IND vs ENG: Sanju Samson, Tilak Varma under pressure as Sooryavanshi waits
The first IND vs Eng T20I was abandoned due to rain after India posted a healthy 189 for 7 at the Chester-Le-Street in Durham.
PTI
-
Disovery of Sooryavanshi's generational talent means there is little margin for error for Samson, Tilak (BCCI)
Manchester, 3 July
With Vaibhav Sooryavanshi breathing down his neck, Sanju
Samson will be under pressure to turn the frequent busts in his performance
graph into consistent booms as India take on England in the second T20
International here on Saturday.
The first game was abandoned after India posted a healthy
189 for 7 at the Chester-Le-Street in Durham, riding on half-centuries from
Abhishek Sharma and skipper Shreyas Iyer. However, the focus of attention
during the next few games would be Sanju Samson and whether he can weather the
Sooryavanshi storm that is building up on the side-lines.
In an alternate universe, three back-to-back match-winning
knocks in India's T20 World Cup triumph would have given Kerala's most
'globally followed' sporting icon a cushion for a year. But with Indian cricket
discovering the generational talent of Sooryavanshi, Samson's margin for error
has become minimal and the T20 World Cup halo alone can't save him.
With Abhishek Sharma smashing his way to 49 and 59 in two of
the last three games, the pressure is entirely on Samson to get some runs under
his belt. In the opening game that was washed out, Samson looked miserable
scoring a single run off seven balls and not for once did it seem that he is
trying to take the high-risk high-reward route.
The technical flaws in Samson's game don't inspire a lot of
confidence when he plays on seaming tracks. Ireland's unheralded Jai Moondra,
who actually hails from Rajasthan's Tonk, had exposed his frailties during
successive games with deliveries that moved off the surface.
In case of Samson, the occasional high scores have always
been flanked by a series of low returns on either side and that has been his
biggest bane.
While the team management is firm on not pushing the
15-year-old Sooryavanshi but he possibly can't be kept cooling his heels if
this continues for another couple of games. However, it is not just Samson who
is struggling in this batting order.
The highly talented Tilak Varma's held-back approach in the
middle overs is also an issue. Varma simply seems incapable of pushing the
scoring rate once slow bowlers come into operation or seamers take pace off
their deliveries.
In 12 T20I games in 2026, Varma has been able to hit only 12sixes - which is one per game. And that statistic is poor for anyone who is
seen as a finisher.
The bowling department is unlikely to feature any changes as
Old Trafford track offers some grip and wrist spinners have had a good time at
the venue. Incidentally, the best figures in any T20I at Old Trafford is held
by India's Kuldeep Yadav, who isn't a part of this squad.
For England, the power-packed batting line-up led by skipper
Harry Brook and the dynamic duo of Phil Salt and Tom Banton can take the Indian
attack on. But once again the intrigue surrounds Sooryavanshi. To Play or Not
To Play remains the lingering question.
Leave a Reply
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *




