Hindustan Times (Noida)

I’d want to open in T20s, and bat at 4-5 in ODIS: Pant LIV: Woods says Norman ‘has to go’ as first step for peace

- Somshuvra Laha somshuvra.laha@htlive.com Agencies sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

There was this short arm jab whip towards midwicket for four that confirmed only Rishabh Pant is capable of Rishabh Pant-like shots. But it can’t quite make up for the glaring nosedive in runs.

His last six white-ball outings have yielded scores of 3, 6, 6, 11, 15 and 10 and even though they might not warrant immediate introspect­ion, India may need to revisit their decision to back Pant for the long run if his wretched form doesn’t subside. This, and a few other middle-order puzzles, stare at India as they managed to leave New Zealand with a 1-0 loss even though the third ODI looked almost done and dusted in favour of the hosts when rain intervened and ultimately washed out the match.

Finn Allen scored a 54-ball 57 and Devon Conway was cautious in his unbeaten 38 off 51 balls, guiding New Zealand to 104 for 1, well ahead of the DLS target, when play was stopped due to rain. The match didn’t end with a result since the 20-over mark hadn’t been reached but India know they got out of jail after a shambolic batting performanc­e that was only propped by a crafty fifty from Washington Sundar. Shreyas Iyer missed out on a fifty but the damage was once again inflicted around the 20-over mark when India couldn’t accelerate properly. Suryakumar Yadav was snapped up in slip and Deepak Hooda got a feather touch to the ball trying to hook but it was Pant’s dismissal that again stood out for its timing.

On 85/2 just after the 20-over mark, India were poised to build on a 30-run stand between Pant and Iyer. But Pant succumbed to the pressure of a few dot balls and miscued a pull off Daryl Mitchell to deep square-leg, trudging off scoring 10 off 16 balls.

That Pant went ahead with the pull even though he was in no position to get on top of the bounce spoke volumes about the desperatio­n in that shot. Pant is a batting maverick, capable of springing miracles and doom in equal measure. But since whiteball cricket is more time and result bound and hence need more consistenc­y in terms of runs and contributi­ons, some questions will be

asked later if not now. Is Pant in the white-ball side because of his Test exploits? Is he there because he is left-handed? Has he been given a wide berth, now that Dinesh Karthik should be out of the T20 picture as well?

Pant himself isn’t worried though. Speaking before the start of the third ODI, he said comparing his white-ball and red-ball numbers when he is still 25 has no logic and should be brought up only when he is 30-32. He is also clear about where he wants to bat. “I’d want to open in T20s, No. 4-5 in ODIS and Tests I’m already batting at No. 5,” Pant said.

When it was suggested that his Test numbers looked better when he came across more as a whiteball player, he said: “A record is just a number, my white-ball record is not bad either. Comparison is not a part of my life, I’m just 24-25 so you can compare once I’m 30-32. There’s no logic in comparing before that.”

Irrespecti­ve of how Pant may want to look at his career and numbers, there is this undeniable feeling that he is more of a natural fit in Tests even though his unorthodox batting makes it look more suited for shorter formats. Pant hasn’t looked comfortabl­e in shorter formats in recent times. He isn’t adept at farming the strike. And the more he slips into a rut, the more premeditat­ed his get-outof-jail shots tend to become. Pant denies it though. “There’s no real need to premeditat­e in one-day cricket but you have to in T20s,” he said. A few hours later, he got out to a pull that looked nothing but premeditat­ed.

Brief scores: India 219 in 47.3 ovs (Sundar 51, Iyer 49, Mitchell 3/25, Milne 3/57); New Zealand 104 for 1 in 18 ovs (Allen 57, Conway 38*) No result. New Zealand won the series 1-0.*

Tiger Woods says Greg Norman “has to go” as commission­er of the LIV Golf Series if the upstart circuit is to exist in harmony with the US PGA and DP World tours. The 15-time major champion, speaking Tuesday before his Hero World Challenge at the Albany in the Bahamas, echoed comments earlier this month by Northern Ireland star Rory Mcilroy, both also saying that litigation between the parties must also be dropped if progress is to be made.

“There is an opportunit­y out there if both organizati­ons put a stay on their litigation,” Woods said. “That’s the problem. There is no willingnes­s to negotiate if you have litigation against you. I think Greg has to go first of all. It has to start with leadership on their side, understand­ing that what is happening right now is not the best future for the whole game of golf.

“You need to have the two bodies come together and if one side has so much animosity, trying to destroy our tour, then how do you work with that?”

Norman has been the very confrontat­ional face of the breakaway circuit funded by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund. He said in September he had “no interest” in negotiatin­g with the establishe­d tours in a bid to heal the bitter split sparked by LIV Golf’s luring of some of the game’s biggest names with multi-million dollar purses for their 54-hole, no-cut tournament­s.

The new circuit has been accused of “sportswash­ing” Saudi Arabia’s human rights record, and the US tours responded to its challenge by suspending any players who competed in LIV events.

The European tour’s attempt to sanction players making the jump to LIV is also facing a legal challenge, while it remains to be seen if the organizers of the four major championsh­ips will open their doors to the rebels.

 ?? AFP ?? Rishabh Pant.
AFP Rishabh Pant.

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