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‘The pull shots were terrific, but it was 1 innings’: Gavaskar wants promising youngster to be consistent after SL knock

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‘The pull shots were terrific, but it was 1 innings’: Gavaskar wants promising youngster to be consistent after SL knock

After showing signs of struggle in last week’s T20I series against West Indies, young India opener Ishan Kishan bounced back with a stunning punch in Thursday’s opener against Sri Lanka in Lucknow, India in the third A big win in a T20I race coming back from 89.

Kishan had 10 overs and three sixes for a 56-run 89, the highest score ever by an Indian wicketkeeper batsman over Rishabh Pant in the T20I innings.

Despite losses and records, former India captain Sunil Garvaska believes the youngster needs to show consistency if he is to find a place in India’s T20 World Cup squad. Gavaskar felt the condition of the first T20I helped Ishan’s shot, while welcoming some of his kicks and pulls and his shot at Lucknow.
“The way he hit the ball today definitely gave clues. But it was only the first game. In all three games against West Indies he wasn’t very good. That length, speed and bounce were all different. The jumps here are under the shoulders, towards the center of the crack, which is easier for him. But didn’t take anything away from his innings, some of the drives and pulls he hit were great, but it was an inning. Let’s wait for consistency. Let’s wait a few games,” he told Star Sports.
At the start of the West Indies streak, Ishan had 71 runs in three innings to open the game with an 85 batting average. The legendary batsman believes that once Ishan shows signs of stability, he can make it to the Indian squad as he offers more teams.

“Once there is consistency, you can say ‘that’s the guy we want’ because he gives you three things – he’s a goalie, he’s a southpaw, he can hit the ball at the top and in the innings, Not at 5 or 6.”

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Kishan’s knock helped India set a 200-run goal in the series opener, with Shreyas Iyer also hitting 28 balls 57.

Sri Lanka were limited to six out of 137, while India won by 62.

Complete News Source : HINDUSTAN TIMES

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Cricket

KL Rahul dangerously close to Laxman territory; to be perished for Sarfaraz Khan and Shubman Gill

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KL Rahul dangerously close to Laxman territory; to be perished for Sarfaraz Khan and Shubman Gill

To accommodate both Sarfaraz and Gill and stick with their five-bowler formula, a batter from the Bengaluru Test must make way. Ergo Rahul and the predicted axe

VVS Laxman went through the first half of his illustrious 15-and-a-half-year international career with the proverbial axe hanging over him. Despite his magical stroke-play and a well-founded reputation for rallying the lower order to bat above itself, he was forever the first name that sprang to the decision-makers’ minds when they had to drop someone to accommodate someone else. It wasn’t until the second half of his stint with the national team that he had ‘job security’, which automatically manifested itself in an array of glorious, match-turning knocks and earmarked him as one for a crisis.

KL Rahul is now dangerously close to approaching the Laxman territory, though at least in this instance, a case can be made out, perhaps, for why he often seems to be playing for his place. Almost a decade after his Test debut in Australia in December 2014, he has yet to nail down a permanent spot, a result of glaring inconsistency and repeated dalliances with injuries that have left him with a modest average of 33.87 from 53 Test appearances.

Unlike Laxman, who was thrust to the opener’s position for three years from 1997, successive team managements have worked overtime to create space for Rahul. He started off in the middle order in Melbourne against Australia, opened in the next Test in Sydney when he made a sparkling century, continued in that position for a good nine years – around the large pockets when either injuries or lack of form relegated him to the sidelines – and now seems to have found his calling in the middle order, where he was tried out in an almost last throw of the dice in South Africa last December.

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In his limited time at the No. 6 position, Rahul has been a revelation. On a spiteful surface in Centurion in his first innings back in the middle order, the classy right-hander made a marvellous 101 – Virat Kohli’s 38 was the next highest score – in India’s 245 all out. Two Tests later, against England in Hyderabad, he waltzed to 86 of the best until a hamstring strain kept him out of the last four Tests.

On his comeback last month against Bangladesh, Rahul showed why he is rated so highly, and therefore why he so frustrates when he chooses to shackle himself mentally, with uninhibited shot-making when India were pressing for a declaration (Chennai) and looking to make up for lost time with a frenetic batting approach (Kanpur) in the two Tests. Kanpur was especially mesmeric, 68 flowing off his bat in a mere 43 deliveries. It was the best of Rahul.

Axe hangs over Rahul’s head for India vs New Zealand 2nd Test

And yet here we are, two innings later, wondering whether he will, or should, feature in the playing XI in Pune, where India take on New Zealand in a must-win second Test from Thursday.

Shubman Gill, him of three centuries in his last six Tests, missed the Bengaluru defeat to the Kiwis with a stiff neck. Replacement batter Sarfaraz Khan made the most of own good fortune with a delectable 150, which makes it near impossible to drop him now that Gill is fully fit. To accommodate both Sarfaraz and Gill and stick with their five-bowler formula which has worked beautifully in the last few years, a batter from the Bengaluru Test must make way. Ergo Rahul and the predicted axe.

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One of the few men to have led India in all three formats internationally, Rahul didn’t help his cause with scores of 0 and 12 at his home ground, the M Chinnaswamy Stadium. In the first innings, he was strangled down leg-side by William O’Rourke while in the second, he received a peach from the same paceman operating with the second new ball and was again caught behind. Rahul was one of 11 failures in India’s first-innings 46 and one of seven wickets to fall in 93 deliveries to the second new cherry, but failures past and the logjam created by Gill’s availability have combined to identify him as the most susceptible to the axe.

It’s a cross impossible to bear, but also impossible to ignore just because it is so heavy, so overarching. Rahul is beyond gifted and makes batting appear oh-so-simple, but his struggles to embrace sustained run-making can’t be wished away. He is the eternal team man, much like his celebrated namesake also from Karnataka – both kept wickets admirably in 50-over World Cups 21 years apart, both made attractive and impactful runs during the tournament and both tasted bitter defeat at the hands of Australia in the final – but ‘eternal team man’ can sometimes be an euphemism for the ‘most dispensable’ and Rahul can be excused for thinking that those two lines have blurred beyond repair. Of course, if he is brutally honest to himself, he will acknowledge at least to himself that he too must bear culpability for the blurring of the lines.

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