The India allrounder talks about his last few IPL seasons for Mumbai Indians, his place in the batting order, and winning matches with his bowling

Interview by Nagraj Gollapudi09-Feb-20222:06

‘If Hardik wants me he can pick me at the auction, otherwise I’m happy to go anywhere’

Krunal Pandya has won a handful of T20Is for India and was the Player-of-the-Series against West Indies in 2019, but he has not been part of the T20I squad since playing Sri Lanka in July last year. He also didn’t fare well in the last two IPL seasons and was released by Mumbai Indians, who in 2018 had used their right-to-match card to buy him for Rs 8.8 crore (then US$ 1.37 million approx). But Pandya says being released by Mumbai does not hurt him. He has put himself up for the 2022 auction at the highest base price: INR 2 crore ($268,000 approx).In the following chat, Pandya speaks candidly about why things have not worked out for him in the IPL in the last two years, but also why he retains the belief that he can still do wonders in the IPL and for India.Do you believe you are among the top allrounders in Indian cricket?
Yes, I certainly do. Six years playing for one franchise, 84 games, 1143 runs and 51 wickets.I did not expect to be here at this point in my life. If someone would have told me [in 2016] that six years down the line I would be here, I would have said: you are joking. Not possible. Always grateful where I am in life, but at the same time my focus has always been on how I can be better.Related

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How do you sum up your last few seasons in the IPL?
My role was very different in the last two seasons at Mumbai compared to the first four.Between 2016 and 2019, I had a certain number where I used to go [in to bat] every time more or less. And then in the last two years, my role changed where [Kieron] Pollard and Hardik [batted ahead of me] as they are two of the biggest hitters [Pandya batted at Nos. 5 and 6 in 27 out of 48 innings between 2016 and 2019, and at No. 7 in 14 out of 24 innings since 2020]. So my role was changed for the team’s benefit.Numbers don’t always justify what you have done, but what matters is: Are you there for the team? Are you taking that responsibility? Are you doing the hard job for the team? And I did.Between 2019 and 2021, you have batted at different positions between Nos. 4 and 7. When you play at 7, your strike rate is the best, at 148. At 4, where you have played only three times, your strike rate is about 138, and at 5 and 6, it’s 96 and 103. Which position do you find most comfortable to bat in?
When I have batted at 5 for Mumbai, I usually walked in when we were 30 or 40 for 3, where we lost wickets in clusters. [These were situations] where I have to go and build a partnership and make sure we don’t lose any wickets. When I batted at 4, I had the liberty to express myself and I knew clearly whether we were 0 for 2 or 100 for 2, I’m going to bat at 4. So the mindset was very clear and I got that performance.Like last year when I batted at 4 against Rajasthan Royals [Pandya made 39 off 26 balls and had 63-run partnership with Pollard] and Chennai Super Kings [he made 32 off 23 and had an 89-run partnership with Pollard] and we won both games – I had the time where I could play my game, play those [first] ten balls and then build.