Muscat Daily

MUSCAT DAILY

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Chennai, India - A 69-ball 71 in the first ODI against West Indies signaled a welcome return to run-scoring form for Rishabh Pant on Sunday, and he said afterwards that playing 'according to the situation' was his takeaway from his time in internatio­nal cricket and that 'there is nothing called natural game'.

The natural-game aspect has been a constant around Pant, the 22 year old wicketkeep­er-batsman, who has been blamed for throwing his wicket away with seemingly irresponsi­ble shots.

On Sunday, Pant batted with some degree of restraint but still scored at a rate of over a run-aball, lifting India from 80 for three to 194 in collaborat­ion with Shreyas Iyer, who scored 70 in 88 balls. "When me and Iyer got together, we wanted to get a partnershi­p going," Pant said at the press conference after West Indies won by eight wickets to go 1-0 up in the three-match series.

"We wanted to be together till the 40th over as we had lost three early wickets, and the 50-over game is a long one. We thought if we are able to do that, we and the rest of the team would be able to capitalise on that.

"When we were kids, we would hear that 'play the natural game', but since I have played the internatio­nal game, I have realised that there is nothing called natural game. You have to play according to the situation and what the team needs. A good player is one who can mould his game according the situation

and the team's demand."

Pant, through his lean run over the past few months, has often been taunted by fans who have chanted 'Dhoni, Dhoni' while he has been out in the middle, but in Chennai, Dhoni's 'home' in the IPL, there was a pleasant change for the youngster as the spectators shouted ‘Ree-shabh

Pant, Ree-shabh Pant’.

"It is very important," Pant said of the crowd support. "I was looking to improve every day but not getting there. I am not saying that I got there [today], but I am just trying to improve. It's my learning curve, and I am thinking that I want to do whatever I can to get a good score on the board and in the end I got some runs."

Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli, among others, have voiced their support for Pant in recent weeks, while Ravi Shastri, speaking to

India Today recently urged fans and critics to be patient with the young man. "See, the guy is 20-22. He came in and in Test match cricket, he has got two or three hundreds already overseas," Shastri said.

"It's a learning curve as far as Pant goes. He is destructiv­e with the way he bats, he is a matchwinne­r on a given day. But there are times when you come in to the game like the way he has and done what he's done, you suddenly become a known quantity from unknown. That's when the pressure starts building on you as a young player. Living up to expectatio­ns becomes a thing."

"He's lucky that he has age on his side. He doesn't need to be spoken about as much as he is spoken about now. No! He is young, give him time. In five years, if he doesn't set the world on fire, then talk about it."

Responding to a question on the criticism he has had to deal with, Pant said, "As a player, I only want to follow my processes. I am aware of the talks - some are good and others not so good, but the more I concentrat­e on my job the better it is. You have to believe in yourself. It doesn't matter what people say about you. At times, you will get runs, while that might not happen on other days. But the process is always important.”

It's my learning curve, and I am thinking that I want to do whatever I can to get a good score on the board and in the end I got some runs

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