Mohit Sharma has been through a lot of turmoil on both the professional and personal fronts. The 34-year-old Haryana cricketer was smashed for 84 runs in just seven overs by top South African batters in the fifth ODI at Wankhede on October 25, 2015, and virtually went off radar after the last of his 34 appearances for India.
On Thursday, Mohit was back at what he does best, tormenting the batter and returning figures of 2 for 18 in his four overs as Punjab Kings were restricted to 153 and Gujarat Titans won the IPL thriller by six wickets with just one ball left.
Mohit was only 27 in 2015 and had a very impressive ODI World Cup, earlier that year, under Mahendra Singh Dhoni’s captaincy. His bowling in Australia had prompted former Pakistani pacer Aaqib Javed to praise his “heavy ball”, which was a deceptive bouncer that came at a higher speed than expected.
The glory days behind him, Mohit’s form dropped alarmingly during the next three seasons of IPL before he was out of collective consciousness of an average Indian cricket fan.
What followed was the most difficult phase of his life. He found himself away from the ground for months after a surgery in 2019 and then the loss of his father due to cancer the following year left him shattered. Mohit tried to pick up the pieces and got back to playing limited-overs cricket for Haryana but it wasn’t until last year that he got the opportunity he was looking for.
He travelled with eventual champions Gujarat Titans as a net bowler last season before finally making his debut for the team on Thursday. The 34-year-old Mohit made the most of the opportunity with a player of the match against Punjab Kings. He a made a name for himself at CSK under Dhoni’s guidance but he has no hesitation in saying that the time with Titans has been the most enjoyable in his long IPL career.
“Majority of my IPL and India career has been under Mahi bhai. My good results have come under him, big credit goes to him for getting the best out of me. But what matters more for me is how much you are enjoying the game. 2013-2016 was the golden period in my career but in terms of environment it is the best I have experienced in the IPL,” Mohit told PTI during an exclusive interview.
He is not the only one who raves about the atmosphere of the Hardik Pandya-led side which won the IPL on debut.
Mohit had replaced Yash Dayal for his first IPL game in three years after the latter had gone for five consecutive sixes in the previous game. However, he insisted the team has a “no replacement” policy.