By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
  • Live Score Updates
  • Sports Podcasts
  • Live Streaming
Viascore
  • Home
  • TENNIS

    NFL

    Show More

    2026 NBA Mock Draft: BYU’s AJ Dybantsa goes No. 1 ahead of Kansas’ Darryn Peterson

    By ViaScore 12 hours ago

    Cavaliers vs. Magic prediction, odds, line, time: 2026 NBA picks for Wednesday, March 11

    By ViaScore 13 hours ago

    Best bets for Rockets-Nuggets, NHL, college basketball on Wednesday, March 11

    By ViaScore 15 hours ago

    NBA best bets today, player props, picks: Target Jalen Brunson, Wolves-Clippers, Rockets-Nuggets on Wednesday

    By ViaScore 16 hours ago
  • CRICKET

    NFL

    Show More

    2026 NBA Mock Draft: BYU’s AJ Dybantsa goes No. 1 ahead of Kansas’ Darryn Peterson

    By ViaScore 12 hours ago

    Cavaliers vs. Magic prediction, odds, line, time: 2026 NBA picks for Wednesday, March 11

    By ViaScore 13 hours ago

    Best bets for Rockets-Nuggets, NHL, college basketball on Wednesday, March 11

    By ViaScore 15 hours ago

    NBA best bets today, player props, picks: Target Jalen Brunson, Wolves-Clippers, Rockets-Nuggets on Wednesday

    By ViaScore 16 hours ago
  • Football

    NFL

    Show More

    2026 NBA Mock Draft: BYU’s AJ Dybantsa goes No. 1 ahead of Kansas’ Darryn Peterson

    By ViaScore 12 hours ago

    Cavaliers vs. Magic prediction, odds, line, time: 2026 NBA picks for Wednesday, March 11

    By ViaScore 13 hours ago

    Best bets for Rockets-Nuggets, NHL, college basketball on Wednesday, March 11

    By ViaScore 15 hours ago

    NBA best bets today, player props, picks: Target Jalen Brunson, Wolves-Clippers, Rockets-Nuggets on Wednesday

    By ViaScore 16 hours ago
  • All sports

    NFL

    Show More

    2026 NBA Mock Draft: BYU’s AJ Dybantsa goes No. 1 ahead of Kansas’ Darryn Peterson

    By ViaScore 12 hours ago

    Cavaliers vs. Magic prediction, odds, line, time: 2026 NBA picks for Wednesday, March 11

    By ViaScore 13 hours ago

    Best bets for Rockets-Nuggets, NHL, college basketball on Wednesday, March 11

    By ViaScore 15 hours ago

    NBA best bets today, player props, picks: Target Jalen Brunson, Wolves-Clippers, Rockets-Nuggets on Wednesday

    By ViaScore 16 hours ago
  • Book Now
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Tennis
Reading: IND vs NZ: How Virat Kohli’s faith in old methods has stood him in good stead in his revival | Cricket News
ViascoreViascore
Aa
  • Live Score Updates
  • Sports Podcasts
  • Live Streaming
Search
  • Home
  • Rugby
  • Cricket
  • Tennis
  • Football
  • NBA
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© Viascore. All Rights Reserved.
Viascore > Blog > Sports India > IND vs NZ: How Virat Kohli’s faith in old methods has stood him in good stead in his revival | Cricket News
Sports India

IND vs NZ: How Virat Kohli’s faith in old methods has stood him in good stead in his revival | Cricket News

ViaScore
Last updated: 2026/01/11 at 5:36 PM
ViaScore 7 Min Read
Share


When Virat Kohli fell for twin ducks on his return to international cricket against Australia in October last year, it felt like an ageing star fast losing his grip over his art. But the assumptions of Kohli’s decline in ODIs are grossly exaggerated, he would prove in subsequent outings. Those failures seem to have lit a fire within him that continues to shine brightly.

The century-record holder in this format, fell seven runs shy of another three-figure mark, but the 91-ball knock was another sumptuous effort and played a central role in India’s four-wicket win over New Zealand in the first of the three-match series, at the BCA stadium. Needing 301 for win, he entered in the ninth over of India’s chase, with the score on 39 for 1. When he departed 30 overs later, India could see the finish line in the Vadodara skies. India nearly made a meal out of it, losing three wickets for eight runs. But the platform Kohli had erected sufficed for India to surpass the total in the 49th over.

It was a classical Kohli knock, vibrant and unruffled, seizing the drift of the game and scoring runs without fuss or taking risks. It was as though he was on cruise mode, comfortably riding the waves on a surface where the odd ball gripped. With Rohit Sharma having set the early tone, there wasn’t a desperate need to reenergise the innings.

Virat Kohli century Virat Kohli plays a shot in the 1st ODI match vs New Zealand at Vadodara on Sunday. (Express Photo | Bhupendra Rana)

Yet, he set a scorching pace. The methods stood out. He batted serenely, keeping desperate slogs and premeditated risks asunder, reverting to modes that had stood by him over the years of constructing one of the greatest 50-over careers in the sport. Such was his confidence and authority that he batted with emphatic precision. A sublime on-drive, a carpet-burning cover drive and an imperious pull shot over fine leg regaled the audience. Even when Kohli took the aerial route, it felt calculated—a deliberate choice to disrupt lengths, to surprise the bowler into retreat. Otherwise, it was all along the ground, all classical riffs, all very Kohli.

After the game, he explained his approach to the broadcasters. “If we were batting first, I’d have gone harder. The experience does kick in, but the main thing was to get the team ahead and to a winning position. The basic idea is I bat at No. 3 and if the situation is tricky, I try to counterattack without playing outrageous shots. I felt today, we can string in a quick partnership in the first 20 balls,” he said.

Reactive mode

The bowlers were forced into reactive mode. Lengths were readjusted, but with little effect. Fields were shuffled in a mild panic. He even met good balls with such decisiveness that they disappeared into the fence. Anything fractionally short was punished; anything over-pitched was driven with authority. The pressure he exerted was not just through scoring, but the inevitability that he would run away with the game. His aura.

The difference was not the aggression. Since the South Africa ODIs, he has batted with a newfound freedom. But the timing, a friend that temporarily kept away. Noticeable is a slight change in approach too, precisely in taking half-risks. These days, he chooses the moments to take risks early, rather than wait for the innings to unfold. In doing so, he flipped the usual script. The powerplay and the early overs, the supposedly cautious phase, especially at the start of the innings, have become a platform to dominate. He completed his fifty off 44 balls in the 22nd overs. By then, he had also helped Shubman Gill prosper after a sluggish start.

Story continues below this ad

India's Virat Kohli walks off after getting dismissed against New Zealand in the first ODI at Vadodara. (Express Photo by Bhupendra Rana) India’s Virat Kohli walks off after getting dismissed against New Zealand in the first ODI at Vadodara. (Express Photo by Bhupendra Rana)

The captain played second fiddle, first to Rohit and then to Kohli. But one shot turbocharged his innings. In the fourth ball of the 160th over, bowled by debutant Kristian Clarke, he strode his front foot to the pitch of a full delivery and finessed it down the ground, between Kohli’s legs. However, just when he was shifting through the gears he handed Adithya Ashok his first wicket.

Walked in Shreyas Iyer, another batsman on comeback trail. He last played for India in October but was given the perfect platform to bat, with the pressure of the chase eased by Gill and Kohli’s 118-run stand. Sensing that Kohli was in the zone, Iyer paced his innings smartly, rotating the strike and combining them with the odd big six to keep the New Zealand bowling on its toes. Kohli looked set to get to his 54th ODI ton, but then he failed to a familiar red-ball nemesis of his, the beanpole Kyle Jamieson. In his attempt to loft a ball past cover, he mistimed the ball to mid-off. A stutter ensued, but KL Rahul kept his cool and saw the hosts home, with a little help from Harshit Rana’s cameo. But it was yet another night of Kohli.

Brief Scores: India 306 for 6 (Kohli 93, Gill 56, Iyer 49, Jamieson 4-41) beat New Zealand 300 for 8 (Mitchell 84, Nicholls 62, Conway 56, Siraj 2-40, Prasidh 2-60, Rana 2-65) by four wickets.





Source link

TAGGED: Regional news
ViaScore January 11, 2026 January 11, 2026
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Bordeaux thump Northampton 50-28 in Champions Cup final repeat
Next Article Washington Sundar has a side strain and will go for a scan: Shubman Gill | Cricket News

Most Popular

A Memoir of Soccer, Grit, and Leveling the Playing Field
10 Super Easy Steps to Your Dream Body 4X
Mind Gym : An Athlete's Guide to Inner Excellence
Mastering The Terrain Racing, Courses and Training

Jharkhand HC Transfers ED Assault Case To CBI

By ViaScore

Subscribe Now

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

Access Denied

1 year ago

Anthony Edwards holds nothing back in frustrated rant on struggling Timberwolves: ‘We soft as hell’

1 year ago

You Might Also Like

Sports India

Jharkhand HC Transfers ED Assault Case To CBI

1 hour ago
Sports India

Rahul Gandhi Says India’s Energy Security ‘Compromised’, Denied Chance to Speak in Lok Sabha

2 hours ago
Sports India

‘Whatever may be my reputation, I have always been human’: Rahul Dravid on his century celebration in iconic 2001 Eden Gardens Test | Cricket News

3 hours ago
Sports India

‘I feel like I’m playing against Federer every round’ — Alcaraz still in hunt at Indian Wells, but far from comfortable | Tennis News

3 hours ago

Sport News

  • Basketball
  • Baseball
  • Football
  • Hockey
  • Aquatics

Socials

Facebook Twitter Youtube

Company

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with us
  • Newsletters
  • Deal

Made by Metastic World.  . 

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?