KL Rahul's innings of 68 not out off 51 balls on a flat batting surface left fans puzzled once again about the batter's approach in T20s.
KL Rahul played another debatable knock at the top of the order, leading to question marks regarding his intent inside the powerplay overs. The Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) skipper went at a snail-like pace despite the field restriction overs and didn’t really go hell for leather after the powerplay either.
The elegant right-hander once again didn’t quite do justice to his talent, potential and range, hitting an unbeaten 68 off 51 balls after choosing to drop anchor in partnership with a rampaging Quinton de Kock.
In an innings of complete contrast to that of his partner, De Kock blasted a terrific hundred against the Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR), finishing 140 not out from 70 deliveries, including 10 fours and 10 sixes.
KL Rahul’s innings also featured a healthy dose of boundaries – 3 fours and 4 sixes – but the batter almost never tried to hit the ball out of the park in anger through his indifferent effort. Even as De Kock’s blitz and the wickets in the bank gave Rahul the freedom to unleash the beast inside him, the player opted to bat within himself.
KL Rahul’s slow fifty retriggers debate on batter’s intent
KL Rahul has been a notoriously slow starter inside the powerplay in IPL 2022, scoring his 177 runs at a pedestrian strike-rate of 98.88. Even lower than his powerplay strike-rates of 124.59 and 117.22 in IPL 2020 and IPL 2021 respectively for the Punjab Kings (PBKS).
The excuse for Rahul’s excessively slow starts and the pursuit to cut down risks and bat deep when he was part of the PBKS set-up used to be the lack of batting depth that ailed the northern rivals.
Watch: Quinton de Kock plays a reverse flick off Sunil Narine; leaves LSG dugout impressed
But the batter has no such reason to bat at the tempo he has been doing with LSG, who bat quite deep with capable powerhitters down the order. Yet, Rahul has chosen not to trust the men deployed in the middle of the innings, trying to farm the strike for as long as possible through the innings.
The innings against KKR was a fine example of the same, as it reflected a longstanding issue with Rahul, who perhaps needs to let go of personal doubts about his teammates’ abilities and bat like the player he is, not the one he is allowing himself to be.
Here is how the fans reacted to KL Rahul’s 68* off 51:
Gambhir sends a player during strategic time-out to read out tweets against KL Rahul. #IPL
— Silly Point (@FarziCricketer) May 18, 2022
It would be ironic if KKR chases this down. KL Rahul needs to rethink this approach for the umpteenth time!
If two openers bat out the entire 20 overs with one scoring 140 (SR: 200) & the other scoring 68 (SR: 133), then fingers should be pointed at the latter.
— Jeet Vachharajani🏏🎯 (@Jeetv27) May 18, 2022
“Strike-rates are very, very overrated,” KL Rahul
But QDK 190+ Strike Rate will Give you a win…
Playing with 120 strike rate will give you only orange cap#KKRvsLSG#CricketTwitter
— Dheeraj Singh (@Dheerajsingh_) May 18, 2022
I’d love to see how KL Rahul would approach T20 batting for a side he doesn’t have too much responsibility for – unleash the beast in the Hundred, BCCI.
— Kieran (@BerbaSpinCric) May 18, 2022
If LSG loose this match,only reason will be the selfish inning 68 on 50 odd delivery by the most selfish batsman @klrahul #KKRvLSG
— Maddy (@Maddy071989) May 18, 2022
today’s keywords to get likes and rts in #CricketTwitter
“Kl rahul” “intent” “statpadding” “calibre” “poor” “captaincy” you’re good to go.
— Klown (@serious_photon) May 18, 2022
The problem with anchoring an innings is that it is a mindset & when you do that again and again then it becomes your game & coming out of that may become difficult.
I don’t want a dynamic player like KL Rahul who has all shots in his armoury to be happy with anchoring only.
— Vipul Ghatol 🇮🇳 (@Vipul_Espeaks) May 18, 2022
Imagine the score if kl rahul too applied these gears 😶
— Shardul Khandelwal (@yesimshardul) May 18, 2022
Looking at strike rate looks like #QDK & #klrahul playing on a different surfaces, if somehow #kkr managed to chase down this score #klrahul‘ s innings will be game changer!!
— Shubham Mane (@Shmane29) May 18, 2022
Easy chase for KKR, MOM Rahul for statpadding.
— TANGENT(Team VADAPAAV) (@pra_tea_k) May 18, 2022
If statpadding is an art then ,
KL Rahul is Picasso of it— Vishvajit🤠 | Rutu💛 (@cricfreakk07) May 18, 2022
Could have broken 229 records but but statpadding is imp from Rahul
— Bully Maguire Cricket Fan 🇮🇳🏏🕷️🕸️ (@bullymag_69) May 18, 2022
Did you really take a single after hitting a 6 in the 19th over when you’re fcking no loss KL?
— arfan (@Im__Arfan) May 18, 2022
Is there a bigger stat padder than KL Rahul is the history of IPL – look at his SR today; pure joke – LSG will lose today cause of him #klrahul #ipl #IPL2022
— D (@cricfan99rt) May 18, 2022
In an easy batting pitch where QDK scored 140 off 70, Where KKR batters are playing at 111 in 11 overs, KL Rahul played a knock of unbeaten 68 from 51 🤦🏻🤦🏻
What a disaster 😐#KLRahul #LSG #KKRvLSG— Shubham Borade-Patil (@Shubh1mm) May 18, 2022
At this point of his career, while it is easy to accuse KL Rahul of being selfish, one perhaps needs to focus on a characteristic trait part of the India and Karnataka right-hander’s batting for a long time.
It seems Rahul’s best is reserved for days and situations when he has absolutely no option but to come out all guns blazing. But when the possibilities are endless, like at the top of the order, he tends to lose his way in the middle.