Opinion

You Can Be Flexible, But Not With Top-Three: Mahela Jayawardene On India’s Batting Order against New Zealand

Written by Vishwas Gupta

Former Sri Lanka skipper and Mumbai Indians head coach Mahela Jayawardene feels the lack of role clarity and team construction led to India’s downfall in the first two games of the ongoing ICC T20 World Cup in the UAE. Jayawardene, who has guided Mumbai Indians to multiple IPL titles since 2017, said batting has always been India’s strength but once that department faltered, it became a Herculean task for the bowlers.

“…the skills in that dressing room are immense and I feel that role clarity and how you want to construct is something which is lacking. Form as well coming into this tournament and how they are going to set themselves up because India, as a team, hasn’t played T20 cricket for a little while and that showed,” he said on ESPNcricinfo’s T20 Time Out show.

“They had couple of warm-up games, they looked good but kept changing personnel at the top of the order and when they came into the actual tournament it was a bit tough. India is always going to dominate with the bat in the competition but as soon as the batting lets them down…

“When you compare with all other bowling attacks you feel that India is not upto scratch. They have some attacking bowlers but its their batting that they have depended on dominating and when that is not happening that’s a concern,” he said.

Asked what he meant by clarity, Jayawardene explained, “For me, the clarity is who are your best opening options, how you are going to get that explosive start and who is going to bat through and then you can have a floater in that little period. How do you use that floater and who is going to keep the tempo up.”

Jayawardene credited MI and New Zealand’s bowling coach Shane Bond for perfectly planning and executing India’s downfall in the last match.

“If you see the last game against New Zealand, having worked with Shane for quite sometime you see the straight match ups. How they used it and the field settings and options they threw and India was rattled with that.

“New Zealand made their bowling changes to adapt to those match ups and whenever those match ups were correct they used that. India had to counter that but obviously they hadn’t thought through that process. Those are areas where you need to be one step ahead of the opponent,” he observed.

The opening two losses against Pakistan and New Zealand have diminished India’s hopes of making it to the semifinals and according to Jayawardene, Virat Kohli and Co may have erred by fiddling with a settled batting order. Vice-captain Rohit Sharma was dropped to no.3 position from his usual opening slot against Kiwis to make way for young Ishan Kishan, a decision which backfired.

“You can be flexible. But not with your top-three batters. Most teams if you take, you don’t have too much flexibility in that top three. They are settled. They are the ones who are going to give you that initial tempo, who are going to go about things.

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Vishwas Gupta