Jharkhand captain Sauabh Tiwary says aim was to give batters time in the middle, but Nagaland coach Kanwaljit Singh isn’t impressed

Himanshu Agrawal17-Mar-2022″Were they scared of us?” Kanwaljit Singh, the Nagaland coach, minced no words while expressing his dismay at Jharkhand batting on on the final day of their Ranji Trophy pre-quarter-final match at Eden Gardens, despite heading into the day 723 runs ahead.In the absence of an outright result, which Nagaland were unlikely to pull off, Jharkhand would have made the quarter-finals anyway, having claimed a first-innings lead, of a massive 591 runs. And when the fifth day began, they had to choose from either of the two: bowling for three sessions to try and take ten Nagaland wickets, or batting on and further grinding the opposition bowlers in the Kolkata heat and humidity.They opted for the latter.

“If we had bowled them out, what would we have achieved? Would we have achieved anything extra?”Saurabh Tiwary defends Jharkhand’s decision to bat on

Jharkhand had relatively tough pitches to bat on in all three of their league matches in Guwahati, particularly at the Nehru Stadium, where they played their first and third games. Against Chhattisgarh, the highest total across the first three innings was 174, with Chhattisgarh’s Shashank Singh’s 43 the most by a batter. Even the match against Tamil Nadu had team totals declining until the third innings, before Jharkhand chased down 215.In between, the game against Delhi at the Barsapara Stadium offered more: at least one Jharkhand batter got a century both times they batted, with Delhi too nearly chasing down 335 on the final day.And so Saurabh Tiwary, Jharkhand’s captain, said he preferred giving his batters time in the middle. “If we had bowled them out, what would we have achieved? Would we have achieved anything extra,” he told ESPNcricinfo.