If any Indian women’s cricket team fan were asked to name one individual to define the side’s ODI journey in the 21st century, Mithali Raj would be the most common answer. The current Indian skipper, who made her ODI debut back in 1999, has been the torch-bearer for the Women In Blue and has largely distinguished herself.
Thus, from a truly historical point of view, there aren’t many women cricketers, not just in India but across the globe that can hold a candle to Mithali’s achievements.
From that perspective alone then, it would seem that Mithali is immune to criticism because, well, she has outlasted most critics and has, on almost all other occasions, not given them a chance to turn hushed tones into clamours.
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More recently, though, there have been murmurs of discontent, not necessarily from within the Indian camp but from nearly everyone else watching the women’s game. India, meanwhile, have maintained that their captain hasn’t put a foot wrong and that this is indeed the way she and the rest of the team needs to be playing.
To be fair to them, that confidence isn’t unfounded. Mithali averages 79.83 in ODI cricket in 2021 and is India’s highest run-getter this calendar year. Yet, for a cricketer long labelled as one of the Women In Blue’s leading lights, it is quite incredible that India have lost 7 of the 9 games Mithali has featured in this year.
Prima facie, one might be tempted to say that the rest of India’s components haven’t functioned properly or that they’ve just been outplayed by better opponents. The truth, though, rather harshly is that Mithali has, despite scoring so many runs, been a part of a larger malaise.
In even blunter terms, a case could be made that Mithali’s archaic approach to ODI cricket is perhaps India’s biggest problem at the moment. That, when considering the stature she enjoys in Indian women’s cricket illustrates the slippery slope the Women In Blue find themselves entrenched in.
Mithali has contributed ODI runs this season and there are no two ways about it. She has easily been the most consistent batter in the Indian line-up and that too is not up for debate. The issue is that those runs have arrived very sluggishly. So much so that it has detrimentally impacted whatever India have sought to achieve and to an extent, even hampered those around Mithali.
Strike rate is often an overused term in ODI cricket. In T20Is, it is perhaps the yardstick applied to batters, both male and female. In the 50-over format, a slightly lower strike rate could be offset by the sheer weight of runs.
However, ODI cricket, unlike Test cricket, still has a logical batting end, meaning that when the 50 overs culminate, one can’t continue batting. Hence, it becomes pretty important to at least have a middling strike rate so that things can keep moving.
Mithali Raj’s strike rate has been cast under the scanner in 2021
Mithali, on the other hand, has contrived to do the exact opposite. In 2021, she has struck at 68.13 – a sliver better than her overall strike rate but pretty obsolete in modern-day white-ball cricket.
Interestingly, that strike rate dips to 65.47 in matches that India have lost, which is 77.77% of the times this year. The average keeps hovering around the 67.33-run mark though, indicating that Mithali might’ve played a few match-losing knocks on the way.
Apart from that, Mithali has a tendency to get bogged down severely during the middle overs – a phase where she bats regularly owing to her batting position. Not only is she unable to rotate strike often enough, she has also developed a habit of perishing when wanting to increase the tempo.
So far in 2021, she has been dismissed in the 30-75 run range 7 times out of 8, meaning that she has gotten starts. Mithali’s strike rate, however, meanders towards 66.77, hinting that she has taken time to get herself established at the crease but has then been dismissed when India have least wanted it.
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