Virat Kohli can switch gears seamlessly while batting but the Indian captain feels that the presence of a compulsive stroke-player like Hardik Pandya allows him to play second fiddle at times.
It's not everyday that Kohli scored at more than run a ball, yet his 82 off 77 balls in India's 36-run win against Australia had only four boundaries and two sixes.
He was happy running the ones and twos, save the two sixes off Mitchell Starc as Pandya was the aggressor, scoring 48 off 25 balls.
Asked if he didn't think about shifting gears, Kohli replied in the affirmative but then spoke about change in plan.
In fact, it was Pandya who told his captain to drop anchor as his presence gave him freedom to attack.
One of the reasons was not getting enough deliveries that upset his rhythm.
"And then in the last five, six overs, I think I played about six balls. So, I would play one ball in three overs and that was also single immediately. As a batsman, you can't really get rhythm after a while. These things happen in the one-day game," the skipper said, providing some nuggets of his conversation with Pandya.
For the skipper, it's not a problem to swallow his champion's ego and be the support cast if he finds that someone else is being the enforcer.
"If some guys are hitting at a certain strike rate, you make sure that you play a second fiddle and control the game because if you lose wickets -- if we lost five wickets in that phase, you're looking at 20 runs less maybe," the skipper said, explaining his rationale behind the game plan.
The team management's communication to the middle-order is pretty clear and the players understand the kind of situational awareness that is expected of him.
He then provided an insight to the team's game plan against Australia.
"Exactly that's what happened, and the communication came from the management that said let's send Hardik and try and capitalise on this because last time we played here against Sri Lanka we got 330 and we lost the game," said Kohli.
But what gave skipper confidence was Pandya's immense self belief that he would score at strike-rate of 200.
"Hardik said to me in the middle of the fact that I'm there at one end gave him the freedom to strike from ball one, and he wanted to strike at 200. That was his plan, and then MS came in and he did the same job beautifully," the skipper said.
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