India skipper Virat Kohli Friday said he won't mind sitting out one or two IPL matches to stay fit and fresh for the ICC World Cup, putting the onus on his United Kingdom-bound players to manage their workload. Kohli was speaking on the eve of the Indian Premier League opener between his team Royal Challengers Bangalore and Chennai Super Kings.
"Yes... that's a big possibility. Why not?" Kohli said when asked if he could sit out a match or two to avoid burnout.
"It's a personal responsibility. It is up to the players to give information on any niggle to the concerned people as soon as possible and work as per plan," he said.
"We have told the players to be smart about how they feel on a particular day and then reporting to the physios. If he's told not to play, then he has to respect that."
With the IPL, which begins Saturday, culminating days before the World Cup, there has been a lot of talk about managing the workload of the players during the next two months.
Asked if the workload issue will affect the league, the RCB captain said it will depend on how the players strike a balance.
"At the end of the day, I am very motivated to start tomorrow personally... I don't know how competitive or how relaxed Indian players are going to be during the IPL. Every professional knows how to maintain a balance. Eventually, you are playing for a franchise and they have trusted you to do a job for them.
"Till the time you play, you have to give 120 per cent. when you don't play, you don't. I don't believe in playing 75-80 per cent. That's the mindset I carry. I am sure the guys are going to be smart about it. They are going to choose wisely through the tournament. It is not forced on them. They said we are going to be careful," he added.
Kohli said the talent of his team's domestic players would be on display when RCB takes on CSK.
"Not many people are aware of the strengths of some of the Indian guys we possess in our team. And that's one area we want to focus on. In the past, the focus was always been on getting strong overseas players," he said.
"This time around, guys from the domestic circuit are really confident. Tomorrow you will see the kind of bowling options and depth we carry.
RCB haven't beaten CSK since 2014 but Kohli made it clear that he doesn't believe in rivalries and head-to-head records.
"I don't believe in head to head and rivalries. In T20 it is anyone's game really. Some teams we have done really well against. Some teams like CSK, we haven't won in the last six games," he said.
"It is not like you focus only on playing those teams and not focus on teams you have lost against. The opposition this year doesn't matter for us. It is the vision we have and the kind of cricket we want to play as a side and we will focus on that," he added.