Run-hungry Kishan fuels middle order fire

Thrown into the deep end against one of the format’s best attacks, Kishan showed his wares even if it was not in his preferred opening slot

Shashank Kishore03-Sep-20231:55

Jaffer: Kishan’s innings will give selectors a good headache when Rahul gets fit

Ishan Kishan may have carried drinks had KL Rahul been fit for the start of India’s Asia Cup campaign against Pakistan. But with Rahul unavailable initially, Kishan had a golden opportunity. The team sheet had listed him to bat at No. 3, but he eventually walked in at No. 5, a spot he hadn’t ever batted in previously in an ODI.The move was met with some scepticism. Experts, most notably former India head coach Ravi Shastri, felt he was best suited to be a powerplay enforcer at the top of the order. But on Saturday, while Kishan wasn’t quite in the middle during the powerplay, he proved to be an able enforcer anyway. And just when the raging selection debate seemed all but settled, Kishan may have fuelled it even more.His punchy 82 off 81 balls was pivotal in India staging a superb recovery from 66 for 4 in the 15th over. For now, while it’s a headache the team management will welcome with open arms, it also opens up another possibility of Kishan being a shoo-in as a reserve batter, one that Tilak Varma and Suryakumar Yadav are already vying for in India’s World Cup squad.Related

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It could be significant on several counts. One, it helps India throw in a left-handed element that they lack in the top order. Two, it brings with it the possibility of having an extra seamer in the squad. But for now, this much is clear. Kishan has controlled the controllables in the best possible manner.His maiden knock against Pakistan didn’t come without its fair share of challenges. Kishan ran into a red-hot pace attack controlling the tempo of the game by making giant incisions. Shaheen Shah Afridi was moving them off the seam both ways, Haris Rauf was effortlessly cranking it up into the late 140kph, and Naseem Shah was bowling unplayable lifters.Kishan enjoyed an early streak of luck when a genuine outside edge off Naseem flew past the slip fielder; he was nearly done in by sharp away movement as the ball took the leading edge. This, coupled with the odd delivery scooting low to the wicketkeeper Mohammad Rizwan, had the potential to create doubts for the batters. Kishan, though, seemed remarkably clear of his plans of taking the bowlers on.