'100 is a magical figure, but sometimes 100 is not enough'

Mayank Agarwal on how he he had to rework himself mentally in his relentless pursuit for big runs

Interview by Varun Shetty14-Feb-20203:23

‘I am very intense when it comes to cricket’

After his first home season with India and just over a year after making a dream start to his Test career, Mayank Agarwal talks about how he had to mentally rework himself in his relentless pursuit for big runs. In this interview from December 2019, he opens up on his intensity, about staying focused on the job, and how older players like Rahul Dravid and Vinay Kumar helped him identify vital touchpoints within his mental make-up.You have 11 hundreds in first-class cricket. Seven of those are scores of 150 or higher. What part of your game do you think has made you suited to make so many 150-plus scores?
Long hours of batting with RX [Murali, personal coach] and understanding the fact that 100 is a magical figure but sometimes 100 is not enough. More often than not, you have to go on to score bigger runs than that and have the hunger to continue to bat long. Setting targets for yourself where you are looking at sessions or situations [such that] in a four-day game, your team doesn’t have to bat twice. So things like that have really got the best out of me.ALSO READ: ‘ When you come back and play domestic cricket in India, it challenges you – Mayank AgarwalIt must help that you have a lot of run-scoring options, like your idol Virender Sehwag. But it seems like you are willing to put those shots away if needed. Are you now more patient?
It has more to do with understanding that there can only be one Virender Sehwag. Or that he’s a different player and has a different game, and I’m a different player and I’ll have a different game. A few things might be similar, but the fact that I have a better understanding of my game and knowing what I can do and what is working for me, I think that [helps].You made 1000 runs in November 2017, and the defining innings there was the triple-hundred against Maharashtra, which came after a string of poor scores. Were you nervous coming into that innings?
Yes. The previous game I’d got two zeroes. And I wasn’t sure, to be honest, if I was going to even be in the side, forget about playing the game. Somewhere, as a batsman, there was that fear of getting out. And when you hit rock bottom you realise there is nothing to lose. It cannot get worse than it already is.