Rohit, who was dismissed for 1 on the opening day of the ongoing fourth Test against South Africa here, was guilty of losing his wicket to a poor shot.
His outlandish shot-selection at a critical juncture was widely castigated as India ended the day at 231/7.
Given the situation, Bangar's example of Sangakkara seemed out of place as the recently-retired legend never failed in so many opportunities for Sri Lanka.
For the record, Sangakkara never had a prolonged failure nor did Atapattu after the first five ducks in six first-class innings as he had six scores between 50 and 150 in the next 15 innings.
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Bangar, in fact, took refuge in Rohit's ODI and T20 hundreds, stating that a player "hurts more than anybody" after a bad day in office.
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"He (Rohit) is coming off a T20 hundred, an ODI hundred. He hasn't really got to play lot many Test matches in a row. That always plays (in the mind) as far as batsman is concerned. I think as I have been saying earlier, that you show faith in him, give him successive opportunities and then assess him. Whatever he has done in longer format, he would definitely want to do more," Bangar put it mildly about the player's under-performance.
"I think what has been happening in the past two Test matches, he (Rahane) was slightly hurrying through his shots earlier on, in his innings. But he reworked his strategy a bit and is willing to spend time in the middle during initial stages waiting for the loose balls.
"This may sound very cliched but that's the key to batsmanship in longer format where you need to give initial time to the bowlers. Get used to the pace of the wicket and this was a classic example of how you could do it. All credit to Ajinkya for the way he turned out after first two games with low scores. It speaks a lot about his character," Bangar was full of praise.