Rohit Sharma's muted century celebration indicated more relief, less happiness; Gautam Gambhir clapped but…
Having endured a wretched run since the start of the New Zealand series at home, the affable Indian skipper faced the most scathing criticism in his 17-plus years at the international level. As much as players speak about "outside noise", an under-pressure man in a high-stakes world would be vulnerable after a point. The memes hurt, conjectures about living on borrowed time must have bruised his champions' ego big time.
The criticism was not unwarranted. He was consistently failing in Test matches, and it came to a point where he had to drop himself from the playing XI of the Sydney Test match. But only he could have changed it all. Till the opening game in Nagpur, everything that could have gone wrong went wrong for Rohit - till February 9 happened. Finally, the sixes were soaring into the stands, and one saw the vintage Rohit, who wasn't pre-empting anything but like good old days reacting to the deliveries.
What changed for Rohit Sharma?
Unlike Australia Tests where he was standing outside the crease trying to counter the movement, he stood deep inside the crease and things started happening. Just like everything goes wrong when it has to go wrong, things start falling in place when it has to. England bowlers made a cardinal mistake during the first ODI by trying to pepper Shreyas Iyer with short-pitched deliveries. In the second ODI on a firm, even bounce track, Saqib Mahmood, Gus Atkinson, Jamie Overton, all decided to bowl the fuller length. However, most of the deliveries were over-pitched and Rohit had played enough cricket to hit through the line with immaculate timing.
When Mark Wood bowled, it was back of the length and Rohit could execute his strokes using the depth of the crease. He could also pick his slower bouncer and deposit it in the stands. "There is a colloquial lingo in Indian cricket - line se line Milana or hitting through the line. He was trying to hit it hard. He just timed each ball. The mindset was clear, and he banked on his experience. Unlike the 2023 World Cup, he attacked but defended when needed but also hit enough sixes to have a high strike-rate," former national selector Devang Gandhi said. Gandhi was, in fact, right.
Rohit knew that an intent-filled 40 off 20 balls wouldn't be enough in a result-oriented world where volume still gets equal if not more impetus. During the World Cup in 2023, he could afford to play that high-risk game but for once, he not only needed to play for the team but also for himself. The cut shot off Adil Rashid, and the six that brought up the 32nd hundred were class acts. And then came the reverse sweep. Rohit Sharma finally batted like Rohit Sharma and the world is now a slightly better place.
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