The Hindu (Mangalore)

The importance of Kohli in the evolving T20 batting landscape

The former India skipper is a classical top-order bat who has often gone searching for intent when the demands of the shortest form of the game has merited a modern upgrade on a role where India does not lack options anymore

- Ayan Acharya

For the last three years, Virat Kohli’s approach to T20 cricket has been in question, but now he nds himself in yet another World Cup squad. In fact, more than 50% of the players selected for the big-ticket event in the USA and the West Indies, including captain Rohit Sharma and

Kohli, featured in India’s 2022 T20 World Cup campaign.

India’s approach to T20Is has historical­ly mirrored its strategy in ODIs, prioritisi­ng wickets over boundaries. But there have been enough signs that that attitude is shifting, but at a glacial pace. Kohli, like Rohit, returned to the T20I squad after more than a year’s absence ahead of the Afghanista­n series at home in January this year.

India’s 15 for the World Cup suggests that the team-management expects slow turners. So, there is a case to be made here for the decision to include Kohli, who, despite being doubted by many in this format, is a good t for this current India group because the bowling make-up, which includes two in-form specialist spinners and a couple of left-arm spin-bowling all-rounders, is expected to be good at boundary-preventing. This allows India the luxury of carrying a T20 batter in the mould of Kohli.

That said, the top four — captain Rohit, Yashasvi Jaiswal, Kohli, and Suryakumar Yadav — were more or less decided even before the o’cial squad announceme­nt was made. The selectors and Rohit are taking a punt on Kohli’s ability to perform under pressure.

Kohli has shown a strong temperamen­t when it comes to big games. He respects his opponents but is not intimidate­d by them. This quality is especially important in high-pressure tournament­s where nerves can get the best of players.

A great example of Kohli’s composure came in the 2022 T20 World Cup chase against Pakistan at a packed MCG in Australia. Kohli’s strike-rate was a jaw-dropping 278.57 at the death that night as he waltzed to 39 oœ 14 balls. At one point, though, Kohli was batting on 12 oœ 21 balls. Kohli’s average in nine successful run chases at the T20 World

Cup is a scarcely believable 518. He has seven fties and has been dismissed only once.

India had earlier lacked the hitting depth of other T20I sides, making it di’cult for the main batters to be ultra-aggressive upfront. Not only that, in the early 2000s, India’s top ve also contribute­d signi cantly with the ball. However, the current primary batters do not have the same level of contributi­on with the ball, which puts pressure on the team management to include a frontline spinner at number seven. Consequent­ly, the team’s tail becomes longer, and the top order has to be more careful and restrained in their approach.

But with the emergence of Rinku

Singh, the Ÿamboyance of Suryakumar, the evolution of Sanju Samson, and the reincarnat­ion of Shivam Dube, that headache seems to have taken a back seat for now. It should alleviate some stress for Kohli. Yes, there is a strong argument that except the redoubtabl­e Jasprit Bumrah, India’s pace bowling looks a tad wobbly, which makes it doubly important for Rohit’s men to win the boundary-percentage count. Kohli will be mindful of that too.

Kohli had recently shrugged oœ criticism of his strike rate against spin after scoring a match-winning 70 not out oœ 44 balls against the Gujarat Titans in Ahmedabad. “All the people who talk about strike rates and me not playing spin well are the ones who love talking about this stuœ. But for me, it’s just about winning the game for the team,” Kohli said after the match. “And there’s a reason why you do it for 15 years — because you’ve done this day in and day out; you’ve won games for your teams.”

However, the criticism of Kohli’s T20 game isn’t completely unwarrante­d. He has high averages, and his strike rates tend to rise as the innings goes deeper. Kohli has an overall strike rate of a shade under 140 in T20Is at an average of over 53 over the last ve years. For the Royal Challenger­s Bengaluru, he averages less than 40 (35.07) and strikes way slower at under 130 during the same timeline.

Looking at what Kohli has been doing in the PowerPlay and the overs after it clears up the picture further. For India, since 2019, Kohli has batted slowly at the start, going at 111.28, and then raised it to 128 between 7 and 16. But he gets stuck into the bowlers if he makes it to the last four, going over 213. In the IPL for the same timeline, Kohli’s PowerPlay, middle-over, and death-over strike rates are: 129.69, 116.61, and 206.50.

In fact, Kohli’s overall strike rate at No. 3 — where he normally bats for India in T20Is — in the last two years has hovered in the early 130s while the average strike rates for one down for teams like South Africa, Australia and West Indies are north of 150. The No. 3s of England, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, New Zealand, Pakistan and Afghanista­n have a lower combined strike rate.

Kohli is scoring at a strike rate of 147 in this year’s IPL. Only once has he ever scored quicker, and that was in 2016 (152.03), when he amassed 973 runs — the most by any player in an IPL season. Kohli scored his eighth IPL hundred against the Rajasthan Royals this year, with his 113 not out against the Royals being his joint-highest score in the T20 league. But he also took 67 balls to get there, making it the joint-slowest hundred in the IPL, along with Manish Pandey’s century against the now-defunct Deccan Chargers in 2009.

Kohli’s innings in Jaipur was a perfect microcosm of his T20 batting. His strike rate was 190 in the last 22 balls he faced. But for the rst 25 balls, he struck at under 130, while for the next 25, he went at 156. It is evident by now that Kohli, the T20 batter, is at his destructiv­e best when he is operating between overs 17 and 20.

However, Kohli has also seemed to embrace a less risk-averse approach to batting inside the rst six overs in this

IPL, looking to hit over the top to nd the fence. “They probably want me to come hard at them so they can get me out or have an early breakthrou­gh. But I feel like if I’m set and if I bat beyond six overs, then our chance of getting good totals becomes that much better,” Kohli had said after his hundred against the Royals.

Kohli is a classical top-order bat who has often gone searching for intent when the demands of the T20 game merit a modern upgrade on a role where India does not lack options anymore. Kohli loves pace on the ball, which partly explains why he is so good in the death

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