Ask Aakash
The reader response to the blog has been pleasing, and here are answers to some of the questions that came up in the feedback

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Dear Zohan, a player cannot pick and choose matches he'd like to play in or sit out of. It's subject to fitness and form. In the case of Gambhir, he had a groin strain that forced him to miss the match against Sui Northern Gas Pipeline Limited.
Dear Manhar, whenever we play an away game it's our state's responsibility to look after the team's stay. In this case it's the DDCA that should be held responsible for not arranging for our stay in a decent hotel. The BCCI did their job efficiently as the ROI team stayed at the Taj.
A. Dear Udit, we had a target in mind for both, the number of runs and the number of overs required to bowl them out in the second innings. We had no way of knowing that rain would ruin everything. We couldn't have taken the chance of declaring too early because had there been no rain, we would've looked like fools. We needed to set them a target of at least 350 runs to make a match of it.
Please accept my apologies if I forgot to mention that. They did bowl exceptionally well, and used the conditions brilliantly in the first innings. Yet, the same attack was found wanting and asked very few questions once the track flattened out in the second dig.
Dear Piyush, it wasn't intentional to bat down the order. I'd twisted my ankle very badly while fielding, and the swollen ankle prevented me from opening the innings. I batted with a runner in the second innings, but the injury's no excuse for getting out. Although the ankle is still giving me some trouble, I'm working overtime to get it in order and hope to be fully fit for the Board President’s XI match against the Australians.
Dear Abhishek, as you rightly mentioned patience is a very important attribute, but I'd like to add that it's equally important in all forms of the game. One needs to be patient regardless of the format. It's just that in the longer format one needs to be a little more patient. One develops patience with experience as with time one realises that one good shot doesn't get you a century, and one good ball doesn't get you a five-for. One needs to bat well for a few hours to reach the three-figure mark, and similarly one needs to bowl consistently well to take a five-for.
Former India opener Aakash Chopra is the author of Out of the Blue, an account of Rajasthan's 2010-11 Ranji Trophy victory. His website is here and his Twitter feed here