Ashwin Slams Abhishek's "Headless Batting" Amid T20 World Cup Struggles

Ravichandran Ashwin has publicly criticized opener Abhishek Sharma for his "headless batting" during India's T20 World Cup campaign. Ashwin urged the struggling batter to rotate strike and support the in-form Sanju Samson instead of trying to go hard from the start. The veteran spinner also expressed concern about India "bleeding" in certain areas, specifically noting spinner Varun Chakravarthy's expensive recent spells. Ashwin emphasized that managing the confidence and practice of both Abhishek and Varun would be a top priority ahead of the final.

Key Points: Ashwin Criticizes Abhishek Sharma's Batting in T20WC

  • Ashwin criticizes Abhishek's approach
  • Urges him to play second fiddle to Samson
  • Notes India "bleeding" in certain areas
  • Highlights Varun Chakravarthy's dip in form
4 min read

Ashwin calls out Abhishek's "headless batting" as star opener's T20WC slump continues

R Ashwin calls out Abhishek Sharma's "headless batting" in T20 World Cup, urges him to support in-form Sanju Samson in the final.

"I felt it was some headless batting from him. - Ravichandran Ashwin"

Chennai, March 6

Indian cricketing legend Ravichandran Ashwin called out opener Abhishek Sharma for his "headless batting" throughout the T20 World Cup, urging him to "try not to go hard" and rotate strike while letting an in-form Sanju Samson bat the other way in the final against New Zealand.

Abhishek's the world's number one batter has failed to score runs in his free-flowing way during the T20 World Cup, with health issues due to food poisoning and the weight of three successive ducks to start off the tournament seemingly eating into his batting rhythm and confidence. During the semifinal clash against England at Wankhede Stadium, an aerial flick against off-spinner Will Jacks ended his stay at the crease for just nine in seven runs, making it just 89 runs in seven innings this World Cup with just a half-century to his name.

These matches have raised concerns about the world number one T20I batter, and a variety of opinions have emerged, first that the health issues have affected his batting and the second most popular stream of opinion being that the batter looks underconfident. Opinions have also emerged about Abhishek perhaps peaking too early or him just continuing to be a fearless powerplay slogger who can have plenty of off-days on trot, and he can come back that one day when the connection of ball and bat and luck favours him once again.

Taking to his YouTube Channel, speaking on 'Ash Ki Baat', Ashwin said that he would urge the batter to not go hard from the start and play the second fiddle to the in-form batter Samson and wait till the right bowler comes and a favourable match-up is formed.

"Abhishek batted well against New Zealand in the bilaterals, so I would not be too fussed about him. But I would have this conversation with him, that there is a plan. Please do not try to go hard. I felt it was some headless batting from him. I am his big fan. But his intent was only to score. Sometimes you need to take time. Sanju was batting so well at the other end. Take a single and get away. Your match-up will also come. You will get that one over," he said.

On Team India's road ahead of the title clash against New Zealand at Ahmedabad on Sunday, Ashwin said that India "are bleeding in certain places", with spinner Varun Chakravarthy leaking runs and Abhishek barely able to buy runs.

While Varun is India's leading wicket-taker in the tournament with 13 scalps in eight matches and is also the joint-highest wicket-taker overall, his form has dipped strongly since the Super Eights, collecting just four wickets for 186 runs in his full quota of 16 overs in these four matches from Super Eights to the semifinal, with an average of 46.5. During the semifinal against England, he bowled the worst spell by an Indian in T20WC history with 1/64, being taken to the cleaners by centurion Jacob Bethell.

Ashwin said that the question of Abhishek and Varun's practice and giving them the confidence they need will be "at the top of his list" personally.

"India are bleeding in certain places. If this final had been against South Africa, I would be really concerned. But they are taking on New Zealand. The last time these two played in Ahmedabad, New Zealand had almost the same team. I am going to have these conversations. What sort of net sessions are Varun and Abhishek going to have? After this game, how will you give these two confidence? That will be at the top of my list," he signed off.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As a neutral fan, it's tough to watch. He's clearly a talented player, but the pressure seems immense. Maybe the team management needs to shield him a bit and work on his mental game ahead of the big final.
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Priya S
We should be more supportive! The guy had food poisoning, and three ducks to start is a nightmare for any batter. Form is temporary, class is permanent. He'll come good when it matters most. Have faith! 🙏
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Karthik V
Ashwin's analysis is always top-notch. "Headless batting" sums it up perfectly. In T20s, intent is good, but reckless hitting isn't. Rotate the strike, find the gaps. Hope the coaching staff has this chat with him before Sunday.
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Michael C
Respectfully, I think Ashwin is being a bit harsh publicly. These are young players in a high-pressure tournament. Criticism is fine, but "headless" is a strong word that might dent confidence further. The support should be private and constructive.
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Anjali F
The problem is we expect every player to be consistent like Kohli or Rohit. Abhishek is a powerplay basher, that's his role. He will have failures. But Varun's form is the real worry. 1/64 in a semi-final? That's a massive hole in the bowling.

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