logo
"We Decided Not To Talk About...": Rishabh Pant's Strange Defence Of LSG's Woeful IPL 2025 Season

"We Decided Not To Talk About...": Rishabh Pant's Strange Defence Of LSG's Woeful IPL 2025 Season

NDTV20-05-2025

Captain Rishabh Pant on Monday admitted it was difficult for his side to fill the void created by the absence of key bowlers as Lucknow Super Giants bowed out of the race to the Indian Premier League playoffs. LSG's six-wicket loss to Sunrisers Hyderabad here knocked them out of reckoning for a top-four finish, with the Pant-led side enduring a demanding campaign from their bowling squad, which was stretched thin.
"Definitely it could have been one of our best seasons but coming into the tournament we had a lot of gaps, injuries and as a team we decided to not talk about that, but it became difficult to fill those gaps for us,' Pant told the broadcaster after their loss to SRH.
LSG began the IPL with injuries to Mohsin Khan, Avesh Khan, Akash Deep and Mayank Yadav.
While they signed Shardul Thakur after the season began and the likes of Avesh and Akash returned, Mayank could only feature in a couple of games before being ruled out due to an injury again.
"The way we planned the auction, if we would have had the same bowling... but this is cricket, sometimes things go your way and sometimes they don't, we take pride in the way we played and take the positives from the season rather than the negative side."
"We have a strong batting lineup, have enough firepower, and that is the biggest positive for the season," said Pant, who himself endured a horror season as a batter.
Pant said LSG found it difficult to keep up with the other teams as the race to playoffs heated up.
'The first half of the season we played really well but the second half it became tougher and tougher to catch up with the teams on the brighter side," he said.
"(Digvesh) Rathi has come up nicely for us, his first season, the way he bowled, he is one of the positives, but you need to keep improving yourself and get better and better as the seasons go,' he recalled among the positives.
SRH's win was set up by India opener Abhishek Sharma, who smacked six sixes and five fours to make 59 off only 20 balls. Sharma credited having a clear plan for his success.
'If we (had) batted first, I might have had other plans but chasing such a total we had a clear plan. If you ask any player who has been doing well for the team, chasing 200 plus something you should be able to win the powerplay.' 'I wanted to express myself and if I do well, I know the team is gonna do well as well. It was the same plan I had in international cricket as well. Just express myself and knock it around,' Sharma added.
Sharma said it was important to take responsibility as an international player. 'You have to take the responsibility as an international player. The plan was same as in the international side. If it is (opportunity) there on the first ball, I had to go for it,' he said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

IND vs ENG 1st Test: Jasprit Bumrah continues Root dominance and breaks SENA charts, Pant eclipses Dhoni – key stats from Day 2
IND vs ENG 1st Test: Jasprit Bumrah continues Root dominance and breaks SENA charts, Pant eclipses Dhoni – key stats from Day 2

Indian Express

timean hour ago

  • Indian Express

IND vs ENG 1st Test: Jasprit Bumrah continues Root dominance and breaks SENA charts, Pant eclipses Dhoni – key stats from Day 2

After a precipitous collapse marred the momentum built from Friday, India and Shubman Gill were in for a hard grind against England's Bazballers at the Headingley ground in Leeds on Day 2. Despite of the growing overcast conditions on Saturday, Ben Duckett and Ollie Pope capitalised on some wavering seam bowling behind Jasprit Bumrah to put on a strong riposte to India's first-innings 471. However, a heap of records were shattered and splashed in a day headlined by Pant, Bumrah and Pope. 7 – Rishabh Pant surpassed MS Dhoni with his seventh Test century, the highest among all Indian wicket-keepers 5 – Five of Pant's seven centuries have come in SENA countries – 3 in England, one each in Australia and South Africa – the most among all Asian wicket-keepers. KL Rahul is the only other Asian keeper to record a SENA century (Centurion, 2023) since Pant's debut in 2018. ALSO READ: Why somersaulting Rishabh Pant is a box-office superstar in traditional Leeds 79 – Pant also surpassed Dhoni's Test sixes tally, becoming India's third-highest six-hitter in the format behind Virender Sehwag (90) and Rohit Sharma (88). Only Adam Gilchrist has smashed more sixes (100) among wicket-keepers. 27 – Featuring in his 27th SENA Test, Pant's century tally (5) is only bettered by Sachin Tendulkar (9) and Virat Kohli (7) among Indian batters at the age of 27. Only Tendulkar (2160) has scored more SENA runs than Pant (1815), aged 27. 471 – India's first-innings total is the lowest Test score to comprise three centuries. Incidentally, the innings also recorded the first instance with three centuries (Jaiswal 101, Gill 147, Pant 134) and two ducks (Sudharsan, Nair) in the top 6 of a Test innings. 148* – With his second wicket in the England innings, Jasprit Bumrah surpassed Wasim Akram (146) for most SENA wickets among Asian pacers. Bumrah's strike rate (45.6) betters Akram's (55.7) with both featuring in 32 matches. 39.5 – Bumrah's strike rate in the ICC World Test Championship for 159 scalps is only bettered by Kagiso Rabada (39.1) for 160 wickets. 54 – Bumrah is the only bowler to record 50-plus bowled dismissals in Tests since the year of his debut in 2018. 10 – Bumrah dismissed Joe Root for the 10th time in 25 meetings, with the Englishman only averaging 29. It is the most Bumrah has dismissed any batter in Test cricket. Only Pat Cummins (11) has dismissed Root more times in Test cricket, with the Australian and Bumrah both accounting for Root 14 times across formats, the joint-highest.

'Kya player hai': Rishabh Pant infuriates, gives the dressing room plenty of grey hair but just let him be. Please
'Kya player hai': Rishabh Pant infuriates, gives the dressing room plenty of grey hair but just let him be. Please

Hindustan Times

timean hour ago

  • Hindustan Times

'Kya player hai': Rishabh Pant infuriates, gives the dressing room plenty of grey hair but just let him be. Please

As the ball disappeared over cow corner and nestled deep in the stands, Rishabh Pant turned towards the dressing-room, arms aloft, savouring the moment. Then, carefully, deliberately, he took off his helmet and gloves, respectfully laying them on the turf alongside his bat. Taking a deep breath and composing himself, not unlike a gymnast preparing for the final flourish to end an impeccable floor exercise routine, he pulled off the perfect somersault before sinking into his delighted captain Shubman Gill's arms. India's Rishabh Pant celebrates his century during the second day of the 1st test match against England, at Headingley Cricket Ground in Leeds (@BCCI X) In the comm box, the great Sunil Gavaskar couldn't contain himself. Less than six months after his famous 'Stupid, stupid, stupid' takedown of Pant's ambitious scoop at the MCG off Scott Boland that flew off the leading edge to Nathan Lyon, one ball after a similar stroke had struck him in the midriff, the former India captain cooed: 'Superb, superb, superb.' That's the impact Rishabh Pant can have – he can exasperate minutes after exhilarating, he can trigger agony with the same regularity as he can ecstasy. On Saturday at Headingley, day two of the first Test against England, Pant brought up his seventh Test century, the most by an Indian wicketkeeper as he left Mahendra Singh Dhoni behind. It was his third hundred in as many tours of England – even dozens of specialist batters don't boast that record – but it was also the slowest of his Test tons, in 146 deliveries. You wouldn't have guessed, much less suspected, that would be the case when he charged a flummoxed Ben Stokes two balls after the England captain had dismissed Yashasvi Jaiswal on Friday evening and smashed him back over his head with utter disdain. Stokes is a maverick himself, but so captivated was he by the little fella hammering the living daylights out of him that he just couldn't stop grinning. 'He will give the dressing room plenty of grey hairs,' Ravi Shastri said, a certain awe in his voice unmistakable. 'Kya player hai.' Pant finds balance between madness and mastery at Headingley When he was the head coach, Shastri didn't discourage Pant from expressing himself. He asked him to be selective, yes, but he also offered him the kind of suggestions he knew would resonate with the chunky left-hander. In the second Ahmedabad Test of 2021, when England tried to frustrate him with a packed on-side field, Shastri exhorted Pant to play the reverse so that he could make the most of the huge gaps on the off-side. 'Ab yeh huyi na baat', Pant trilled, as he breezed to 101 off a mere 118 deliveries on a treacherous surface where Axar Patel took nine wickets to formalise India's entry into the final of the inaugural World Test Championship. This latest gem from Pant was another indicator of how rapidly the 27-year-old is maturing without going against his natural grain. When he felt that was the need of the hour, he offered a dead defensive blade – his tightness and orthodoxy in defence is often lost in the magic of his unconventional, impish stroke-making – but when he committed himself to cutting loose, he did so without any indication of hesitancy. Sixty-four percent of his 100 (10x4, 4x6) came off boundaries even though he got to three-figures slower than both Yashasvi Jaiswal (144 balls) and Gill (140). He then took just 32 balls for his next 34 runs before, ironically, being dismissed not offering a stroke for the first time in 71 Test innings. Pretty much sums up the Pant persona, doesn't it? For the left-hander coming off an ordinary season with Lucknow Super Giants that he only marginally salvaged with a hundred in the final game of a disappointing campaign, this fourth ton against England will be especially satisfying because it came in his first outing as the Test vice-captain. Apart from KL Rahul and Ravindra Jadeja, no one else in the top seven has played more five-day matches for the country. Pant has occupied the No. 5 position for a fair while now, the surest indication that successive team managements have stopped viewing him as a unidimensional ball-basher and have encouraged him to think and play like the wonderful batter that he is without being shackled by the need to rein in his instincts entirely. It wasn't mere coincidence that his dismissal on Saturday came after a presumed message to play out time with lunch five minutes away. Why would you tell him that? After all, didn't he charge Chris Woakes, operating with the new ball, in Friday's last over and deposit him over square-leg for six? Let him be, guys. Let him do Rishabh Pant things. He will infuriate from time to time, but the trade-off is worth it when he can give you 43.30 per Test innings on average. At 73.69 runs per 100 balls faced. Just let him be.

Watch: 'DSP' Mohammed Siraj On Duty, Inspects England Player's Bat In Leeds
Watch: 'DSP' Mohammed Siraj On Duty, Inspects England Player's Bat In Leeds

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

Watch: 'DSP' Mohammed Siraj On Duty, Inspects England Player's Bat In Leeds

Last Updated: 'DSP' Mohammed Siraj was captured inspecting Ollie Pope's bat during Day 2 of the Headingley Test. Indian fast-bowler Mohammed Siraj brought back the 'DSP' jokes on Sunday by 'inspecting' England batter Ollie Pope's bat during the first Test between India and England at Headingley. In a video posted by Star Sports on X, Pope's Gray-Nicolls can be seen leaning on the stumps during a drinks break on the second day of the Test. Siraj walked towards it, picked it up, took his guard and then checked it again before putting it back where it was. Watch the hilarious clip here: Telangana state police force gave Siraj an honorary position of Deputy Superintendent of Police in October 2024, recognizing his achievements as a cricketer — a news that sparked several cricket memes. The humor has spilled to the cricket field, too, with crowds during IPL often chanting, 'DSP' when he's involved. Siraj's off-day at Headingley Pope troubled India with that bat on Saturday. The number three batter scored a quick 131-ball century with 13 fours to carry his bat at stumps. With support from Ben Duckett's 62 and Joe Root's 28, England ended the day solidly at 209/3, 262 runs behind India's first innings score of 471. The visitors were not up to it from the start. A bit too aggressive batting in the lower order led to a collapse and what looked like a certain 500-plus score fell well short. Then, they had good bowling conditions at the start of the second innings but took just one wicket, before allowing a 122-run stand between Pope and Duckett. All three wickets were taken by Bumrah (he could've had more if not for dropped catches and no-balls) in his 13 overs as other bowlers looked toothless and inconsistent. Siraj bowled the most overs, 14, and showed heart and precision in some spells but lacked overall impact, making India look over-reliant on Bumrah again. As the second senior pacer, he'd want to put up a better show on Sunday as India aim to restrict England and take a first-innings lead. First Published: June 22, 2025, 08:11 IST

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store