Dhawan’s overall T20 strike rate — a middling 123.58 — has become a talking point in recent times, but that’s partly down to his role during his five-season stint at Sunrisers Hyderabad where he was to hold one end up and let David Warner be.But more recently, in the second T20I against South Africa in Bengaluru last September, Dhawan did show greater intent at the top and took more risks than he usually does after India had chosen to bat first. He regularly flitted around his crease against South Africa’s spinners and although he wasn’t picking left-arm wristspinner Tabraiz Shamsi, he shimmied out and hoisted him for back-to-back sixes. However, when Dhawan attempted another six in Shamsi’s next over, the spinner pulled his length back and had the batsman holing out.When Dhawan was going through a lean patch in ODI cricket ahead of the 2019 World Cup, questions were raised about his form. Dhawan, though, bounced back spectacularly, with a well-constructed hundred against Australia.Dhawan’s weakness against left-arm pace is well-documented, but he found a way past that by standing on leg stump — and occasionally outside — staying beside the line of Mitchell Starc. He cleverly saw off Starc and Pat Cummins and went after the rest of the attack.Dhawan’s bouncebackability and pedigree in the ICC tournaments need no introduction, but Rahul’s recent run and his range have heated up the race for the second opener’s role in the T20 World Cup later in 2020 in Australia.You can’t really separate Dhawan and Rahul now, and you might not be able to do that after just two T20Is against Sri Lanka. The verdict will probably come in New Zealand.

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