Dhoni's 51 off 96 balls and failing to rotate the strike has brought to focus the rejigging that skipper Virat Kohli and coach Ravi Shastri will have to fret upon.
Mahendra
Singh Dhoni's inability to set the pace during middle overs will
remain a major cause of concern when India take on Australia in a
do-or-die second ODI on Tuesday in their bid to keep the three-match
series alive.
Hardik
Pandya's sudden suspension on disciplinary grounds has badly affected
the balance of the batting order, which was apparent during team's
34-run defeat in the opening match despite vice-captain Rohit
Sharma's 22nd hundred in 50-over format.
Dhoni's
51 off 96 balls and failing to rotate the strike has brought to focus
the rejigging that skipper Virat Kohli and coach Ravi Shastri will
have to fret upon.
With
Dhoni being slotted at No 5 even though vice-captain Rohit wants the
veteran to bat a notch higher but cues from India's training session
made it clear that the team is unlikely to tinker with the batting
order.
India's
batting order did come under the spotlight at the Sydney Cricket
Ground. The top three (Rohit, Shikhar Dhawan and Kohli) have enjoyed
a fairly consistent run since 2016.
But
it was a rare occasion when Dhoni had to come out in the fourth over
of the innings.
Dhoni
averages 52.95 while batting at number four, which is higher than his
current career-average of 50.11 over 333 games.
It
is even higher than his favoured batting positions of number five
(50.70) and six (46.33) but batting lower down the order, strike-rate
becomes paramount.
Yet,
Dhoni's career strike-rate at number four is 94.21 is higher than his
overall career strike-rate of 87.60, or at number five (86.08) and
number six (83.23).
When
India last played ODIs in Australia
in January 2016, Dhoni batted at number four in two matches but only
scored 18 runs.
In
fact, since that series, Dhoni has batted at number four in only
eight ODIs, with the last instance in the 2018 Asia Cup.
He
averages 24.75 in this interim, with a strike-rate of 77.34 and a
highest of 80 against New Zealand in October 2016.
This
presents a quandary, which the Indian team management might not be in
a mood to sort out at present.
Rayudu
did well enough in the Asia Cup and in the home series against West
Indies, and both batsmen merit a longer run in their respective
positions to help settle this batting line-up in the run-up to the
English summer.
No comments:
Post a Comment