Kohli faces more expectations than Sachin did: Alec Stewart

2 mins read
ST 4

Southampton :Former England skipper Alec Stewart believes the pressure of expectations on Virat Kohli is far higher than it was on Sachin Tendulkar, praising his single-minded effort to help India rally to a great win in the third Test at Trent Bridge.
Stewart, Surrey’s director of cricket, had looked forward to the India skipper playing for his County before the Test series to get used to English conditions after failing on the 2014 series. Though Kohli dropped out due to a neck injury suffered in IPL 2018, it hasn’t made any difference.
His 149 and 51 in the first Test at Edgbaston still ended in a narrow defeat, but he struck 97 and 103 in the third Test at Trent Bridge to seal a great India win and narrow England’s series lead to 2-1 with two games left.
“India are ranked No 1, and they put up a decisive show at Trent Bridge. Under Virat, India have become a very competitive and proud unit. India would have lost the series otherwise, and it was a very, very good performance all around. Kohli’s batting was exceptional. Virat is the best in the world and India’s bowling and catching was right,” Stewart said in an interview.
“At Lord’s, India got their selection wrong, and they corrected that. They must back it up now at the Ageas Bowl and not revert to what we have seen at Lord’s and Edgbaston,” he said.
Kohli’s turnaround in batting didn’t surprise Stewart, who played 133 Tests, scoring 8,463 runs with 15 centuries. He took 263 catches and effected 14 stumpings, 241 of those victims coming as keeper.
“I’m not surprised at all. He is world class; I am a massive fan of him. Top players will always find a way to succeed. I expected him to do well, whether he played for Surrey or not — he has talent and mental strength to perform well.”
Much like the attention Sachin Tendulkar got worldwide, the focus of every English fan is on Kohli, to the extent the series is almost like England versus the India skipper. Stewart felt pressure has only grown.
“Both represent a country with 1.3 billion people and there will be massive expectations. But it’s a tribute to these people the way they deal with adulation; it’s more than just a game of cricket.
“It’s potentially harder on Kohli than Tendulkar because of the accessibility now — TV, radio, social media, online, these days everyone has an opinion. The spotlight is even greater now.”
Stewart backed England’s Jonny Bairstow, who is reluctant to give up keeping with the team management pushing him to play as a specialist batsman to bolster the weak area. Bairstow is likely to play only as a batsman in the fourth Test starting on Thursday due to a finger injury, but is keen to keep long term.
“I fully understand he doesn’t want to give up keeping, and expect him to carry on,” he said. “He wants to keep wickets as long as he performs to the right level. And his batting and keeping have improved, he has done very well in the last 18 months.
“If the selectors decide, it is down to them. I know Jonny wants to keep as well and his level is outstanding.”

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Kashmir Monitor staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

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