FORMER captain Sunil Gavaskar
says India’s failure to make good
starts cost them the ODI series
against New Zealand and the
team’s batters should take a leaf
out of Virat Kohli’s book to understand how an innings should be
paced while chasing difficult targets.
“Unless Virat Kohli got substantial support, it was always
going to be difficult, and he got
very little of it.
The real problem
for India throughout the series
has been the starts. As they say,
well begun is half done,”Gavaskar
said on ‘Amul Cricket Live’ on
JioStar. “India never began well,
and that’s one of the main reasons they weren’t able to chase
these big scores,” he pointed out.
“...When you lose someone in
good form like KL Rahul, and you
have Nitish Kumar Reddy, who
hadn’t really done justice to his
ability until this innings of 53
runs and then Harshit Rana,
someone you are never quite sure
what you are going to get, it
becomes an uphill climb.
That’s
exactly what India found,”
Gavaskar explained.
The legendary former batter
lauded Kohli for trying till the end
and urged the others to emulate
his mindset and consistency.
“The thing about him is that
he’s not tied down to an image.
A lot of batters and bowlers are
constrained by how they’re perceived, and they feel they must
live up to that image. Virat isn’t
like that,” he said.
“He’s tied to the job at hand,
and that job is to score runs.
Sometimes, that means starting
watchfully and then opening up.
Sometimes, it means attacking
early and then spreading the field
and picking up ones and twos,”
he added.