"The reality is that he is at his best when he is facing ten or less balls," Moody said on ESPNcricinfo's T20 Time:Out show. "That's when he is the greatest threat. But if he's suddenly coming in the tenth over, it can be a totally different situation for him to unpack, so he's really really dangerous from the seventeenth over onwards."
"Players like Rashid Khan are always involved in the game at the hottest point. The first moment he entered the game was in the powerplay when the game was running away from them. He bowled an over, he took a wicket.
"So again, critical time, put in the hotspot, he does the job."
"End of the game, into the hotspot with a different skillset with bat in hand, not ball in hand and does what Rashid's doing more increasingly and that is finding a way to hit a six, hit a four and suddenly when it is getting a little bit tight and everyone's tense on the bench, he's quickly turned it on its head within two or three balls."
"He [Rashid] is such a valuable player because he is a genuine matchwinner that does impact at critical times," Moody said.