The Gujarat Titans have taken the IPL by storm in their debut IPL season with a cleverly assembled and astutely coached team led by the all-round talents of local star Hardik Pandya.
Founded by global venture fund CVC Capital for $690 million, Gujarat on Sunday stunned four-time champions the Chennai Super Kings to sit atop the 10-team standings.
Their batting has exceeded expectations with Hardik and South Africa’s David Miller leading the way with stellar performances in the early half of the season.
ALSO READ: It’s Miller time as Gujarat stun Chennai
Gujarat-born Hardik has excelled with both bat and ball, accumulating 228 runs in five matches and claiming four wickets during economical pace-bowling spells.
The team also shone in his injury enforced absence, their stunning three-wicket win over Chennai coming off the back of an unbeaten 94 by Miller and a batting blitz by stand-in skipper Rashid Khan.
“The team has been selected well, led well and coached well. You can see they picked the kind of players they wanted and got the kind of balance they wanted,” sports journalist Sharda Ugra told AFP.
“And, in the choice of Hardik Pandya, he was picked as a kind of symbolic representative of cricket in Gujarat. He carries the aura of a superstar.”
Gujarat netted the 28-year-old Hardik and Rashid for $2.08m each in the IPL draft pick.
They also paid $1.32m in the auction for New Zealand’s Lockie Ferguson, who leads the pace pack alongside India veteran Mohammed Shami.
“Look at the quality of their bowling,” said Ugra. “They have got Rashid Khan. They have got express pace in Lockie Ferguson and they have got Mohammed Shami, so that is three straight ‘Team of the IPL’ kind of players.”
Australia wicketkeeper-batsman Matthew Wade and India’s up-and-coming batting star Shubman Gill have also had a telling impact on the team’s early success.
The selection of Ashish Nehra as coach made for a low-key appointment in contrast to other teams, such as Mahela Jayawardene at the Mumbai Indians and Kolkata’s Brendon McCullum.
But his straightforward style is paying off and TV images of the former India pace bowler strategising on paper in the dugout as other team coaches work off computers has made an impression on pundits.
“Paper or laptop, it’s how Nehra is working his mind to convince the players and get the best out of them,” former India spinner Pragyan Ojha told Cricbuzz.
The team staff also features World Cup-winning coach Gary Kirsten of South Africa as head of batting and mentor, and former England international Vikram Solanki as director of cricket.
Former India opener Wasim Jaffer called Gujarat a “surprise package”, but warned Hardik must stay fit if they are to maintain momentum at the business end of the tournament.
Gujarat next play two-time champions the Kolkata Knight Riders on Saturday and it remains to be seen whether they can keep up their charge all the way to the playoffs.
Fellow debutants the Lucknow Super Giants, led by KL Rahul, are fourth on the table.
“Both the new teams are playing good-quality cricket and producing great results for their fans,” Ugra said.
ALSO READ: Overcooked Kohli risks ‘fried brain’ if not rested
© Agence France-Presse