance. The law states: “A batsman retires out if he retires without the umpire’s permission and does not have the permission of the opposing captain to resume his innings. If such a return does not occur, the batman is marked as ‘retired out’ and this is considered a dismissal for the purposes of calculatin­g a batting average.”

There is a bit of ethical stigma attached to this mode of dismissal but in T20 there is no room for emotional decisions. In an effort to maximise the potential of every ball, no team would want to waste a specialist on the bench. An innovator, always the team man, and someone who doesn’t regret running out the non-striker if he backs up too much, Ashwin was possibly the best man to implement this.

And by being the first team to bite the bullet, RR may also have essentiall­y led us onto the next phase of T20 evolution, one that is more tactical than ever. No longer are batting orders sacrosanct. Timing is what matters, and from now on more teams may take this road. Such decisions have to be mutual though, and RR coach Kumar Sangakkara confirmed that Ashwin and the support staff jointly came to this decision. “It was a combinatio­n of both,” Sangakkara said at the post-match press conference. “It was the right time to do that, Ashwin himself was asking from the field as well, and we had discussed it just before that as to what we would do.”

RR captain Sanju Samson spoke on similar lines. “It’s about being Rajasthan Royals. We keep trying different things. We have been talking about it before the season,” Samson said. “We thought if a situation occurs, we can use it. It was a team decision.” That RR were in experiment mode was clear in how Sangakkara regretted holding back Parag. “I think as the coach I got one call wrong, not sending Riyan ahead of Rassie van der Dussen, so we couldn’t get the full benefit of Riyan, but I thought the way Ashwin handled that situation, walking in under pressure, the way he batted, and then finally sacrificed himself in terms of being retired out, was just magnificen­t, and then he went out in the field and backed it up with an excellent, excellent bowling effort.”

Experiment­ing with the batting order also took on a different avatar with LSG as they dropped Marcus Stoinis, possibly the best finisher right now, to No 8 after promoting K Gowtham to No 3 and Jason Holder to No 4. While their batting depth allows LSG to be more flexible about approachin­g chases, in truth they were trying to perfectly time Stoinis’s entry.

“Throughout the 20 overs, we kept believing we could win this game,” LSG captain KL Rahul said after the match. “We have depth in our batting, today Stoinis batted at No 8; when you have someone like that with so much power and who is such a destructiv­e batsman... that’s one of the reasons he’s our second retained player.” Fifteen off six isn’t unattainab­le by Stonis’s standards. “We believe Stoinis can win us games from any position, we had that belief through and through,” said Rahul. But this was a rare day when Stoinis was stumped by Sen’s unfamiliar­ity. From Rahul’s point of view, it could have been an easier chase “had we gotten a couple of partnershi­ps going in the early stages.” That certainly doesn’t mean they won’t try to time Stoinis’s entry again, even if that means demoting him.

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