How Gujarat Titans maximised their strengths and minimised their weaknesses

The factors include Miller’s unprecedented IPL form, Hardik’s dual impact, hiding Tewatia’s bowling, and more

Karthik Krishnaswamy31-May-20224:36

Vettori: Hardik and Rashid are two of the best five players in IPL

From having their chances almost universally dismissed to winning the IPL title in their debut season, Gujarat Titans went on a thrillingly unexpected ride. The concerns around their squad following the auction weren’t entirely unjustified, but in a 10-team tournament, every squad had its problem areas. Titans proved to be the best of them both at maximising their strengths and finding ways to work around their weaknesses.And over the two months of the IPL, a span of time in which poor form isn’t easy to turn around – witness the impact of Kieron Pollard’s struggles on Mumbai Indians, for example, or of Ravindra Jadeja’s on Chennai Super Kings – most of Titans’ key players found their rhythm at the right times. This set in motion a chain reaction that turned their eclectic collection of talents into a team with a repeatable formula for winning matches.Miller defies history

In the immediate aftermath of the auction, an ESPNcricinfo panel including former international cricketers Wasim Jaffer and Daniel Vettori put together a potential starting XI for Titans, and found no room for David Miller. This was before Jason Roy’s withdrawal, of course, but Miller’s recent IPL form hadn’t given the panelists much of a reason to pick him anyway.Related

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Scratch “recent”. Of the 58 batters to face at least 500 balls across the six IPL seasons from 2016 to 2021, Miller had the second-lowest strike rate – 118.65.Few, then, would have imagined that he would end IPL 2022 with 481 runs at an average of 68.71 and a strike rate of 142.72. Miller must have put in an incredible amount of work behind the scenes to achieve these successes, and Titans’ coaching staff may also have had a hand to play – not least for backing him, which he has highlighted more than once – but you wonder if he would have started the season at all had the squad contained one or two higher-profile middle-order options.3:36

Aakash Chopra deciphers David Miller’s technique against spin

Hardik’s dual impact

Hardik Pandya didn’t bowl a ball during the 2020 and 2021 seasons, so whether his body could hold up to any sort of bowling workload was a genuine concern before Titans began IPL 2022. As it turned out, he bowled in 10 of their 15 games, sent down an average of 3.1 overs each time he bowled, and executed his skills brilliantly: he finished with eight wickets at 27.75, and an economy rate of 7.27, bettered only by Rashid Khan among Titans’ regular bowlers.Hardik also assumed a new role with the bat, turning himself into an anchor at No. 4, and ended the season as Titans’ highest run-getter with 487 at an average of 44.27 and a strike rate of 131.26.His successes had knock-on effects on the rest of the team. Titans had one of the worst-performing top threes in the tournament – Wriddhiman Saha’s belated entry alleviated this issue in the second half of the season – but they only rarely suffered top-order collapses. Titans’ Nos. 5 and 6 faced more balls (493) than the batters in those positions from any other team, but only 13% of those balls came during the first 10 overs of innings. Of all teams, only Sunrisers Hyderabad (12%) and Rajasthan Royals (9%) had their Nos. 5 and 6 facing a smaller proportion of their balls during the first 10 overs.