City
Epaper

Men's ODI WC: You want to put the team first, says Pujara on Kohli going slow to get 48th ODI ton

By IANS | Updated: October 20, 2023 16:40 IST

New Delhi, Oct 20 Indian Test batter Cheteshwar Pujara gave his take following Virat Kohli's remarkable achievement of ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Oct 20 Indian Test batter Cheteshwar Pujara gave his take following Virat Kohli's remarkable achievement of scoring his 48th ODI century against Bangladesh, which he accomplished by strategically refraining from taking singles in the final overs of the run chase.

A section of fans expressed their opinion on social media regarding Kohli's choice to refrain from taking singles while partnering with KL Rahul. In the final phase of the Indian chase to reach 257, Kohli managed to score the last 30 runs primarily by keeping the strike to himself. During this period, Kohli faced 8 dot balls in the last 21 deliveries.

"As much I wanted Virat Kohli to score that hundred, you have to keep in mind, that you want to finish the game as early as possible. You want your Net Run Rate to be at the top. If you are in a position where you are fighting for the Net Run Rate, then you don't want to look back and say 'you could have done that'," Cheteshwar Pujara told ESPN Cricinfo.

"That's where I feel that as a collective decision, maybe you have to sacrifice a bit. You want to look at the team, you want to put the team first, that's how I look at it. You want your milestone, but not at the cost of the team. As a player, you always have a choice. But some players feel if they get a hundred, it helps them in the next game. So it depends on what kind of mindset you have," he added.

Meanwhile, Australian former cricketer Mathew Hayden advised the team to take care of Net Run Rate (NRR) in a big tournament like the World Cup as it can come back to haunt teams in the end.

"My initial reaction was he has earned the right to get to his hundred. You have got to be very careful in these tournaments. These things matter. The great Ian Bishop often talks about this, these things matter. The sporting gods are sinister-like, if you start flirting with that sort of form, then it can bite you. But it's a decision that they both took. I don't really have a problem with that,” said Hayden.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalIndian legal system badly in need of fixing: CJI

NationalED busts multi-crore international cyber fraud syndicate operating from Pune

CricketENG vs IND, 3rd Test: Cheteshwar Pujara Rings Iconic Five-Minute Bell at Lord’s Before Start of Day 3

Other SportsMotoGP: Marquez masters rain to seal sensational Pole at Sachsenring

Other SportsWilliamson declares Kohli as the greatest all-format player seen in last 15 years

Other Sports Realted Stories

Other SportsAishwarya Pissay eyes historic 7th National Rally title at Coimbatore

Other SportsTour de France: Tadej Pogacar takes back yellow jersey with Stage 7 trimuph

Other SportsMcIlroy in contention as Aaron Rai stays 26th in Scottish Open

Other SportsGolf: Aditi Ashok lies seventh at halfway mark in Evian Championship

Other SportsSolid start for Aditi Ashok at Evian, lies seventh after first round