Connect with us

Sports

India hammer New Zealand to retain T20 World Cup crown

Published

on

Defending champions India retained the T20 World Cup with a clinical performance over New Zealand in the final in Ahmedabad.

India produced a ruthless, near-flawless performance to retain the T20 World Cup title they won in the Caribbean two years ago, steamrolling New Zealand by 96 runs in Sunday’s final in Ahmedabad.

The Kiwis, who had marched into the final after ending South Africa’s unbeaten run in the Calcutta semi-final, ran into a blue wall. India piled up a daunting 255 for five after being asked to bat and then bundled New Zealand out for 159 with an over to spare, sealing one of the most emphatic wins in a World Cup final.

India had been given a wake-up call earlier in the tournament when South Africa handed them a heavy defeat in the Super Eight stage, leaving them needing four straight wins to lift the trophy. From that point on, Surya Kumar Yadav’s men put their foot on the accelerator and never looked back, playing like a side on a mission and delivering the knockout punch when it mattered most.

It was a triumph built not just on star power but on depth and system. India’s conveyor belt of talent keeps churning out match-winners, and their bench strength is the envy of the cricketing world. You may grumble about their strong-arm tactics in the corridors of power, but there is no denying the machine they have built. The result is domination across formats – men’s, women’s and Under-19 – echoing the era of Australian supremacy. At the moment, India are the team everyone else is chasing.

The victory was India’s biggest in T20 World Cup history and made them the first team to win the title three times. Former captains Rohit Sharma, who led the side to the 2024 crown and M.S. Dhoni, the architect of the inaugural triumph in 2007, were present at the venue to witness another chapter of Indian cricketing glory.

New Zealand, however, got their sums wrong. Their seamers stuck to predictable pace and failed to mix things up, allowing India’s openers to cash in during the powerplay.

Abhishek Sharma and Sanju Samson came out all guns blazing, racing to 98 for the first wicket in just 7.1 overs and putting the Kiwis immediately on the back foot. Abhishek set the tone with a blistering 52 off 22 balls, while Samson anchored the charge with a sparkling 89 off 46 deliveries, peppered with five fours and eight towering sixes.

Samson had been India’s banker throughout the tournament, striking three consecutive half-centuries during the campaign and walking away with the Player of the Series award.

The fireworks did not stop there. Ishan Kishan chipped in with a breezy 54 off 25 balls at number three as India threatened to push past the 270 mark. New Zealand managed to drag things back slightly at the death, but chasing 256 in a World Cup final was always going to be a bridge too far.

India’s bowlers then applied the squeeze. Jasprit Bumrah led the charge with a masterclass in fast bowling, finishing with figures of four for 15 and walking away with the Man of the Match award as New Zealand’s chase fizzled out quickly.

Rex Clementine in Ahmedabad



Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Latest News

Bangladesh eye rare double-series win over New Zealand in rainy Dhaka

Published

on

By

Towhid Hridoy scored a quick half-century in the chase in the first T20I [Cricinfo]
Bangladesh go into the third T20I chasing a bit of history: they have never won more than one series against New Zealand on a tour.  Theywon the ODI series 2-1 earlier after being down 1-0, and started the T20I series with a win in the first game after a thrilling chase.
Rain meant no play in the second T20I, meaning Bangladesh can’t lose this series, and they should begin the final game high on confidence after chasing down the 183-run target without much fuss. It was the middle-order batters who made the difference then, as the trio of Towhid Hridoy, Shamim Hossain and Parvez Hossain accelerated perfectly to go past the target with two overs in hand.
Bangladesh would, however, want their openers to show a bit more urgency in the powerplay. Saif Hassan and Tanzid Hasan  are both capable batters, but couldn’t hit a higher gear in that first outing. Saif’s 17 took 16 balls and Tanzid’s 20 came off 25 balls. Especially when it came to Saif, there seemed to be a focus on boundaries: he got two fours and six, but conceded far too many dot balls.
New Zealand had the opposite experience in the last game.Katene Clarke and Dane Cleaver  struck rapid half-centuries during a second-wicket stand of 88 with some attractive strokes. But once they left the scene, the middle-order struggled to keep the innings going. Only stand-in captain Nick Kelly struck the ball cleanly, scoring a 27-ball 39, as they missed out on the 200-plus total they looked likely to get.
With the ball, New Zealand’s inexperience showed. Perhaps they missed a trick by not including left-arm spinner Jayden Lennox. A few really big overs hurt them in the first game, and they will want to address that.
There was a lot of concern about Bangladesh’s middle-order ahead of the T20I series. Hridoy had a difficult outing in the third ODI, when he couldn’t farm the strike in the death overs with lower-order batters batting with him. Hridoy, however, turned things around with Parvez and Shamim in the first T20I, as they put up one of the best performances by the Bangladesh middle-order in a T20I chase. Parvez is a convert, having only started batting in the middle order since the start of this year, while Shamim shed the rust of not playing a competitive match for two months with some mind-boggling shots.
Ish Sodhi is the most successful bowler across the two squads, with 164 wickets in T20Is. He is level with Tim Southee as New Zealand’s highest wicket-taker in this format, but it was his expensive third over that turned the tide in Bangladesh’s favour in the first game. Sodhi finished with 2 for 40 from his four overs. Sodhi will be expected to turn things around in the more spin-friendly conditions in Dhaka.
Bangladesh are unlikely to change the team that played in the first T20I.
New Zealand could bring Lennox into their playing XI. Who goes out is the question. Debutant Matthew Fisher gave 53 runs from his four overs in the first game, and could be the one to face the axe, with Ben Lister having conceded just 23 from his four overs and Josh Clarkson 28 from three.
Bangladesh:  Tanzid Hasan, Saif Hassan, Parvez Hossain Emon, Litton Das (capt, wk),  Towhid Hridoy,  Shamim Hossain,  Mahedi Hasan, Rishad Hossain, Tanzim Hasan,  Shoriful Islam,   Ripon Mondol
New Zealand:  Tim Robison,  Katene Clarke, Dane Cleaver (wk), Nick Kelly (capt), Bevon Jacobs, Dean Foxcroft,  Josh Clarkson, Nathan Smith,  Ish Sodhi,  Matt Fisher/Jayden Lennox,  Ben Lister
[Cricinfo]
Continue Reading

Latest News

Rahul, Nissanka fifties lead 226 chase as Delhi Capitals return to winning ways

Published

on

By

Pathum Nissanka gave Delhi Capitals a huge start [Cricinfo]

In their last match in Jaipur, Rajasthan Royals [RR] were asked to bat first, scored around 230, and never looked like they could defend it. On Friday, against Delhi Capitals [DC], their second match in Jaipur this year, RR won the toss, chose to bat first, scored around 230, and never looked like they could defend it. Between these two matches, RR themselves chased down around 230 with ease.

The decision at the toss remains in sharp focus because it took extraordinary hitting for RR to recover from 36 for 2 in five overs when the ball seamed. During the chase, though, the pitch didn’t offer much to RR, who have arguably had the best attacking new-ball bowlers in Jofra Archer and Nandre Burger. The result was DC’s highest sucessful chase without seemingly having to come out of third gear.

Riyan Parag had to endure the early misbehaviour before he could turn his innings around into 90 off 50 balls. Donovan Fereira (47* in 14 balls) drilled out proverbial yorkers for sixes to give RR their second-best finish in the Impact Player era.

However, led by the returning Mitchell Starc’s three-for, the DC bowlers did just enough to let their batters make full use of the improved conditions. Pathum Nissanka started the charge with 52 from 26 deliveries in the powerplay, KL Rahul went at better than two a ball in the middle overs, and Nitish Rana put any possible nerves to rest with his 33 off 17 balls.

The moment Parag won the toss and surprised just about everybody, including his opponents, that shock quickly gave way to anticipation of watching Vaibhav Sooryavanshi go against Starc after his first-ball sixes off Jasprit Bumrah and Pat Cummins, a second-baller off Sunil Narine, and four boundaries in first four balls against Josh Hazlewood.

However, things happened at the wrong ends. Yashasvi Jaiswal hit Starc for a first-ball six, and two balls later, offered a return chance off a high full toss. Sooryavanshi never got to the Starc end as he played on a Kyle Jamieson yorker, which might point to a pre-decided plan.

Parag had the dubious company of Dhruv Jurel, but he kept RR going at a rate that was exciting but did not promise a win. However, outside the three wickets that fell, you hardly see or hear of any IPL coaches asking those in the between to initiate something.

Now RR were happy with a strike rate of little over one as long as Ravindra Jadeja could offer Ferreira shield from Kuldeep Yadav, with the right-hand batter having fallen to the left-arm wristspinner twice in nine balls. Jadeja was strictly a pinch anchor, asked to face Kuldeep out for Ferreira to have the biggest impact.

But what impact did Ferreira have, including hitting three sixes off Kuldeep. The balls he hit were no more than two inches off the mark, if at all. By bending his back knee and staying deep inside the crease, Ferreira took RR to what looked like a competitive score.

For someone introduced into this IPL as a second thought and only for his par-time offspin against SRH, Rana has shown he belongs at this level if not for India. While the two DC openers holed out, they had already done such good work that DC needed just 49 off 28 balls. Tristan Stubbs and Ashutosh Sharma were never going to allow a hiccup.

Brief scores:
Delhi Capitals 226 for 3 (Pathum Nissanka 62, KL Rahul 75,  Nitish Rana 33, Tristan Stubbs 18*, Ashutosh Sharma 25*; Jofra Archer 1-46, Thushar Deshpande 1-38, Ravindra Jadeja 1-33) beat Rajasthan Royals 225 for 6 in 20 overs (Dhruv Jurel 42, Riyan Parag 90, Ravindra Jadeja 20, Donovan Ferreira 47*; Mitchell  Starc 3-40, Kyle Jamieson 1-48, Axar  Patel 1-39, T Natarajan 1-54) by seven wickets

[Cricinfo]

Continue Reading

Sports

Two Sri Lanka U-19 cricketers arrested for allegedly filming women in a hotel

Published

on

Two Sri Lanka Under-19 men’s cricketers have been arrested over allegations of filming people bathing in the hotel the players were staying at, in Narahenpita, Colombo. Both players have since been released on a personal bail of LKR 500,000 (approx $1,564).

The cricketers had been arrested earlier this week after women staying at the hotel had complained that they were being filmed using mobile phones, while in their bathrooms. Sri Lanka police told ESPNcricinfo that Narahenpita police are currently investigating if any of these videos have been shared online.

Having been produced at the Aluthkade Magistrate’s Court for their initial hearing, the players are next due back in court on May 25.

SLC has not announced any disciplinary measures of its own. However, the board has been in flux over the past 48 hours, with the ousting of the previous office bearers, and the appointment of the Transformation Committee.

[Cricinfo]

Continue Reading

Trending