Cricket

Karnataka looks to play to its reputation

Pivotal player: Karnataka will hope that skipper Karun Nair comes good .  

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To make it a contest, Saurashtra will have to display its tremendous fighting abilities again

Karnataka appears inspired to hold a trophy in an otherwise below-par season, by its own lofty standard.

In Tuesday’s final, the two-time champion will have to deal with surprise-finalist Saurashtra for the Vijay Hazare Trophy at the Ferozeshah Kotla ground.

No doubt, Saurashtra could find it tough to match Karnataka’s firepower. Much depends on how the team bowls.

Karnataka’s in-form batting trio of Mayank Agarwal, skipper Karun Nair and R. Samarth has done most of the work in the two matches at this venue.

Therefore, to make it a contest, Saurashtra will have to get into the Karnataka middle-order at the earliest. After all, should any of the top-three batsmen settle down, others are capable of performing their roles effectively.

For instance, the last time Karnataka was tested this season, against Railways, Mayank stood firm after three wickets fell early and in the company of Pavan Deshpande, added 132 runs.

The bowlers, too, have been consistent for Karnataka and played their part as the team eyes a fifth successive victory. New-ball bowler Prasidh Krishna has impressed after breaking through from the under-23 ranks. T. Pradeep has shown consistency with his line and length while sharing the new ball.

Should left-arm paceman S. Aravindh recover from the fever that forced him to miss the semifinal, the team will have variety in its attack. Among the spinners, Shreyas Gopal and K. Gowtham have proved their worth.

So far, Saurashtra has displayed tremendous fighting abilities after being on the brink of elimination following losses — to Jammu & Kashmir and Hyderabad — in the league stage.

Thereafter, Saurashtra has not looked back and chased down targets against Jharkhand, Services, Ranji Trophy champion Vidarbha and Baroda. On Sunday, it overcame several anxious moments against first-time semifinalist Andhra and defended 255 to win by 59 runs.

Pujara’s struggle

Though Saurashtra has several batsmen who can step up the pace, its biggest worry is Cheteshwar Pujara’s poor strike rate of 63.93, spread over eight matches. Shockingly, the strike-rate is the lowest among the 15 Saurashtra players who have batted this season.

So far, Pujara has managed only 289 runs off the 452 deliveries faced (most for his team this season). Moreover, if Ravindra Jadeja and Aarpith Vasavada had not scored brisk half-centuries and established a timely century stand against Andhra, Saurashtra’s campaign could have ended in the semifinals.

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Printable version | Feb 27, 2018 1:55:42 AM | http://www.thehindu.com/sport/cricket/karnataka-looks-to-play-to-its-reputation/article22859986.ece