If there has been one man who has played the role of a quintessential all-rounder in this edition of the Indian Premier League, Marcus Stoinis would probably walk away with top honours.
If adaptability, accountability and execution are the qualities of a top all-rounder, then Australian Marcus Stoinis has been the perfect example in IPL 2020.
Yes, he will have several close contenders -- Kieron Pollard of Mumbai Indians, Ravindra Jadeja of Chennai Super Kings, Jason Holder of Sunrisers Hyderabad, Ben Stokes of Rajasthan Royals and Axar Patel of Delhi Capitals -- but no one has been so effective as Stoinis has been in IPL 2020.
On Sunday, Ricky Ponting's move to play Stoinis as an opening batsman luckily worked out for Delhi Capitals. Aggression has always been Ponting's middle name and if there was a time to show that, it had to be on Sunday against Sunrisers Hyderabad. (HIGHLIGHTS OF DC vs SRH)
Planning and execution can be strangers. At the business end of the IPL league stage when Delhi started losing successive matches. Ponting was worried because his plans were not being executed by Shreyas Iyer's men on the field. The worst came when Mumbai Indians routed Delhi Capitals in the first qualifier.
On Sunday, Delhi made some logical changes. Ajinkya Rahane replacing an out-of-form Prithvi Shaw was expected but Stoinis walking out as Shikhar Dhawan's opening partner was not.
For plans to work, you need a stroke of luck. Delhi were blessed with a large dose of it in Abu Dhabi.
Jason Holder dropping Stonis on three was the first sign that the day would be Delhi's. The Aussie (38 off 27 balls) capitalised on that chance and muscled his way through the Powerplay. The 86-run first-wicket partnership with Dhawan in less than nine overs was a blessing and probably decisive.
PONTING'S PLOY