INDIA: A test of Kohli’s tactical acumen in World Cup – 2019

His manic consistency has already put him among the pantheon of greats but the World Cup in England will be Virat Kohli’s hour of reckoning in his bid to create a lasting legacy as India’s captain.

The first Indian captain to win a Test series on Australiansoil, Kohli will be leading a team which has its own share of worries but isnot short of game-changers, a must in a big ticket tournament.

   

Who bats at No 4? Is Kedar Jadhav good enough? Third paceror an extra all-rounder? Kuldeep or Chahal or both? The World Cup will be muchabout Kohli, the captain as much as it is about Kohli, the batsman.

A World Cup victory will put Kohli in a league of his ownand even those sceptical about his tactical nous, will have no other option butto grudgingly doff their hats at his heady achievements.

Without doubt, the Indian captain will hold the key duringthe seven-week period where he is expected to cross 11,000 runs and also add afew more hundreds to the 41 he has already has in his kitty.  With the pitches expected to be as flat aspancakes, Rohit Sharma’s flamboyance may fetch him a few ‘Daddy Hundreds’, maybe even a fourth double, if the vice-captain gets going.

And then there is Shikhar Dhawan, who has never put a footwrong at the ICC events since his international debut and would like the recordto remain unblemished.

The trouble starts after this point, something that Men InBlue have not exactly been able to paper over despite fabulous show from thetop three on more occasions. The number four slot has been a topic ofdiscussion after Ambati Rayudu failed to inspire confidence and the maverickRishabh Pant was left out of the squad defying logic.

Even the explanations given by the chairman of selectors MSKPrasad and skipper Kohli about Dinesh Karthik’s experience under pressurewasn’t a convincing enough reason.

Save his 8-ball-29 in the Nidahas T20 final againstBangladesh, Karthik in his stop-start 14-year international career has hardlydone anything worth remembering.

Vijay Shankar, the man termed as the ‘Three Dimensional’cricketer by Prasad or specialist opener KL Rahul could be the ‘square peg in around hole’.

Whoever is the choice, it will be more of an inspirationalone rather than having any method to the madness as the ‘Madmax’ Pant waits inthe wings.

Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s final World Cup campaign will be anemotional one for his legion of fans but a strike-rate in 70s and inability toforce the pace on a consistent basis between 35th and 50th over will keepopposition teams interested.

During the IPL, Dhoni is known to target the young Indianbowlers during the death overs, using all his expertise, something he might finddifficult against a Kagiso Rabada or a Pat Cummins or a Muhammed Aamir.

At No. 6 comes Kedar Jadhav, hopefully fit by the time Indiatake on South Africa at Southampton on June 5.

The cheeky player that he is, Jadhav’s below-par show in 14IPL games is a cause of concern. At CSK, despite playing on conducive Chennaitracks, Jadhav wasn’t bowled — partially due to his dodgy hamstring and partlydue to success of Harbhajan Singh and Imran Tahir.

Hardik Pandya’s multi-dimensional talent at No. 7 isexpected to be put to good use during the tournament. His ability to producebig sixes at the death can change complexion of the game.       

The Indian team management and the selectors in the past twoyears, invested heavily in wrist spinners Kuldeep Yadav and Yuzvendra Chahal,who have got decent amount of success.

But the Australians during their last ODI series in India,were able to successfully decode the duo with Usman Khawaja and Aaron Finchshowing the way in Ranchi while  youngAshton Turner (not in WC squad) followed suit in Mohali.

Kuldeep’s poor IPL form has been an insult to the injury ashe was the only World Cup bound India player, who lost his place in an IPLplaying XI due to poor form.

But there is Jasprit Bumrah, who in coming years, will perhaps be one of India’s greatest match-winners. Mohammed Shami’s swing up-front and Bumrah’s yorkers at the death makes it for a heady cocktail. Out of nine league games, winning six could prove to be good enough to qualify for the semi-finals for a team that has plenty of talent on offer.  PTI

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