India vs England, 3rd Test: Rohit Sharma Says Intent To Score, Not Just Survive, Helped On Ahmedabad Pitch
India vs England: Rohit Sharma said an intent to score runs on the pitch for the third Test in Ahmedabad was the way to go as that's what fetched him the runs in both innings.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: February 26, 2021 12:17 am IST
Highlights
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Rohit Sharma said he tried to look for scoring opportunities in 3rd Test
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Rohit scored a half-century in 1st innings on a tricky pitch in Ahmedabad
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India beat England by 10 wickets in a game that finished inside two days
Rohit Sharma attributed his sublime first innings half-century to the positive intent that he displayed by not just trying to survive on an "interesting" but "normal" Indian wicket where England got thrashed by 10 wickets. The senior opener scored India's only half-century of the game with the home side spinners accounting for 18Â wickets. England batsmen were deceived by Axar Patel's straighter deliveries that skidded straight instead of turning. "When you are playing on a pitch like that, you need to have an intent and look to score runs as well. You can't just keep blocking. As you saw that odd ball might just turn and odd ball might just skid on to stumps, when you play for turn," Rohit said during the virtual conference after the end of the match.
Rohit felt that during his innings off 66, he was a step or two ahead of England bowlers. "You just need to be slightly ahead at times and try and find ways to score runs. My intent was not just to survive but try and score runs as well, while respecting the good balls. That's all I tried to do," said Rohit.
"The pitch was an interesting one and odd ball was just coming in and some were taking turn. On a track like this, you need to have a clear mindset, which I think I did until I played that sweep shot."
He felt that Axar's strategy of attacking the stumps paid off well. "Axar was simply brilliant," Rohit said, lauding the left-arm spinner who had big shoes to fill, replacing Ravindra Jadeja.
"Coming out from nowhere and performing is never easy. He was out injured, slightly down, came back and bowled very well in Chennai. He understands conditions well and how to vary the pace and what lines to bowl."
Coming wider off the crease was also another effective ploy used by Axar. "He made the batter play most balls which is important as you never know which one is going to turn. It all goes to his skill-sets. He bowls little wider off the crease and slightly slinging action makes it very difficult for batsman to either leave or play," said Rohit.