India, Jan. 15 -- Sanjay Manjrekar's line that ODI batting is "easy" sounds spicy, but it leans on an outdated picture of 50-over cricket. Modern ODIs are not a diluted Test; they're a format with built-in pressures where batting success depends on repeated recalibration rather than one steady method.

Manjrekar's core-point is that top-order batters find ODIs the most comfortable format because conditions and incentives favour run-making. That framing skips what ODIs uniquely demand: three different innings modes, ball-behaviour shifts, and scoreboard pressure that punishes even the smallest of misreads.

In an uninterrupted ODI innings, fielding restrictions are split into three blocks: overs 1-10 (maximum 2 fielders outside the circle)...