Virat Kohli Says Not Doing Anyone A Favour By Scoring Runs
It was a sense of deja vu for the skipper, who had a slight altercation with the media at this very venue after the team lost the Test series.
- Press Trust of India
- Updated: February 17, 2018 03:37 pm IST
Highlights
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India beat South Africa 5-1 in the ODI series
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Kohli was named man of the match and series
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Kohli hit three centuries in the series
Virat Kohli has literally made the 22-yard strip his own kingdom but the India captain said he is not one to pat himself on the back. Kohli believes scoring runs is his job and that he isn't doing anyone a favour. "Yes, if I make a mistake I will come here and accept it. I have never been one to give excuses and will remain like that. But I am never one to come here and praise myself. I can never do that because as I said, this is a job for me. I am not doing anyone a favour," he said. Kohli was again at the forefront scoring a staggering 558 runs (including three hundreds) in his team's 5-1 ODI series win against South Africa but made it clear that he has never ever played cricket to be a "headline grabber".Â
"At this stage, I don t feel like competing with anyone. It s all about how I prepare before the game and what my work ethics are and how I am feeling on game day. My only motivation is to get into that frame of mind. I am not competing with anyone at all," Kohli said at the post-match press conference.
The key to consistency is not thinking too ahead of himself.
"But if you are thinking about being ahead of someone else then you will be found out very soon by this game and you are compromising on what the team needs as well," the skipper said after anchoring his team home with yet another ODI hundred.
Asked if he can now be termed as the best batsman in world cricket, the straight-talking skipper said: "As I said, I don t want any tags. I don t want any headlines. I just go out there and do my job, it is up to the people to write what they write, I don t want to be called anything.
"It's my job, I am supposed to do what I am doing and I am not doing anyone a favour, so just want to be in this zone of working as hard as I can and trying to do the best for the team," the Delhi batsman added.
The skipper once again made it clear that public perceptions are least of his concerns as long as his team knows his worth.
"What matters is what the management thinks about me, what I think about the players and what the players think about me. That's all that matters to me. I know the headlines change from day in and day out. Tomorrow I play a bad shot and get out for zero everyone will conveniently do what they want to do, so it's not my job to say anything about what I do.
While India's ODI juggernaut has rolled on, there have been questions raised about the quality of opposition playing ODI cricket and the skipper's views made it clear that he wasn't amused one bit.
Questioned if this was India's best overseas win, pat came a terse response: "You people can tell!"
"One month back we were a very bad team. Now we are being asked these questions. We haven't changed our mindset. Now whether this is the biggest win or no, whoever wants to analyze, write will do so," Kohli's response made it clear from where it was coming.
It was a sense of deja vu for the skipper, who had a slight altercation with the media at this very venue after the team lost the Test series.
"I know for a fact that 90 percent people didn't give us a chance after two Tests. I was sitting in the same room giving a press conference. So we understand where we've come from," the sarcasm was not lost on anyone.
"I am not going to live in a dreamland right now and accept all the praise, sit here and feel good about this, because it doesn't matter to me. Honestly it doesn't. It didn't matter when we were 2-0 down, it doesn't matter now that we are 5-1 up because what matters is the respect in the change-room," the disdain and disregard for the media was once again evident in each and every sentence that he spoke.
The skipper sounded a bit irritated when asked about South Africa being laid low by injuries to senior players.
"Whether the team was what it was supposed to be was not in our hands. It's none of our concern. We want to take the best team as far as we can on the field and have the best mindset to perform on every given day that we represent our country. That remains our mind set regardless of what happens," he said.Â
(With inputs from PTI)