Dinesh Karthik retires from cricket after the defeat against Rajasthan

In the IPL, he continued to find new methods to scare bowlers and fielding captains even at 38. Who knows how far his career in India could have gone if Dhoni hadn't happened to it?

(Cricket news) Dinesh Karthik’s final ball as a professional cricket player could have been the most emotional of endings if it had edged into MS Dhoni’s gloves. One final web of entwined fortunes.

If it weren’t for Dhoni, who knows what heights Karthik’s international career may have reached, or how he might have quadrupled his 26 Tests, 94 ODIs, and 60 T20Is? Add all that up, however, and you get a measure of the cricketer Karthik has been: a wicketkeeper-batter capped 180 times by India even though he played the bulk of his career in Dhoni’s all-encompassing shadow, and a batter good enough to be capped 94 times as a specialist in matches involving Dhoni.

Karthik is younger than Dhoni by nearly four years, but he jumped the queue and made his India debuts first: a month and a half before Dhoni in ODIs, and more than a year before him in Tests. Both were part of India’s first T20I XI, and Karthik the Player of the Match.

Karthik’s India career outlasted Dhoni’s too: his last Test, in 2018, and his last T20I, in 2022, coming three-and-a-half years after Dhoni’s respective farewells. Both, of course, went out of ODIs together, on that fateful day in Manchester in July 2019.

It would have been poignant, but the edge to Dhoni wasn’t the end for Karthik, with Royal Challengers Bengaluru making the playoffs at Chennai Super Kings’ expense on the day. It would seem, then, that Karthik – though we can never be entirely certain until Dhoni actually tells us – outlasted his great rival in the IPL too, by one match.

It’s fitting, because Karthik has been one of the IPL’s great survivors. He’s featured in every season, and played more matches than anyone other than Dhoni and Rohit Sharma, and while he hasn’t become a figurehead at one franchise like those two, he’s been a vital member of six different dressing rooms. He’s always had elite T20 skills, and he’s always kept adding to them, evolving with the format and staying relevant, season after season.

It’s as true of his career as it is of his manner on the field that Dinesh Karthik has never stood still.

An example of this came one ball before Karthik edged Tushar Deshpande to Dhoni.

Karthik had stepped across to the off side, shaping for the scoop over short fine leg, and Deshpande had responded by shifting his line wider, so wide that the ball was nearly in line with the return crease when it reached the batter. Karthik reacted like he’d expected this all along, manipulating his hands expertly to reverse-scoop the ball past the right glove of a leaping Dhoni and out of reach of the short-third fielder throwing himself to his left.

Over the course of IPL 2024, Karthik played a total of nine reverse-scoops, including one off a wide. We’ll come to the reverse-scoops he nailed, but let’s first spend some time with the one he missed against that wide.

It came on day one of the season, and the bowler, once again, was Deshpande.

This was a contest with a bit of history. Deshpande had dismissed Karthik in their teams’ only meeting of IPL 2023, getting him caught at deep midwicket. Fine leg had been inside the 30-yard circle on that occasion too, and Karthik had stepped across his stumps, no doubt eyeing the vast spaces either side of and beyond that fielder. Then too, Deshpande had shifted his line wider.

On that occasion, Karthik’s response had been a low-percentage one. He went for the slog-sweep, a difficult shot to nail since he was fetching the ball from well outside his eyeline, and one that didn’t give him too much margin for error since long-on and deep midwicket were out on the boundary.

By the time IPL 2024 rolled around, Karthik had worked on a different response to the same situation. He didn’t connect with the reverse-scoop the first time round, and his second attempt, against the same bowler in the same game, didn’t quite come off either, producing an inside-edged single to fine leg. But Karthik had clearly worked on this shot in the lead-up to the tournament, and he clearly believed it would give him an edge in these death-overs battles of wits.

It’s safe to say now that the reverse-scoop has worked brilliantly for Karthik over the season. He’s played the shot more often than anyone else this season, and it’s brought him 21 runs off eight non-wide balls, including five fours, at a strike rate of 262.50.

The shot has helped Karthik score 45 runs through the fine deep third region off the fast bowlers, off just 15 balls. Of this season’s top ten run-getters against pace in that sector of the field, only Suryakumar Yadav and Sunil Narine have (marginally) better strike rates than Karthik.

It’s not an area of the field Karthik is known for scoring heavily or quickly in. Against fast bowling, he’s only made 20 or more runs in that sector in five previous seasons, each time at a strike rate of less than 150.

At 38, in his 17th IPL season, Karthik has opened up an entirely new area of the field, and found a new way to worry bowlers and fielding captains. Do we push deep third back? If so, who do we bring into the circle? How does that change the lines and lengths we want to bowl?

This isn’t the only way Karthik has levelled up in IPL 2024. He’s also found ways to combat a long-standing weakness.

Over recent seasons, Karthik had become a hyper-specialist in the IPL, an end-overs pace hitter to the exclusion of everything else. He had specialised in this role to the extent that other batters would routinely get promoted ahead of him to ensure he had the ideal entry point, and opposition teams would routinely save up one or two overs of spin to match up against him.

In three successive seasons, from 2020 to 2022, Karthik had struck at less than 120 against spin in the IPL. He improved his spin strike rate to 135.18 in 2023, but that was only a teaser of what was to come this year.

In IPL 2024, Karthik faced 38 balls of spin and scored 63 runs at a strike rate of 165.78, without being dismissed. This was his quickest-scoring season against spin; only once before, all the way back in 2008, had he gone at above 150.

It will please Karthik particularly that the three spinners he scored the most runs off this season were legspinners – a type of bowler he had long been reputed to struggle against. He hit Rahul Chahar for 12 runs in four balls and Mayank Markande for 13 in six, and when he walked into a sticky situation against Gujarat Titans – RCB had lost 5 for 19 after a blazing start to a chase of 148 – he clattered Rashid Khan for 18 off 7.

Find new ways of dominating pace, and address a long-standing issue against spin. Karthik did these things at 38, in his 17th IPL season and his 23rd year at the senior level. He did them at a time when he’d become, in his own words, a full-time commentator and part-time cricketer.

Karthik’s performance in the IPL 2024 was so strong that it was appropriate for India to include him in their T20 World Cup roster as a left-field player. It so happened that they had two more outstanding candidates in Rishabh Pant and Sanju Samson.

One last time, the same story. Karthik competed against Parthiv Patel, Dhoni, Wriddhiman Saha, Pant, Samson, and a plethora of other players over the course of an incredibly long career. He managed to stay in the conversation season after season by adapting to the changing circumstances and never standing static.

Also read: Mitchell Starc and his spell in the Qualifier 1

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