Mumbai (Maharashtra): A King Kohli grandest of grand milestone of 50 centuries, a quickfire ton by Shreyas Iyer in 67 balls, a fiery 47-run start by skipper Rohit Sharma, an 80 by Shubman Gill and a late charge of 39 runs by K L Rahul – India reached a seemingly unsurmountable total of 397 runs for four wickets in the first semifinal of a World Cup that has India written all over it.
It all started with Rohit Sharma showing an infectious fearlessness with his heart-in-the-mouth knock of 47 runs. With this, he surpassed the mighty Chris Gayle’s 49 sixes in World Cups by gathering a half ton of 50s, incidentally, starting off with a strike rate of 200!
Giving India a peri-peri start, the Rohit Sharma show could not have been better placed – the first semifinal of the World Cup, a crunch game that would decide the Motera madness. So audacious and fired up Rohit Sharma was that Kane Williamson had to make two bowling changes within the powerplay but even Mitchell Santner gave away 11 runs in his first over, compelling Kane Williamson to bring back Tim Southee.
His majestic flicks rubbed shoulders with signature pulls as aerial became the mantra of the session. Definitely one for a bravery award. It was finally the experience and slower ball of Tim Southee that had Rohit Sharma hitting high onto the sky over the bowler’s head to be taken magnificently by Kane Williamson who held back on this difficult one as if it was the last morsel on Earth.
The first wicket partnership was of 71 runs in 50 balls. Rohit Sharma walked at 47 after a short but scintillating show that would have developed muscle had it lived a little more than just eight overs. Rohit Sharma’s 47 runs came with four massive sixes and an equal number of boundaries as he made the statement of intent – fearless intent.
All overs up to the eighth one which had Rohit Sharma walking were battered for eight or above runs, except for one by Tim Southee which Rohit Sharma uncharacteristically showed respect and restraint.
Proceedings calmed down with Rohit Sharma’s early departure. Virat Kohli survived a leg before appeal at the outset even as Shubham Gill changed role from anchor to aggressor to keep the scoreboard going.
India's 100 came when Shubman Gill hit Lockie Ferguson's short ball for a mighty six over midwicket in the 12.2 over. In the next over, the young gun raised his bat for a well-earned 50 which he constructed in 41 balls, hitting seven boundaries and a six. It was a patient construction with Gill biding his time, giving Act 1 and Scene 1 to his skipper, and then getting into action after it was curtains for Rohit Sharma.
The Gill-Kohli 50-run partnership in 46 balls was the highlight of the second phase of the Indian campaign wherein the Kohli rotation gig took over from the 13th to 15th over to keep the runs ticking Gill sneaking in a six to keep up the pace in Santner’s over, following it up with a teasing boundary between short third man and point.
Williamson, meanwhile, was on his own brand of rotation, changing bowlers every one or two overs. Rachin Ravindran got one, Mitchell Santner another two and so on. The short spells, however, did not yield expected returns as Gill and Kohli sang "safety first" with their bats. The two batters kept up the run rate to a handsome seven plus into the 18th over.
India reached 150 in 19.4 overs when Gill had just lifted Glenn Phillip for a high-end six over long-off coming to 74 as Virat Kohli rested on the other end with 26.
The Shubman Gill show, which preceded the fast and furious one by Rohit Sharma was one of cautious aggression. It was carefully opportunistic, well-paced and sound, the last not being the least. Gill’s youthful maturity may sound paradoxical, but it is this quality that makes him tower head and shoulders above the rest of his generation in cricket.
Most of his boundaries were thoroughly placed, never going up in the air for a moment. Opposed to that, his sixes did not bother to give hope to fielders at the boundary. His unbreachable display of his special armoury was tantalising. While Rohit Sharma's cameo was a heart in the mouth moment flirting with imminent death, Gill was an unbreachable fortress of intent. The only thing cramping in his exercise book were his legs under the searing sun raising temperatures in the Wankhede ring.