“Look, when you’re playing on challenging pitches, you’ve got to be brave, honestly,” Rohit mentioned throughout the post-match presentation. “I just felt we allowed their bowlers to bowl on one particular spot. But not taking any credit away from their bowlers, especially Nathan Lyon. He was brilliant, he kept challenging us, kept hitting that right length. So yeah, when the bowler is doing that, you’ve got to come out with your plans and try and do different things; try and be a little brave as well, which I thought we were not.”
“When you’re playing on pitches like this, you need a Shreyas Iyer kind of an innings,” Rohit mentioned at his post-match press convention. “Someone has to step up, someone has to take down the bowlers. It cannot be always that the batters will get 100 runs, 90 runs, 80 runs; you have to play cameos like that.
“If one of many prime batters can get an enormous rating, that is a plus – that is nice – however when you already know the pitch [offers the bowlers something], there’s a problem. You want guys to go on the market and play the way in which Iyer did.”
Cheteshwar Pujara top-scored in India’s second innings, with 59 off 142 balls. At one point during Pujara’s innings, when he was tied down by Lyon’s accuracy and 7-2 leg-side field, cameras caught Rohit gesturing in the dressing-room balcony as if to tell Pujara to stop defending and try hitting Lyon over the top instead.
“He loves spending time within the center, he desires to grind it out, that is his means of doing it”
Rohit said Cheteshwar Pujara’s approach was a case of a batter scoring runs based on his own strengths
In that context, Rohit’s comments about a lack of bravery could be seen as directed as Pujara, but he indicated that this was not the case. At one point during his press conference, he expressed his annoyance at being asked repeatedly about the pitch rather than players who performed on it, and took Pujara’s name while doing so.
“Every time we play in India, there’s solely concentrate on the pitch,” Rohit said. “Why are individuals not asking me about Nathan Lyon, how effectively he bowled, how effectively Pujara batted within the second innings, how effectively Usman Khawaja performed?”
Later, he said Pujara’s approach was a case of a batter finding a method of run-scoring based on his own strengths. This, he said, was how India wanted their players to approach batting on challenging pitches.
“Pujara [was] being Pujara,” Rohit said. “He loves spending time within the center, he desires to grind it out, that is his means of doing it. May not be the identical means for lots of the opposite guys.
“That is something that we spoke in our group as well, find your own methods of going out there and doing your job. As long as the job gets done, we are happy as a unit. Yes, like] in the first two games as well, the runs will not come from everyone. As long as the runs come, we are happy as a unit.”
Karthik Krishnaswamy is a senior sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo
Source web site: www.espncricinfo.com