Admitting that the team balance was not right "initially", Royal Challengers Bangalore captain Virat Kohli on Saturday that after enduring a six-match losing streak in a forgettable IPL campaign, he could only tell the teammates to "look into the mirror" and ask themselves if they were doing enough.
"I remember after the 6th game everyone got together and we looked at each other and nodded our heads and that was it. We are doing everything possible and literally there is nothing going right. Even in the games when we were up for it 80% of the game and we would just lose it in those two overs," Kohli told Star Sports when asked how he kept his team-mates motivated in that tough phase.
"We just had one message to give to the team that we are committed 120% every ball every minute. It is up to the individuals to look into the mirror and ask I am doing enough," he added.
Kohli, however, admitted that the team balance was not right "initially".
"We always try to do our best. Sometimes, the balance of the team just does not set right in a tournament like IPL, for the team to fire. Someone who gets the balance right from game one they go on and dominate all the games someone like CSK or Mumbai or Delhi. They have a good balance which unfortunately we could not initially," the India captain said.
Asked if RCB could have done differently at the start of the tournament, Kohli said, "I think it is always important to start well in IPL. We have seen that in the past. I think 2016 was a freakish season where we just played well and, in the end, did not qualify. But if you don't start well your chances of qualifying becomes lesser and lesser.
"But if you collectively don't win for 6 games which none of us had experienced before, and we spoke about it and then everyone just woke up. I think it gets a little more difficult to go through the play-offs. But having said that we brought in a few new people as well. So, for them to settle in the IPL was not going to be easy. If some people got going then things would have been different."
Kohli and de Villiers have been together for over eight years exclusively. Asked if it's turning out to be cricket's biggest bromance story, Kohli said, "I think it might be in between there was Chris Lynn and Baz (New Zealand's Brendon McCullum). But that was only for a couple of years. This has been 8 years now. Since 2011, so this has to be the biggest bromance story."
IPL 2019: Kohli asks RCB teammates to 'look at mirror' and question themselves!
ABP News Bureau
Updated at:
05 May 2019 03:02 AM (IST)
After enduring a six-match losing streak in a forgettable IPL campaign, Kohli said he could only tell the teammates to "look into the mirror" and ask themselves if they were doing enough.
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