'I think captaincy will give him that edge, a motivation to do something extra. You never know maybe he can lead Kings XI to a title.'
India's leading off-spinner Ravichandran Ashwin can use the IPL as a platform to revive his dwindling career in limited overs cricket, feels veteran batsman Subramaniam Badrinath.
Having bought Ashwin for Rs 7.60 crore, Kings XI Punjab, who have been the perennial under-achievers in the Indian Premier League, handed the veteran off-spinner a big responsibility to lead the side.
Ashwin, who has 100 wickets in 111 IPL games at an economy of 6.55, will lead a side boasting some of the biggest hitters in limited overs cricket including the likes of Aaron Finch, David Miller, Chris Gayle, KL Rahul and Yuvraj Singh.
"I have played a lot of cricket with him. I know him as a person, as a friend. He will be looking to do something, he will be looking at this as a challenge," former Tamil Nadu skipper said Badrinath of Ashwin who made his Ranji debut under his captaincy.
"I think captaincy will give him that edge, a motivation to do something extra. You never know maybe he can lead Kings XI to a title, with an extraordinary season and his name will start coming up in the limited overs cricket."
Ashwin had finished with one wicket from three matches with an average of 167.00 in last year's ICC Champions Trophy and played his last ODI during the West Indies tour in same month of June.
With wrist spinners Kuldeep Yadav and Yuzvendra Chahal putting in some consistent performances in limited overs cricket recently, Ashwin has his task cut out as far as making it to the Indian ODI team is concerned, especially with the 50-overs World Cup around 12 months away.
"I don't think it would have come at a better time for him. He is at that stage of his career, where he should look beyond his own cricket. Not just performing as a bowler, but what can he do more."
"It is a great opportunity and has come at a right time. knowing him, he will look to take this up as a challenge. It's not going to be easy but he will be up for it."
Kings XI Punjab have managed to reach the playoffs only twice. In the first season, they reached the semi-finals and secured the third spot while their best show was a runners-up finish in 2014.
Having taken up the role of a commentator in the upcoming IPL, Badrinath picked Chennai Super Kings and KKR as the two best franchises.
"KKR and CSK are probably the best franchises, as far as teams go, I can vouch for that. Only time can tell what will happen going into the tournament."
Former champions CSK will be returning to IPL after two seasons, but Badrinath felt the core of the team remains the same, so Mahendra Singh Dhoni and Co would not face much problem.
"Coming back after two years will wont be easy. But CSK have players who have been with the past. It would not be a new team altogether even though they are coming back after a break. In Ravindra Jadeja, Suresh Raina, Dwayne Bravo, the core group is the same. They will be able to gel."
KKR's newly-appointed skipper Dinesh Karthik's last-ball six to win the T20 tri-series final against Bangladesh in Sri Lanka has been the buzzword before the IPL.
Refusing to compare Dhoni with Karthik, he said: "Dhoni is a brand on his own. He's the best wicketkeeper. I don't think you can ever compare Dhoni and Karthik. It's not fair. MS is a special cricketer, he's a legend.
"But the innings will definitely help Karthik. He will carry that confidence. He's been playing well for last couple of years. It's about how he manages the team.
"Bulk of the batting in the middle order will depend on Karthik, Nitish Rana and Andre Russell. These three have to take the bulk of the load."
Ashwin seeks sharp turn in perception for white-ball success
Hey, isn't that Ashwin at Nagpur airport?
'The Salman Khan of Indian cricket'
Ashwin, Gibbs involved in Twitter spat
Saha hits 6 sixes in an over enroute to 20-ball century in club game!