Greg Chappell: Kohli played an innings that was as close to a ‘song by god’ as has ever been played in T20 cricket

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Greg Chappell says we have known for some time that Kohli is in a rare class, but this was done against the backdrop of a pretty lean run during the last few years by his lofty standards

Virat Kohli’s knock against Pakistan was near being a ‘song of god’, the literal translation of ‘Bhagavad Gita’, and has legitimized T20 cricket as an “art form”, feels Australian legend, Greg Chappell.

Virat Kohli’s knock against Pakistan was near being a ‘song of god’, the literal translation of ‘Bhagavad Gita’, and has legitimized T20 cricket as an “art form”, feels Australian legend, Greg Chappell. 

Kohli’s knock amazed Pakistan in India’s T20 World Cup opener and Chappell had no hesitation in affirming that the former skipper is the “most complete Indian batsman” of his time.

“The Bhagavad Gita is the holy book which is the synthesis of Hinduism. Literally translated, it means “the song by God”. Kohli played an innings that was as close to a ‘song by god’ as has ever been played in T20 cricket,”

Chappell wrote in his column for the ‘Sydney Morning Herald’.

The 74-year-old highlighted that Kohli’s great knock took the art of batting to another level and has legitimized T20 cricket as an art form.

“Like a cat playing with a new skein of wool, Kohli teased then expertly picked apart an excellent Pakistan bowling attack until it lay unraveled, spent, and exposed on the green carpet of the MCG.” “….It was an innings that showcased the art of batting like no other that I have seen in a lifetime of watching cricket.

“Ironically, it was also the innings that legitimized T20 cricket as, dare I say it, an art form, more than any that I have seen in the past 15 years. Nobody can dismiss T20 cricket as simply entertainment ever again,”

wrote the former India coach.

“None of the greats of bygone eras could have dismembered an opponent so brutally without compromising the niceties of the art of batting as Kohli did last Sunday night.”

“Kohli is the most complete Indian batsman of my time. Only the greatest of champions have the courage and the intelligence to transport their imagination beyond the mortal plane. Kohli has that.

“Perhaps only Tiger Pataudi has come close to transcending a similar stratosphere,”

Chappell wrote.

“I can think of many of the best hitters in the modern game who could have pulled off a similar victory, and probably have, but none has ever done it with pure batting skills in the manner that Kohli did against Pakistan,”

he said.

“Only Adam Gilchrist has come close in the past, but this was even more esoteric than some of his most sublime efforts. It was simply impossible to look away.”

That the knock came from the strongest and most vocal supporter of Test cricket made Chappell all the more ecstatic.

“It gave me immense pleasure as it was played by one of the staunchest supporters and exponents of Test cricket of the past 145 years.

“This was the day that T20 cricket came to maturity, and the nail-biting game was played between two of the younger nations of the long form of the game in front of 90,000 rapturous fans, most of whom were thousands of miles from the land of their birth,”

Chappell wrote.

“We have known for some time that Kohli is in a rare class, but this was done against the backdrop of a pretty lean run during the last few years by his lofty standards. “Not many are going to have to go through it in the glare Virat has. Everyone has had an opinion; most of it has been centered on his eyes and/or his technique as having waned in some way. As someone who has been down that track, I was pretty sure this wasn’t the case.

“It is likely the best T20 innings of his career, and it may also be one of the most satisfying in any format. He looked completely at home. He was in his element.”

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