Inside Team India's unbeaten run ahead of home T20 World Cup
Abhishek’s surge at the top, Hardik’s dual role and Jasprit Bumrah’s control form the core of India’s T20 WC defence.
ANI
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There is something surreal about this line up, which has not dropped a series since Rohit Sharma broke the trophy drought (PTI)
New Delhi, 1 Feb
An unbeaten, unconquered Team India, led by
Suryakumar Yadav, will enter their ICC T20 World Cup title defence as a team to
be beaten and feared after a monumental run leading up upto the tournament.
There is something surreal about this
Indian line up, which has not dropped a series since Rohit Sharma broke the trophy drought by lifting the T20 WC back in 2024, going unbeaten throughout
the competition. A fiery Abhishek (or should one say AbhiSix) Sharma, a
reliable number three in Tilak Varma and the spin duo of Varun Chakravarthy and
Kuldeep Yadav are some of the things that have made India in T20Is a
must-watch, entertaining team.
Defending the title on their home soil
would make them the first ones to successfully defend their title and also win
three T20 WCs. Besides that, the legacy of this set-up as one of the greatest
teams of all time, up there with the West Indies of 1970s and 1980s or the
Australian juggernaut which tormented the entire cricketing world in 2000s.
Team
India's record following 2024 T20 World Cup win
Following their T20 WC 2024 win, which was a swansong to
nation's two-biggest match-winners, Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli, this young
Team India has put on performances that are sure to make them beam with pride.
After that tournament, India has played 41T20Is, winning 31 and losing just six. Two of each have ended in a tie and no
result. India's home record looks imperious, having won 14 out of their 17
games and losing just three.
Coming to series-by-series breakdown, India
have won all eight bilateral series and had an undefeated Asia Cup run.
Top
performers for India after T20 WC till now:
*Abhishek Sharma: 1,297 runs in 38 matches,
37 innings at an average of 37.05 and a strike rate of above 194, with two centuries
and eight fifties.
*Tilak Varma: 847 runs in 24 matches and 22
innings at an average of 60.5 and a strike rate of over 146, with two centuries
and four fifties.
*Hardik Pandya: 579 runs in 29 matches and
23 innings at an average of 34.05 and a strike rate of 154.81, with three
fifties and 21 wickets at an average of 31.47, with best figures of 2/23.
*Varun Chakravarthy: 57 matches in 30
innings at an average of 13.92, with a four-fer and two fifties.
*Arshdeep Singh: 39 wickets in 24 innings
at an average of 18.94, with a fifer.
*Kuldeep Yadav: 25 wickets in 13 matches at
an average of 12.84, with two four-fers.
Strengths
for Team India:
*Abhishek's red-hot form: Abhishek made a shaky start to his career in 2024, scoring just 256 runs in first 12 matches
and 11 innings with a century and a fifty. However since 2025, he has turned
things around, scoring 1,041 runs in 26 matches and innings at an average of
43.37 and a strike rate of over 201, with a centuries and seven fifties.
Abhishek is the number ranked batter in the
world now and no one has hit more sixes than him amongst Test playing nations
than his 88 maximums since the last T20 WC, with West Indies batter Shai Hope
as his distant rival with 50.
*Tilak's reliability at #3: Tilak Varma has
displayed impressive ability to switch gears, change his roles to a stabiliser
to a full-on attacker within a jiffy that would make his predecessor Virat
proud. The Asia Cup final knock of 69* in a tense 147-run-chase against
Pakistan displayed his ability to come clutch in the most dire situations.
In 15 games at number three, Tilak has made
542 runs at an average of 60.22 and a strike rate of 160.83, including two
centuries and three fifties.
*Surya's return to form: Going into the NZ
series, Indian skipper Suryakumar Yadav was on a long slump, having not hit a
fifty since October 2024. Not only did Surya end his 23-inning slump with a
fifty in 2nd T20I, but also made a confidence-boosting return to form with 242
runs in five matches at an average of 80.66 and a strike rate of over 196,
including three fifties.
The Surya of the old days, with shots all
over the ground, razor-sharp reflexes and supreme confidence looks truly back
and its not a good sign for the bowlers. More 'Supla Shots' could be coming
during the World Cup.
*Varun-Kuldeep duo lethal: The spin duo of
Kuldeep and Varun has been dominant for Team India and have won several matches
for Team India in this cycle. On familiar subcontinent conditions across India
and Sri Lanka, which often assist spinners, the duo could continue their
dominance and be India's ultimate match-winners with the ball. Varun's mystery
spin has been extremely difficult to decipher for opponents and batters would
sweat at the prospect of playing him in Asia.
*Best bowling average: Since the last T20
World Cup, Indian bowlers have the best bowling average (18.93) among all Test
playing nations and their bowling economy rate of 7.93 is fourth-best, not too
far from Afghanistan (7.35), Zimbabwe (7.51) Pakistan (7.75) who get the top
three spots.
*Strike rate dominance: Once struggling
with conservatism in their batting, with an increased focus on accumulation and
less on accumulation, India has made giant strides in regards to strike rate,
with their overall SR of 156.03 being the best since the last T20 WC among all
teams and the SR of top-seven batters (158.21) being the second-best to England
(158.57) among Test nations.
*Leading six-hitters since last WC: With
359 sixes being hit by India since the last T20 WC, they have given fans
guaranteed entertainment for the most part and the opponents plenty of scares
and things to ponder upon leading upto the tournament.
Negatives
for Team India:
*Pressure of home WC: For India, there is
home advantage, sure. But playing the WC in home conditions is a double-edged
sword. All the media scrutiny, home crowd pressure and the expectation to
defend their title could be scary for the team. Their other-wordly dominance so
far could become a burden the moment they slip the slightest.
The 'Class of 2023' which lost to Australia
in the final at Ahmedabad after a 10 match streak of wins, dominance and
records is a proof. The law of averages and home pressure could catch up with
India, as it has done with other teams/players in a variety of sports,
including cricket.
-Sanju's poor form: Sanju has been sub-parwith the bat since last year. Despite immense backing as an opener, he has
managed just 97 runs in last 10 innings at the top at an average below 10. This
NZ series was a total flop show as he could make just 46 runs in five innings.
Since last year, he has made just 268 runs
in 16 innings at a sub-par average of 16.75 and a strike rate of over 120, with
just one fifty to his name. The entry of Ishan Kishan, who slammed 215 runs in
four matches during NZ series at a strike rate of over 231 with a century and a
fifty has increased selector's headache: To whether persist with a struggling
Samson and give him that confidence or to play a red-hot Ishan. India's batting
during the World Cup hinges a lot on this question.
Axar's sub-par returns with bat: In the T20
World Cup final, Axar's counterattacking 47 in 31 balls and partnership with
Virat took India to a match-winning total of 176. The left-hander has also
nailed his role as a number five in ODIs, playing a crucial role in Champions
Trophy 2025 win. But somewhere, his T20I batting has regressed, scoring just
233 runs in 17 innings at an average of 19.41 and a strike rate of above 120.
While Axar has been fine with the ball, taking 28 scalps in 27 matches, the
Indian vice-captain is in a dire need of runs.
India T20 WC squad: Suryakumar Yadav (c),
Abhishek Sharma, Tilak Varma, Sanju Samson, Shivam Dube, Ishan Kishan, Hardik
Pandya, Arshdeep Singh, Jasprit Bumrah, Harshit Rana, Varun Chakaravarthy,
Kuldeep Yadav, Axar Patel, Washington Sundar, Rinku Singh.
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