'Pressure is a privilege': Fueled by failure, Kohli conquers another chase


The celebration of his ninth IPL hundred itself was subdued - just a raise of the bat and an acknowledgement towards the dressing room, without even removing his helmet - because Virat Kohli knew the job was not done yet. But there were two moments during the chase that perhaps captured the evening better. The first came right at the start, when he finally got off the mark after two consecutive ducks. Kohli punched the air with a little fist bump, which was more relief than anything else. The second arrived on 98, when he whipped Kartik Tyagi over deep midwicket with those trademark wrists and broke into a brief little dance, allowing himself to enjoy the shot.
Coming into the game against Kolkata Knight Riders, the scrutiny around Kohli had not really been about form as much as output. He had looked fluent enough through the season but had fallen cheaply in successive outings, something that clearly lingered with him. Kohli got going against Vaibhav Arora, striking four boundaries in the second over. There was the checked punch through midwicket, the flick over square leg and the effortless slash over the off side, all trademark Kohli strokes played with the certainty of someone determined to reassert control quickly.
The innings could still have ended early. On 21, Kohli drilled Kartik Tyagi hard towards cover where Rovman Powell put down a difficult chance that burst through his hands. KKR, who had been one of the sharper fielding sides in the competition before this game, never recovered from that moment. Kohli settled deeper into the chase thereafter, and once he crossed the Powerplay, the innings adjusted into a familiar rhythm.
His fifty came off 32 balls, but perhaps more revealing was how he built the innings after that point. The hundred eventually arrived 28 deliveries later, yet the acceleration never felt frantic. There was no sustained assault against a particular bowler, no sequence of desperate boundary-hunting. Instead, Kohli manipulated the chase through placement and movement.
Of his 105 runs, only 62 came in boundaries while the remaining 43 came through relentless strike rotation, pushes into gaps and hard-run twos that ensured the asking rate never became a conversation. Kohli repeatedly called for the quick runs, challenged fielders and kept turning strike over even as the milestone approached. The chase was paced almost like an ODI innings compressed into T20 tempo: stabilise after the early wicket, absorb the middle overs without stagnating, and gradually close the game before the finish became stressful.
Padikkal later revealed that the pair had spoken about stretching the partnership deep into the chase rather than chasing quick finishes. "I think we didn't really go into the specifics of anchoring. It was just more about making sure that we took the game to a certain stage where we felt that the rest of our batting lineup will be in a comfortable position. I think over the last couple of games we have been in a situation where we have lost a couple of wickets early and then we have never stitched those partnerships together. I think it was important today that once I went in, both of us spoke about just elongating that partnership as long as possible and then taking it from there."
That understanding was visible through the middle overs. Kohli remained the tempo-setter while Padikkal supplied fluency against spin and pace alike. Together, they added 92 runs for the second wicket and the stand never quite allowed KKR an opening. Even during quieter overs against Sunil Narine, Kohli kept nudging singles and twos, refusing to let pressure accumulate. Then came the bursts of acceleration: the wristy pull off Narine, timing one cleanly down the ground against Anukul Roy, and the remarkable whip over deep midwicket off Tyagi.
Kohli admitted that the pressure of the previous two failures had sharpened him rather than burdened him. "Well, there's a reason why people say pressure is a privilege. It actually keeps you humble, keeps you focused, makes you work hard at practice again. You can't take things for granted. Butterflies in the stomach, good pressure always helps you to improve your game. So I was in the nets working harder. Training harder, you tend to, when you're playing well, you can tend to kind of taper off a little bit with your intensity and focus. But I think a couple of games that don't go your way, you start feeling a bit of nervousness again," he said at the post-match presentation after bagging yet another Player of the Match award.

"It helps you to go out there and work on your game and back yourself even more, which takes a lot of effort out of you. But then I think you go a level up as a player and then you keep improving your game little by little. And at the end of the day, when you look back, those failures are so important because they put you back into the place that gets you the performances in the first place and it doesn't let you go off your intense best. So I think that's why people say pressure is a privilege. And of course, I was nervous. I just wanted to get off the mark and just celebrate and have a bit of fun there."
The innings also reflected the batting philosophy Kohli described afterwards. There was very little extravagance in it despite the hundred. Most of it stemmed from clarity. He spoke about staying true to his positions at the crease, knowing exactly which lengths he wanted to target for sixes and ensuring the team's requirements stayed ahead of personal milestones.
"Well, just my positions at the crease, you know, not trying to do anything extravagant, just backing my game, hitting a lot of fours, hitting gaps, being clear as to where I wanted to hit sixes, which length I wanted to hit sixes from, and just staying in the game - like running a lot of twos, hitting the boundaries where needed, picking length, hitting the gaps that I know I can hit.
"So I was happy for the fact that I was able to back my game and execute the shots that I usually execute to the best of my ability. And that gets me the most consistent, the most risk-free cricket, keeping the demands of the situation always in front of me and the team's need always at the top of my head. So all these factors were very pleasing for me out there," said Kohli.
The fist pump after finally getting off the mark, the irritation after miscued strokes despite cruising in the chase, the constant sprinting between wickets at 37, the refusal to celebrate before the game was finished - all spoke to the competitive restlessness that still drives him.
"Well, I just love batting, even after all this. You know, that's my core feeling. Look, what an honour to be playing at this level. What an honour to be competing with the very best in the world still. This is all I've done all my life. Cricket is absolutely something that I truly love. And I just give my heart and soul out there on the field, whether I'm fielding or batting, because it's going to finish one day.
"And I want to make the most of every day that I'm on the field and just enjoy myself and have a lot of fun and look forward to a pressure situation, look forward to scenarios where I'm feeling a bit of heat. And then I challenge myself to say, 'you know what, just go for it'. And when you cross the line, it makes you a better player.
"And sport, as you know, teaches you a lot as a person as well. So you build your character slowly and surely when you keep performing under pressure. And for me, even after all these years and numbers and whatever you said, it's still the love for the game. I just love hitting the ball in the middle of the bat. And that joy is still there. And it's all God's grace. And I'm very thankful and grateful," said Kohli.
Records may not mean much to Kohli now. What clearly still does is the next ball, the next run, the next chance to compete and take his team to victory. At 37, that hunger looks anything but negotiable.





