Kohli Cutting Style -
He didn't fix that hole. He the wall around it.
The moment the ball lands short and veers wide of the off-stump—the trap most batsmen fall into—Kohli is already gone. He doesn't "adjust." He was waiting for it. The traditional coaching manual says: Back and across, high backlift, cut downwards.
It is the shot of a man who hates risk. The cover drive is sexy, but it carries the risk of the nick. The Kohli Cut is . It is low-risk, high-reward. It turns a dot ball opportunity into two runs or a boundary with zero drama. The Evolution: From Flaw to Feature There was a time (circa 2014 England tour) when Kohli couldn't cut. Bowlers like Anderson would feed him width outside off, and he would poke, or leave, or edge. He had a "hole" at backward point. kohli cutting style
When Kohli cuts, he is essentially saying, “Your trap is beneath me. I don't have to chase. I will wait for it, hit it later than you expect, and place it exactly where your fielder isn't.”
That isn't a cut. That’s a surgeon at work. He didn't fix that hole
Watch his trigger. It’s a tiny, violent shuffle across the stumps. To the naked eye, he looks like he is driving everything. But watch closely. That shuffle isn't just for the front foot. It’s a feint. It invites the bowler to think, “He is coming at me. I will go wide.”
But if you want to understand the killer inside the king, you need to stop watching the ball race past cover and start paying attention to the back foot. He doesn't "adjust
Let’s talk about the cut shot.