
Mumbai have lost its previous three clashes and are currently placed at the bottom of Indian Premier League points table. In the last clash, which was on Saturday, Mumbai scored 194 runs but team Delhi defeated the Rohit Sharma-led team and chased down the total, all hail to England's batsman Jason Roy,his 91 runs knock was the sole reason for Delhi's victory over Mumbai.
The next match of Mumbai will be on Tuesday against Bangalore and Mumbai's skipper Rohit Sharm got enough time to think what went wrong in the previous games.
In a recent media interaction, Mumbai's all-rounder Kieron Pollard looked around media for help during the crisis situation of the team.
"Three games in a row, we have lost in the last over. If you guys have any idea to tell us how to get over the line, if it happens again, you guys obviously know a lot of cricket, so, give us an idea of what to do," asked the Windies cricketer.
He also mentioned that the team is currently discussing how to go about the further remaining games, "We have had conversations going. We had talks at different levels where we need to go forward and actually try and finish off those games."
"For me, I'm not bothered. As any cricketer, if you do not perform, you're dropped. You look at these three games. One game I didn't bat. The second game, we were in a difficult position. And the third game? These things happen.
"I'm always hungry to perform. For any individual, (for) any cricketer performance is important. For me, what gets me going against any team are big players. Big players mean big games. These are the times you want to be counted,"
He praised powerful batting of Chris Gayle against Chennai on Sunday when King Gayle played at a strike rate of 190.91 and scored 63 runs off just 33 balls.
He said, "When you talk about Chris Gayle, you talk about the guy with most T20 runs, the best record, the most sixes, the most dominant force in T20 cricket."
He also said, "As a fellow West Indian, it is disappointing that he didn't fetch a buyer in the first or second round. But he eventually got a buyer."