We All Have World Cup Superstitions…..Mine Is Hating On Rohit Sharma

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Vatsal Maheshwari
Jul 16, 2019   •  6 views

Of course, Sharma’s talent is undeniable — he has more double centuries to his name than any other ODI batsman — but until recently he was synonymous with unfulfilled potential for many fans. I was one of them. Even though I root for Team India, where Sharma is a crucial player, and Mumbai Indians, where he is the captain, my opinion of him was never too high. Compared to his peers likeVirat Kohli, or even his seniors like MS Dhoni, he always seemed less fit, less eager to dart between the wickets for difficult twos and threes. When fielding, Sharma is the kind you try to conceal in the slips or at short cover, and pray that catches go straight to him so that he doesn’t have to chase the ball too hard. As a batsman, Sharma was blessed with exceptional talent, but he had a reputation as a flat track bully, the archetypal lion at home and lamb abroad.
And then there was the fluctuating form. Sharma used to be the anti-Glenn McGrath of consistency. Even his most ardent fans had to acknowledge that every time he took the crease, he would deliver a surprise — whether it was pleasant or unpleasant varied from day-to-day. For me, it became a habit to indulge in wild speculation before every Rohit Sharma innings. Would we be getting the Hitman, or only someone who looks like him? This mysterious ability of Sharma’s, to score a double hundred just as easily as a duck, became his defining quality for me. I approached each of his outings like I would a blind date — with equal parts apprehension and skepticism. This way, I could indulge in my fetish for being Rohit Sharma’s loudest armchair critic, and I would be pleasantly surprised if he actually played well.
This is why this World Cup has been so hard to watch for me. It’s been a departure from my favourite cricket-related activity: taking petty joy in being vindicated about calling Sharma a disappointment. After Munaf Patel stopped appearing in the side, Sharma was all I had left. But his performance at this World Cup has ruined all the credibility I had at my living room and watercooler punditry sessions. He’s become the first-ever player to score five hundreds in a single World Cup, he’s joined Sachin Tendulkar as the player with joint-most centuries ever at World Cups with six in total, and amassed 648 runs at the tournament, leading the pack in style.

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