IPL 2026: From square to straight – Abhishek Sharma redraws the map


The SRH opener’s 135* against DC was an innings built on a subtle shift in geometry, balance & intent

Till Tuesday night at Uppal, Abhishek Sharma had begun to look a touch too readable. The talent was never in doubt and neither was the intent, but bowlers had started to guide him into a familiar pattern. Deep midwicket and deep cover were two coordinates of concern in recent times, fields set not just to contain him but to expose a familiar pattern.

They dragged Abhishek wider, lured him into the square and waited with protection in place. For Abhishek, the violence was still there but the options seemed to be shrinking. For a batter who thrives on instinct, that narrowing of the map had begun to matter.

Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!

Against Delhi Capitals, Sharma did not merely snap a lean stretch. He redrew the field. His 135 not out off 68 balls, with 10 fours and 10 sixes, powered Sunrisers Hyderabad to 242/2 and set up a 47-run win. It was also the ninth T20 hundred of his career. But the significance of the innings lay beyond volume — it was a smart adjustment.

Sharma looked less rushed, less eager to manufacture and more willing to let the ball arrive on his terms. Beneath the flourish lay fine recalibrations.

That change was most visible in his scoring arc. The arc that once stretched across the horizontal now narrowed and surged straight. Seventy-one runs flowed down the ground through long-on and long-off. A corridor he had long neglected was now reclaimed with authority.

The old temptation was to keep forcing the game square, especially through cover and point. Here, the bat path looked cleaner and the intent straighter. The off drive fetched him 34 runs.

His footwork, still instinctive and balletic, found a new grammar. Previously, he stepped away recklessly to manufacture width and force the square hit. Sharma now moved into the ball, momentum forward, closing angles, and meeting it on his terms.

“On a flat track, he (Sharma) is almost like Chris Gayle,” former South Africa captain Faf du Plessis said. The SRH opener exhibited a stable base, clean extension and a mind remapping the field in real time. In doing so, the 25-year-old dismantled Delhi’s plans with disarming ease.



Source link

  • Related Posts

    RCB’s Jacob Bethell at the IPL: Kevin Pietersen rekindles old feud with Alastair Cook

    After his superb century in Sydney, 22-year-old Bethell looks assured of a place in the England XI for the first Test against New Zealand at Lord’s on 4 June –…

    Sri Lanka news – Gary Kirsten lays out the roadmap to the 2027 ODI World Cup

    When Gary Kirsten coached India to ODI World Cup glory in 2011, 20 million Sri Lankan hearts were shattered. Now, as Sri Lanka’s new head coach, his mission is to…

    Leave a Reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    You Missed

    Best Fitbit Models for Beginners, Athletes, and Kids (2026)

    Best Fitbit Models for Beginners, Athletes, and Kids (2026)

    'My baby scratches and scratches': Families say their homes are making their children sick

    'My baby scratches and scratches': Families say their homes are making their children sick

    Alberta Premier Danielle Smith set to update fall referendum question plan

    Alberta Premier Danielle Smith set to update fall referendum question plan

    Anglo Advances Coal Business Sale After Setback With Peabody

    Breast reductions in UK overtake enlargements for first time, data shows | Plastic surgery

    Breast reductions in UK overtake enlargements for first time, data shows | Plastic surgery

    2 trains collide in Denmark, leaving 5 people critically injured

    2 trains collide in Denmark, leaving 5 people critically injured