Yes it used to drive me nuts in late 90s ODIs where a team would have the opposition really tied down early with all but two fielders in the circle... and then for no other reason than the end of the 15-over fielding restrictions the field would spread and suddenly the batsmen could score 4 singles per over. Not because the batsman was hitting boundaries. Not even necessarily because they wanted to bring a slow bowler on. Just because they could. And that still applies somewhat today.The mistake captains make with block or bash players is that they start protecting the boundary too early and giving easy singles. Guys like Sharma live for that, because suddenly they have other scoring options outside of smashing a boundary off loose deliveries.
Assuming you mean he's limited outside the sub-continent considering he recently scored an ODI double-ton against Australia.been a garbage innings from Rohit so far, for all his talent, he's still far too limited a player to be consistently successful in this format.
He's done sfa the rest of his LO career. And it's been a reasonably long one.Assuming you mean he's limited outside the sub-continent considering he recently scored an ODI double-ton against Australia.
Have a feeling he'll get a huge ton today. Let's see.He's done sfa the rest of his LO career. And it's been a reasonably long one.
He's played a lot of ODIs in India though, it's only last year that he started to open, he needs to be more proactive when rotating the strike, he almost looks to block like half a dozen deliveries at the start of the innings, regardless of how good or difficult the conditions are.Assuming you mean he's limited outside the sub-continent considering he recently scored an ODI double-ton against Australia.
Remember when Jono said it was no longer the case that Indian batsmen couldn't handle the short ball?
16 sixes = 96 runs. 12 fours = 48 runs - 144 runs in boundaries, 74 dot balls - again, if he can hit boundaries he's fine and in India on their pitches and their fast outfields? Much easier to hit boundaries there - don't need to work the ball around as much.Assuming you mean he's limited outside the sub-continent considering he recently scored an ODI double-ton against Australia.
Would you have dropped Dhawan incidentally ?He's played a lot of ODIs in India though, it's only last year that he started to open, he needs to be more proactive when rotating the strike, he almost looks to block like half a dozen deliveries at the start of the innings, regardless of how good or difficult the conditions are.
The criticism of him isn't that he can't produce these scores, it's just that with good tactics, bowling and drying up his runs he tends to get bogged down really easily which means unless he improves he's never going to be consistent. And the problem with that is we're nealy always chasing huge targets or have to make big scores, if he gets bogged down and gets out before he's able to catch up with his strike rate then it's a massive blow for the side.Have a feeling he'll get a huge ton today. Let's see.