![]() |
| MS Dhoni has to make the most of the limited resources he has at his disposal with RPS |
It was Sunday afternoon at Mohali,
and the Rising Pune Supergiants (RPS) lost their second game in succession
against a resurgent Kings’ XI Punjab (KXIP) playing at home. Sure it has been just
3 games, but it’s a compelling proposition to compare RPS with the most
successful franchise in IPL cricket over the 8 seasons and see why it’s not really
a CSK – Version 2.0.
Let’s look at fielding first. An
often neglected aspect of cricket in yesteryears, T20 has taken the importance
of fielding to a whole new level today. For a 20 over game, when conditions and
rules are so heavily skewed in favour of the batsmen, it’s the fielding that can
often win you matches, especially the big games. RPS hasn’t really fielded too
well in the tournament so far. Compare them with the CSK of the past and you’ll
see why CSK won so many matches even when everything seemed lost. An outstanding catch by Raina, a brilliant run-out
by Jadeja and those diving stops by McCullum – how often have they tilted the
games in CSK’s favour? Apart from these 3, there were Bravo, Du Plessis and Hussey
who were all exceptional on the field and often inspired the laggards in crunch
situations when it mattered the most. RPS has Smith, Du Plessis and Rahane, but
surely CSK was far ahead of the current RPS team in terms of their fielding pedigree.
Let’s take a look at their
batting now. Rahane, Du Plessis, KP, Smith, Dhoni, Marsh/Perera. Looks brilliant,
doesn’t it? Problem is the RPS has too many batsmen who can play an anchor’s
role and are one-dimensional in their styles. Smith, Rahane and Du Plessis are
all brilliant, but they are players who score at strike-rates in the range of
120-130. A modern day T20 side needs at least 3 players who can score at more
than 150. At the moment only KP and Dhoni are the ones capable of doing that,
and unfortunately for RPS, KP hasn’t displayed a lot of his big-hitting in the
3 matches so far while Dhoni just hasn’t faced enough balls. Apart from KP stepping
up and Dhoni batting up the order, probably Albie Morkel also needs to be given
a go. It was the first season when Morkel was picked by Dhoni in the playing XI
for CSK. His consistent performances for the team forced South Africa to pick
him regularly in the T20I side and even in their ODI side for a brief while. It
was almost as if Dhoni unleashed Albie Morkel at the world stage. At CSK
though, especially in the later seasons, he was often underutilized as the team
was brimming with explosive batsmen right down till number 7 and was eventually
let go by them after 6 seasons. As luck would have it, Dhoni’s team bought him
back at the auctions, this time for a different franchise. RPS lacks the batting
firepower that CSK had and they need someone like Morkel desperately. Dhoni knows
his game in and out too. Now may be the right time for Morkel to repay the
faith that Dhoni showed in him a few years ago by bringing back RPS to winning
ways.
Bowling is probably where the two
teams come close; and not in a good way. Batting was the stronger suit for CSK
too, as in the case with RPS. Ashwin became CSK’s strike bowler in the later years,
but they never truly had a leader of the pack apart from probably Bollinger in
the first 3 seasons and Nehra in the last 2. The bowling for RPS is all over
the place at the moment. Ravi Ashwin hasn’t been best utilized by Dhoni yet.
Ishant has been unpredictable, and the rest; well let’s just say they haven’t
really been at their best yet. Marsh bowled well in seamer-friendly conditions
at Wankhede in the tournament opener, but was dropped in the third game due to
his inability to add much value with the bat. Murugan Ashwin has been the only
silver lining so far. To win a tournament, at least 2-3 bowlers need to take
wickets regularly and the rest need to support them well.
Another striking feature about
the Superkings was that a majority of their playing XI were capped
international players or were regular picks in their teams. Contrast this with
the current RPS team – Rahane is not a regular in the India T20 side, KP doesn’t
play international cricket anymore; Marsh, Perera are more or less fringe
players for their respective sides. RP Singh, Ishant Sharma, Pathan, Dinda have
not been playing T20Is for quite some time now, while Bhatia, M Ashwin and Ankit
Sharma are all uncapped. It will definitely take them some time to get used to
the rigours and demands of the highly competitive cricket that the IPL embodies.
With almost everything going
against him, it looks like a tough road for MS and the Rising Pune Supergiants from
here. It’s a test of Dhoni’s captaincy now as he is left with a new franchise
and a new set of players to lead, many of whom have not even played regularly
in IPL or for India and are short on match practice. But these are the sorts of
challenges that you play the game for. With another 11 matches to go and at
least 7 matches to qualify for the play-offs, only time will tell whether Dhoni
and his men can pick themselves up and truly rise like Supergiants.

No comments:
Post a Comment