'There's more depth to T20 than hitting out at every ball'
Brendon McCullum, one of the most skilled batsmen in the shortest format, talks about its evolution and how its pressures are different from ODIs and Tests
It has an element of being in the zone and having those days where the conditions suit you and you have a good read on the bowlers, and the circumstance allows you to put the foot down. You also look at the amount of starts you give yourself. You keep giving yourself lots of starts and look to turn those into hundreds, but for me, it is not about the hundreds. It is about the contributions you make. What is more pleasing for me is that those hundreds I have made, we have won each of those games. So, yes, there are elements of being in the zone, and there are elements of structuring your innings according to the situation.
This format suits my style of play a bit more. I like to be pretty aggressive. In 20 overs, you have to continue to do so. It suits my temperament more - being able to make those quick decisions while you have got the bat in your hand. If you do keep giving yourself those starts, turning them into match-winning scores is that much easier. Also, in T20, when you give yourself a start, the bridge between a start and a match-winning score is not as great as it can be in the other forms. That is probably why the conversion rate is slightly high.
You are not always going to perform. There is the understanding that while you may have the right game plan or the right frame of mind when you go out to bat, it might not always work out. I think it is more than just hitting. The tactical sense of targeting short boundaries, targeting specific bowlers, looking to hit them in specific areas and expose certain areas of the field, as well as the balance between attacking early in the over as against late in the over. While on the surface it appears that you are just consistently trying to hit out at every ball, I think there is more depth to it than that.
It's been a fairly quick evolution of the game and people have been very quick to adjust to it. During the first T20I [in 2005], it was about doing the dress-up and people growing beards and the like, and you were trying to swing at every ball. There is a lot more seriousness about it now. People's understanding of how to play the game has definitely developed. Overall, it has been a very rapid development and one that has been great for the game.
I think you need to have the mentality that you may miss every now and then. You are probably going to miss more often than you succeed in T20. It's just the nature of having to be as aggressive as you need to be. With that high risk, you are going to come unstuck. There is an understanding that it can be a bit of a hit or miss, but when it is your day, there is also the understanding that you have to still craft an innings and how you go about doing that, reading the situation very quickly and adapting accordingly. I think some of the best players in T20 know that, and it is no mistake that they give performances more often than not.
"Dot balls are okay. Sometimes the situation is such that you just cannot afford to lose a wicket. So you'd rather take a dot than try to force the issue to pick up some runs"
I do agree with him. Those guys he has mentioned there - two of the world's premier T20 players. I think they go about it differently compared to some of the other guys, especially those that bat at the top of the order. There is more cultured slogging or cultured hitting at times.
Dot balls are okay. You do try to minimise the number of dot balls you face in an innings. Sometimes the situation is such that you just cannot afford to lose a wicket. So you'd rather take a dot than try to force the issue to pick up some runs. If you are facing continuous dot balls or slow overs, it definitely plays on your mind. You need to get your team to a score which is competitive or above par.
To me, I had to play that shot because I didn't believe I was capable of hitting them in front of square [smiles]. The pitch was very good, the boundaries reasonably short, and he was bowling pretty quick. We had to score in excess of 190 and had to hit their best bowlers for fours and sixes. I honestly did not believe it was possible to do so in front of the wicket. I had to take an educated risk and guessed that was the best way to do it. I could have been knocked over but those are the risks and gambles you have to take during a game, based on what is required. I was lucky those ones came off that day.
Especially if there is a left-hand right-hand combination, singles are of huge importance. Again, it is about structuring the over when you need the singles. If you get a boundary and are able to follow it up with some sort of scoring next ball, it makes the over more sizeable. Rotating strike and running hard helps your ability to construct your innings. You can't go out and make a huge score where it's all boundaries. Otherwise it gives the bowlers an opportunity to wear you down.
I am learning the pattern. I would not say I have developed the pattern. It is going to take a long time to learn. I definitely have more information now than I did seven years ago on how to play this game. You try to include that in your style of play and the need to play for your team at that point of time. A pattern does start to emerge in people's games. I am sure Gayle has got his own pattern in mind. There are different players who have different patterns. From what suits my style of play and my role in this team, there is a pattern starting to emerge. Then you can prepare for that mentally and assess a situation and work out where that pattern needs to raise its risk or reduce its risk.
I don't know. [smiles] While you are moving a lot prior to the point of impact, you try and keep the key fundamentals of staying still at impact. As long as my head is still, my hands are back and ready to hit the ball, and my eyes are on the ball - the three fundamentals - what goes on before that is irrelevant. It is more to try and mess with the bowler's head a little bit. Again, it does not always come off but sometimes, it is required.
Abhishek Purohit is an editorial assistant at ESPNcricinfo