On the day when Rohit Sharma scored the latest of his three ODI double hundreds, cricket statistician The Cricket Prof tweeted that the India opener hit a six every 125 balls he faced in the first six years of his one-day career. In the five years since, Sharma has hit a six, on average, every 35 balls faced.
Sharma hasn’t just transformed into a better ODI batsman, he’s transmuted into a one-day monster. His batting graph after mid-2013 has numerous skyscrapers including three double hundreds. Since 2013, he’s scored 14 hundreds and only one of the 14 ended at less than 120 runs.
So, it doesn’t sound like Sharma was bragging when he told The Times of India in an interview, “I can tell you this with conviction: Every time I’ve scored a hundred and gotten out, it has only been due to my mistake. Try and hit through the line and it all works out fine.”
For a top-order batsman with a mindset of batting through the 50 overs, he said, “anything is possible” on their day.
“After you score a century, it’s highly unlikely that bowlers will look to get you out as much as they’ll try to curb the run flow. It’s only if you commit a mistake that you’ll be walking back,” he said.
“Like in my case, after I reach a hundred, a potential outswinger is not what’s worrying me. I’m entering a zone from where only my mistake will allow me to fail, unless of course if you’re facing someone of the calibre of a Wasim Akram, Waqar Younis or even Mitchell Starc and Dale Steyn who can do things with the ball.”