Go hard or go home: Is Punjab Kings' batting approach futuristic or unsustainable?

The team have adopted an aggression-first, high-risk-high-reward approach this season. Is it paying dividends?

Matt Roller28-Apr-2022Punjab Kings are the IPL’s mavericks. Their matches this season have been appointment-to-view TV, ranging from convincing wins to blow-out defeats with nail-biting final-over drama in between.Kings have the IPL’s third-best balls-per-six ratio, third-highest dot-ball percentage, and second-lowest batting average. It was obvious from their auction strategy that they would be a boom-or-bust batting team, and their totals this season have borne that out: they have made five totals of 180 or more, and three of 151 or less.Only Kolkata Knight Riders have a batting style that is high-risk, high-reward to the same extent but that has been their identity for a number of years; Punjab, by contrast, are the franchise whose captain described strike rate, perhaps T20 cricket’s most fundamental metric, as “very, very overrated” 18 months ago.Related

  • M Shahrukh Khan: 'I want to be the best version of myself wherever I go'

  • Best friends reunite as Rahul's Super Giants face off against Agarwal's Punjab Kings

  • The six-hitting revolution is only getting started

  • How do batters train for the demands of T20?

  • Punjab Kings come out all guns blazing, and it's working

But after seven consecutive seasons without reaching the playoffs, it was clear something needed to change. Their research and development consultant, Sankar Rajgopal, put together an auction team focused on exploiting market inefficiencies and recruiting six-hitters. Of their six most expensive auction purchases, five were bought primarily for their attacking ability with the bat: Liam Livingstone, Shahrukh Khan, Shikhar Dhawan, Jonny Bairstow and Odean Smith.The result was a squad filled with power, as Kings sacrificed bowling strength for batting depth and backed their hitters to succeed. The first two matches showed the trade-off involved in their approach: in their opening game, they chased 206 with an over to spare against Royal Challengers Bangalore; in their second, they were bowled out for 137 by KKR.