In this six-year-period, while Dhawan scored at 85.95 in the first ten overs, Rohit went at 69.52 – slower than, in ascending order of strike rates, Azhar Ali, Alastair Cook and Ajinkya Rahane. Dhawan would take most of the early risks in this period, using his feet to fast bowlers, chipping over the infield, staying leg-side of the ball to try and create scoring opportunities against corridor deliveries.This allowed Rohit to bed in and bat long, and when he did this, there were few forces as destructive: in overs 41 to 50, Rohit scored at over two runs per ball while averaging 68.22. Out of 119 innings in this 2013-19 period, Rohit batted into the last ten overs in 15. Dhawan only got that far four times in 122 innings.It reflects in the magnitude of hundreds they scored. Rohit has nine scores bigger than Dhawan’s ODI highest of 143, including three double-hundreds. Dhawan played a significant helping hand with two of those doubles, though; he made 68 off 67 in Bengaluru, when Rohit’s contribution to the opening stand was 46 off 60; and 60 off 57 in Mohali, when Rohit scored 40 off his first 57 balls.They were playing different roles that happened to suit their strengths; each was in his own way equally valuable to India’s cause.Until the 2019 World Cup, it was even possible to make a case for Dhawan opening alongside Tendulkar in India’s all-time ODI XI: so compelling was the middle ground he offered between Virender Sehwag’s frenetic starts and Rohit’s rate of scoring centuries, while providing the tactical advantage of left-handedness.Rohit then went on to end the argument during the 2019 World Cup, scoring an unprecedented five hundreds. Dhawan played just two games and exited the tournament with a fractured thumb sustained while scoring 117 against Australia.Once we were heroes: Dhawan has had enough of an impact in Indian cricket to have left an indelible mark in the minds of fans•Money Sharma/AFP/Getty ImagesThat 117 was Dhawan’s sixth hundred in World Cups and Champions Trophies. The three batters above him on that list, with seven each, are all Indians: Tendulkar, Rohit, Sourav Ganguly. Take away runs against non-Test-playing opposition, and only Rohit sits above Dhawan.Dhawan’s returns diminished in the years since that World Cup, though, his run-scoring slowing down markedly, age perhaps catching up with a game heavily reliant on hand and eye. In the current ODI cycle, his strike rate of 81.75 is the lowest of the ten India batters who have scored at least 500 runs – the other nine have all gone at above 90.Rohit and Dhawan, then, has given way to Rohit and Gill, a partnership that reflects both the accelerated rhythms of ODIs in general and the fact that India are now spoilt for choice with middle-order options. Both Rohit and Gill have struck at above 93 in the powerplay during this ODI cycle, and at above 100 overall. There is no accumulator.And so, while there’s no room for Dhawan at the top of India’s order, their style of play is entirely out of his peak-years playbook. If he isn’t missed, it could be because he hasn’t really gone away.

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