Thursday 25 July 2013

Virat Kohli and the art of ODI batting


THANKS TO- ESPNCRICINFO

ORIGINAL LINK
(Virat Kohli and the art of ODI batting   BY-Shiva Jayaraman)
http://www.espncricinfo.com/tri-nation-west-indies-2013/content/story/648739.html

( Disclaimer:tirupur cricket academy.blog spot  is only a compiler of the content.. Copyrights © are owned by the respective writers and websites.
 tirupur cricket academy.blog spot  holds no rights on the below cover story  compilation.)

 Virat Kohli century in India's third league match, against West Indies, in the tri-nation series was the second-fastest of his 14 ODI hundreds - it came off 81 balls. His second fifty took all of 26 balls, which is the lowest number of balls he has taken to go from 50 to 100. His innings was the best example of how he has mastered the art of pacing an ODI innings. Stats suggest that he has been one of the most successful ODI batsmen since his debut in August 2008. Kohli has aggregated 4345 ODI runs, the third most by any batsman in the last five years in ODIs. His career strike rate of 86.74 - a healthy one for the amount of runs he has scored - shows that he has managed to straddle the two aspects of ODI batting - scoring runs and scoring them fast - comfortably. 

 
Over the last few years, the scoring rates for a couple of No.3 batsmen have been questioned, but Kohli has had no such problems. Among those who have batted in at least 20 innings at No.3 in the last five years, Kohli's strike rate is the highest.
A look at how Kohli's strike rates move over ten-over blocks of an innings, reveals a fair bit on how Kohli has a template for building and finishing his knocks. His innings have generally been characterised by slow, watchful starts, busy middle periods and explosive ends. This is corroborated by the progression of his batting strike rate through his innings. He is at his slowest at the start of an innings - scoring at a rate of 63.8 in the first ten overs of the innings. He is usually content in playing himself in during these periods - 71% of the balls he faces are dots. He hits a boundary only once in 12.4 balls during this period. In the next ten overs, his dot-ball percentage drops to 52%, but his boundary rate drops as well, possibly because of the lack of fielding restrictions.
Virat Kohli's batting stats - over-wise




















Overs
  Inns
0s
1s
4s & 6s
Runs
Avg
Cum avg
SR
dot-ball %age
Balls/boundary
1 to 10  
70
778
193
89
704
10.1
10.1
63.8
71%
12.4
11 to 20
75
838
577
113
1226
16.3
26.4
76.7
52%
14.2
21 to 30
52
534
580
77
1092
21.0
47.4
86.5
42%
16.4
31 to 40
35
303
344
111
952
27.2
74.6
117.7
38%
7.3
41 to 50
18
75
93
52
371
20.6
95.2
155.2
31%
4.6















































Kohli's batting in the next ten overs (21-30) gives us an insight into how careful he is in building an innings; it's also an aspect that a batsman like Rohit Sharma would do well to learn from. Rohit tends to let his guard down after getting starts and throws his wicket away, but this doesn't happen with Kohli. This period is when he has taken minimum risks, hitting boundaries only once in 16.4 balls, the least through his innings, but still manages to score at 5.2 runs an over - thanks to the high percentage of singles he takes during this period. Nearly 53% of the balls he plays during these overs are taken for singles. No wonder then, Kohli has been dismissed on only 14 occasions between scores of 30 and 49 (14% of his total innings), the least when compared with other top No.3 batsmen. The next ten overs are when he breaks free. His boundaries now come at a much greater rate: one off every 7.3 balls. The last ten overs of his innings are when he is most destructive - boundaries off every 4.6 balls and only 31% dot balls.
Given the caution Kohli takes at the start of his innings it is obvious that his strike rate between overs 11 and 30, of 81 - which is quite healthy in itself - does not rank at the very top among batsmen. However, Kohli still manages to be among the top-ten batsmen in this regard. Considering that he has scored almost 500 runs more than the second batsman in the list, his scoring rate in these overs is certainly not a big disadvantage. Moreover, India have had bad starts (one down for less than 20) in 43 of the 93 matches since 2010, when Kohli has started batting at No.3 or at No.4, demanding a mature, risk-free start from the batsmen at the crease. 





Top batsmen (strike rate) in overs 11 to 30 (min 1000 runs), last five years

Batsman
Inns
Runs
Avg
SR
Dis
Shane Watson
52
1491
39.23
90.8
38
AB de Villiers
64
1819
69.96
87.7
26
Hashim Amla
42
1525
76.25
85.7
20
Gautam Gambhir
49
1575
60.57
85.5
26
Tillakaratne Dilshan
55
1706
46.10
83.2
37
Yuvraj Singh
56
1245
40.16
83.0
31
Virat Kohli
78
2318
56.63
81.0
41
Mohammad Hafeez
39
1045
37.32
81.0
28
Jacques Kallis
39
1196
62.94
77.8
19
Ricky Ponting
61
1576
41.47
76.7
38







The last 20 overs of the innings are when Kohli makes amends for his comparatively slow starts. Among batsmen with at least 1000 runs in these overs, Kohli's strike rate of 126.3 is second only to Shahid Afridi's. Compare this to the strike rate of 98.8 at which MS Dhoni - who is arguably the best finisher going around in this format - scores in these overs. Kohli definitely knows how and when to switch gears. 




Top five batsmen (strike rate) in overs  










31-50 (min 1000 runs)
Batsman
Inns
Runs
Avg
SR
Dis
Shahid Afridi
61
1222
21.82
135.5
56
Virat Kohli
40
1323
49.00
126.3
27
AB de Villiers
43
1581
65.87
119.7
24
Suresh Raina
73
1929
38.58
116.8
50
Kieron Pollard
46
1073
26.31
115.0
41






The most important stat of all is Kohli's contribution in India wins. In the last five years, no other batsman has scored more in teams' wins than Kohli. Of Kohli's 14 ODI centuries, 13 have come in wins - the most hundreds any batsman has scored in wins in the last five years. His average in these games is among the top five in the last five years. Kohli has eight centuries in 39 successful chases he has been involved in. This is already the third-highest by any batsman, and he has taken fewer innings, by far, by any batsman to achieve this. 
Top batsmen (Average) in wins (min 40 wins)
Batsman
Inns
NO
Runs
HS
Avg
SR
100
50
AB de Villiers
44
14
2528
134
84.26
105.9
9
17
Hashim Amla
44
4
2969
150
74.22
93.9
11
17
MS Dhoni
56
21
2397
124
68.48
91.3
2
17
Misbah-ul-Haq
41
17
1633
93*
68.04
72.5
0
15
Virat Kohli
63
14
3263
183
66.59
90.8
13
14









What these numbers indicate are that Kohli juggles between the roles of a No.3 batsman and a finisher quite efficiently - accumulating big runs that count, and at a rate that helps his team win matches.














































Shiva Jayaraman is a sub-editor (stats) at ESPNcricinfo













































































No comments:

Post a Comment

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...