“It’s important to respond well. There’s good signs out of tonight’s match. The result’s hurting in the change room. We’ve got to take what we did well out of tonight. And take that over into our preparation. And have a look at what things we can improve on. We’ve got to find a way to get out of the rut we’re in at the moment.”
What, specifically, has gone wrong after the electric start to the tournament?
“We just haven’t been able to handle the pressure in the last few defeats. We haven’t played our best cricket when we need to, which has been disappointing – with the way we started the tournament and where we are now,” Haddin said. “The one thing that does come out of it is we’ve got to find a way to get out of it. There’s no hiding that we’ve got to play better. We’ve got two games of cricket left [in the league stage]. And we’ve got to find a way. And now there’s no tomorrow. There’s no talking about anything else. We have to win our remaining games now. And that’s as simple as it is.
“You want to be playing at this end of the tournament. You want to be playing your best cricket now and we have to find a way. We have to find a way now to play our best cricket in the next couple of games to hopefully get the opportunity to play in the finals, but what we’ve got to do is find a way to play our best cricket in a couple of days’ time.”
That game is against Royal Challengers Bengaluru (RCB) in the day in Dharamsala. And then the last game to close the league-stage campaign, against Lucknow Super Giants (LSG) away next Saturday.
“Punjab just look like they’ve lost their way with the bat, lost their confidence,” McClenaghan said on ESPNcricinfo TimeOut. “I don’t think it was the surface, I just think it was an a lack of intent from what we’ve seen previously in the tournament.
“They looked a little bit rattled at the top.”
Was Yuzvendra Chahal used poorly?
On Thursday, PBKS had to sub in Vishnu Vinod for Prabhsimran Singh during their batting innings, and that meant they couldn’t bring in a bowler as an impact sub as they normally do.
“They’ve always had the luxury of playing the extra bowler. Today, they didn’t. And they needed to rewire the tactics,” Abhinav said. “If a team goes out of their original deployment of overs, they don’t know what to do in certain number of overs that they have to use with the bowler. So, let’s say they have only five bowlers to contend with, or a different type of bowler who comes in. That’s the case with Punjab Kings. You’ve got Lockie Ferguson who’s played a game, then [Xavier] Bartlett, then you got [Ben] Dwarshuis. Everyone’s coming with different strengths. So teams or captains generally don’t know how to use them in a particular phase. And that’s where the sixth-bowling option comes good.
“But they’ve always been reluctant to use Chahal [against left-hand batters]. That was the gamble you had to take then, because Tilak Varma was also struggling against Yuzi but he hit a six of the final over, and that’s why spin numbers will look good if you look at it after the six and a couple of runs [in Chahal’s last over]. Otherwise, he was a-run-a-ball to Yuzi before that. So why would you not bowl him was the question, and that I think that cost them the game.”
