Rohit Sharma's 'High Risk' Revelation Before The Asia Cup 2023.
Rohit Sharma spoke candidly about his batting approach and how it has affected his recent results.
To add a new dimension to his batting, Rohit Sharma traded caution for aggression, and the Indian captain is happy with the results, even if it means missing out on those Daddy 100s. Rohit scored 27 hundreds before the end of the 2019 World Cup, although he was only able to add three more hundreds to his total over the previous four years. The captain thinks that his high-risk strategy is largely responsible for this.
"I wanted to take
more risks, which is why my numbers are slightly different now," Rohit
told PTI during an exclusive interview. "My (ODI) strike-rate (during this
period) has increased but the average has dipped a bit. This is exactly what
our batting coach (Vikram Rathour) was telling me, ‘You have scored big runs
because of the way you batted all these years and in the last few years, it
(big runs) has not happened because you are taking risk," the skipper
added.
Rohit is the only player who scored three double hundreds, including 208* (against Sri Lanka in 2017) and 209 (against Australia in 2013) and the highest individual score in ODI cricket 264 (against Sri Lanka in 2013)
at 2019 against the West Indies at Vizag, he scored his last 150-plus run innings.
Somewhere along the line, according to Rohit, he had to make a concession.
"My career strike-rate is around 90 (89.97) but in past couple of years, if you look at my scores and take the strike-rate into consideration, it has been around 105-110. So somewhere you had to compromise. It is not possible to have a 55 average and a 110 strike-rate." This high-risk game is also a process of his self-discovery, said Rohit.
"It was purely my choice. My usual batting is still my patent, but I wanted to try something else. I am very happy with the result."
In fact, he had
communicated his change of approach to the team management.
"Everyone wants to
bat long and score those 150s and 170s. I still want to do that, but it is
always nice to do something that you have not done. It only adds up in your
list of batting abilities. Unless you do it, you won't know it.
"I know if I play
high risk shots, I will get out few times but I didn't bother. This was
communicated by me to the management that this is how I want to play." An
extension of that was the kind of tracks that India team has played Test
matches on at home. They weren't exactly batting-friendly, and the Indian
skipper has been the team's most consistent Test batter of late.
"Look at my recent
Test innings in India. I can tell you that batting in India is much more
difficult now than batting overseas, especially in the last 2-3 years.
"The pitches that we have played on, it is more challenging than overseas.
That's why we haven't spoken about runs and averages of batting unit. All of us
agreed that we want to play on challenging pitches. I don't want to worry about
what kind of averages we finish with.
"That is how I think
but different players will have different thought processes, and I don't want
to change that. I am going to play on pitches that suit our bowlers,” he
declared.
He has captained Mumbai
Indians for 11 years and is leading the national team for nearly two years now.
So, do captains have shelf
life? "There is no such thing as shelf life,” he replied with conviction.
"You get a responsibility;
you produce a result and more important is if you are happy with the
responsibility that you have been entrusted with. This is more important
questions than the shelf life." He is a planner but also likes to trust
his gut instinct.
"I am a person who
goes with the flow. What I feel right now, I would want to do without thinking
about what I want to do five or six months later. I like to take things as they
come but prepare according to what is in store in the future."