Chasing has been Sunrisers' Achilles' heel during the first two matches, once again bringing under scanner, their lack of depth in the playing XI and below-par Indian bench strength
Chennai: Getting the combination right would be topmost priority of Sunrisers Hyderabad when they take on a qualitatively superior Mumbai Indians in an IPL encounter here on Saturday, in which they will try to arrest the early slide after back-to-back defeats.
To make matters worse, the nature of the Chennai track is not great news for the David Warner-led ‘Orange Army’ that failed to chase down a total which was less than 150. Chasing has been Sunrisers’ Achilles’ heel during the first two matches, once again bringing under scanner, their lack of depth in the playing XI and below-par Indian bench strength.
Under these circumstances, facing a formidable team like Mumbai Indians, fresh from their ‘Houdini Act’ against Kolkata Knight Riders, would be a difficult proposition.
For skipper Warner, there are some serious questions about the choice of the playing XI, which many believe hasn’t been well thought out and the results also back that assessment.
Using two wicketkeepers — Jonny Bairstow and Wriddhiman Saha — in the same XI hasn’t served any tangible purpose with the veteran Indian looking completely out of sorts as an opener.
Saha has been playing IPL from the first edition (2008) and a closer look at his record indicates that he has not been consistently successful in scoring runs.
With a seasoned man like Kedar Jadhav in the dug-out, along with two talented youngsters Priyam Garg and Abhishek Sharma, Saha is on borrowed time as far as his place in the side is concerned. In case of Kedar and Abhishek, they also provide the option of slow bowling — off-breaks for the veteran and slow left-arm orthodox for the youngster.
With only Warner and Rashid Khan being certainties among the overseas players, a fit Kane Williamson is a must for SRH, factoring in his prowess against spin bowling. The manner in which the likes of Manish Pandey and Abdul Samad played cross-batted shots against RCB left-arm spinner Shahbaz Ahmed left Warner far from amused.
On a track like Chepauk, at times it becomes imperative to play as late as possible and use the depth of the crease well, which Williamson is adept at. The other issue has been team’s bowling with T Natarajan not in the kind of form he was last season and Bhuvneshwar Kumar also on the expensive side.
Options like Sandeep Sharma and Siddarth Kaul don’t inspire too much confidence when one looks at Mumbai Indians top-order comprising Rohit Sharma, Quinton de Kock, Suryakumar Yadav and Ishan Kishan.
It is unlikely that MI will tinker with their playing XI and more so after winning a thriller against KKR. However, they would like to put up a better account of their batting as theirs is a line-up that can just throw the pitch factor out of equation on a given day.
Williamson hopes to be fit within a week
Star New Zealand batsman Kane Williamson, who missed Sunrisers Hyderabad’s first two IPL matches due to elbow injury is recovering well and is expected to attain full match-fitness “within a week”.
The 30-year-old Williamson, a vital cog in SRH’s middle order, suffered a small tear in his left elbow tendon and was ruled out of the home ODI series against Bangladesh in March ahead of the IPL.
However, the New Zealand captain on Friday said his “recovery is going really well”. “…you know I have been focussed to get pain free as quickly as possible and we are certainly tracking really nicely and hoping to be fit and ready within the week,” Williamson said in a video posted by SRH in twitter.
It’s been a bit of a balance between practice and rehab and sort of things. But for the most part, the progression is been really good. So pretty optimistic about being close to full fitness very soon.” Batting at number four, Williamson had scored 317 runs in 11 innings to take SRH to the play-offs last season in UAE.