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de kock vs India’s Bowling Wall: 4th T20I Promises Fireworks Between IND Vs Proteas

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IND Vs SA - 4th T20I

Gear up for a spectacular deciding battle! The misty Ekana Stadium in Lucknow is buzzing with an electrifying match.

 

4th T20I Match Status : The Match has been abandoned due to fog! 

The Indian team is looking forward to sweeping South Africa in the 4th T20I to win the series. And wait, the South Africans are also planning with de Kock and Markram to inflict a surprise on team India to equalize the T20I series.

At the moment, Men in Blue are having an advantage with a 2-1 series lead and are eager to clean sweep with a victory.

The Indian batter front—fans expect Shubman and Surya Kumar to work on their disappointing form to put in a strong performance to take the series. Rest, Tilak and Pandya may do some great jobs in today’s match too.

On the Indian bowling front, India’s spin sensation, Varun Chakravarthy, and opening pacer Arshdeep Singh did excellent job with their bowling line and length in the last game, and the fans look forward to seeing their dominant form intact.

For South Africa, Quinton de Kock and Aiden Markram are the men to expect some spirited performance from. This experienced duo has played several games at this venue and knows the conditions like the back of their hands.

They’ll be crucial in leading their team’s charge to level the series with another win.

The South Africans will need to be consistently at their best to overcome India’s powerful bowling lineup.
The Lucknow crowd is excited and is expecting a thrilling match fight.

In this unpredictable game, who will become the winner? The stage is set for an outstanding game!

Team stats :

India : Won 4, Lost 1 (In last five T20Is game)
South Africa : Won 1, Lost 4

Pitch Condition :

The condition of pitch at Ekana Cricket Stadium built on black soil. Such type of pitches produces low bounce, grip, and wear and tear as the match advances. Such surface requires technical precision with focused power hitting against pacers and spinner due to sudden turn, variation, ball tends to hold up slightly, making ill-timed shots usual in middle overs and closing overs.

The team winning the toss will definitely bat first and try to set scores in the range of 170–180.
Chasing such scores are bit difficult on this pitch.

Teams batting first have won about 58 percent of matches, especially when defending totals through
combined bowling strategy of tight spin and swing pace attacks.

India side – Match Statics & Cons

Pacer Arshdeep Singh has got out in form Quinton de Kock five times in 56 balls in all T20 cricket for just 66 runs. Captain Surya kumar Yadav and opener Subhman Gill’s form are the reason for worry.

Venue : Bharat Ratna Shri Atal Bihari Vajpayee Ekana Cricket Stadium, Lucknow

Umpires : KN Anantha Padmanabhan, Rohan Pandit

3rd Umpire : Virender Kumar Sharma

Referee: Richie Richardson

India squad Players :
Abhishek Sharma, Shubman Gill, Suryakumar Yadav (captain), Tilak Varma, Harshit Rana, Hardik Pandya, Shivam Dube, Jitesh Sharma (wicket keeper), Kuldeep Yadav, Arshdeep Singh, Varun Chakaravarthy

Reserve : Sanju Samson, Washington Sundar, Jasprit Bumrah, Shahbaz Ahmed

Support Staff :
Gautam Gambhir, Ryan ten Doeschate, T Dilip, Morne Morkel, Sitanshu Kotak

South Africa squad Players :

Reeza Hendricks, Quinton de Kock (wicket keeper), Aiden Markram (captain), Dewald Brevis, David Miller, Donnovan Ferreira, Marco Jansen, George Linde, Corbin Bosch, Lungi Ngidi, Ottneil Baartmaan.

Reserve : Corbin Bosch, Tony de Zorzi, Kwena Maphaka, Keshav Maharaj, Tristan Stubbs,             Anrich Nortje

Support Staff
Shukri Conrad, Jean-Paul Duminy, Eric Simons, Wandile Gwavu, Albie Morkel

T20I Statistics and Records at Ekana Cricket Stadium, Lucknow

  1. Nine games were played in total.
  2. Batting first wins in total matches: 5
  3. Bowling-first victories in total matches: 4
  4. First-inning average score: 151
  5. Average score by chasing team: 126
  6. India’s 199/2 (20 Overs) was the highest total ever recorded against Sri Lanka.
  7. New Zealand’s 99/8 (20 Overs) against India was the lowest total ever recorded.
  8. South Africa chased the highest score of 159/4 (20 Overs). India vs. Women Women
  9. Afghanistan’s lowest defended score against the West Indies was 156/8 (20 Overs).

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Sanju Samson’s unbeaten 97 wipes out West Indies’ 196: India storms into Semis With Record-Breaking Chase at Eden Garden.

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It was a heart wining  quarter-final, a knockout performance delivered in front of a sea of blue at the Eden Gardens, Kolkata. And when the dust settled on Sunday night, it wasn’t just a victory for India; it was a coronation. Sanju Samson, the man who has often been cricket’s most talented enigma, finally unleashed the beast with cool temperament on the crucial yet biggest stage, powering India to their highest successful chase in ICC T20 World Cup history.

Here is how the drama unfolded in Kolkata, and what lies ahead in the semi-finals.

The Toss and the Surface: A Batting Paradise

India Captain Suryakumar Yadav called it right and, with no hesitation, opted to bowl first. The Eden Gardens pitch was a batting pitch. True and flat under the lights, with the dew in March always a looming threat for the team bowling second. The message was clear: chase, and chase big. The only question was, could the attack restrict a dangerous West Indies line-up?

West Indies’ Power Surge: Holder and Powell Play Party-Poopers

The Caribbean reply was a tale of two halves. Openers Shai Hope (32 off 33) and Roston Chase (40 off 25) started defensively, respecting the good balls but never looking rattled. The 6 over powerplay yielded a steady 45/0 score.

Just as the innings needed a spark, Shimron Hetmyer provided the fireworks. He smashed 27 off just 12 balls, treating the spinners with utter disdain. But just when West Indies looked to accelerate into orbit, Jasprit Bumrah produced a magical 12th over. He removed a dangerous Hetmyer with a clever away-angler and then had Chase chip one straight to cover. In the span of three balls, the score went from 102/2 to 103/3. India had the control on.

But they loosened their grip. Badly.
Rovman Powell and Jason Holder launched a brutal counter-assault in the death overs. The 16th over from Arshdeep Singh disappeared for 24 runs as Powell flexed his muscles. The duo added an unbeaten 76 runs off just 35 balls for the fifth wicket. Holder’s 37* off 22 and Powell’s 34* off 19 powered the Windies to a towering 195/4 in 20 overs. It felt like 20 runs too many.

Image Courtesy: BCCI

The Indian Bowling & Fielding Follies

While Bumrah (2/36) was exceptional, the supporting cast was wobbly. Arshdeep Singh went for 43 runs in his four overs, and the decision to save Bumrah for the death backfired as the damage was already done by Powell.

But the real sin was in the field. India were sloppy, dropping three regulation catches. The most glaring miss was by Abhishek Sharma, who put down a simple chance at cover when Chase was on just 15 run. That drop cost India dear, as Chase went on to add another 25 crucial runs. In a match decided by a few balls, those lapses were almost criminal.

Image Courtesy: BCCI

The Sanju Samson Masterclass: A Knock of Destiny

Chasing 196, India needed something special. They got a masterpiece.

When Abhishek (10) and Ishan Kishan (10) fell cheaply, India were struggling at 41/2. The pressure was immense. But Sanju Samson played the innings of his life. He didn’t just bat; he mesmerized. His 97* off just 50 balls was a blend of classical timing, thoughtful stroke and raw power12 fours and 4 sixes, a strike rate of 194.

He found the perfect ally in Tilak Varma, whose brisk 27 off 15 took the pressure off during the middle overs. Captain Suryakumar Yadav chipped in with 18, and Hardik Pandya with a quick 17, but this was the pure Sanju performance show.

The equation came down to 7 runs needed in the final over. Romario Shepherd ran in. The first ball was dispatched into the stands for six. The next was lofted over mid-on for four. Game. Set. Match. India won with four balls to spare. Eden Gardens erupted, not just for the win, but for the redemption of a player who had waited for this moment his entire career.

Key Match Highlights Backed by Data

  • Highest Chase: India’s 199/5 is now their highest successful run-chase in ICC T20 World Cup history.

  • Samson’s Solitude: Sanju Samson’s 97* is the highest individual score by an Indian wicket-keeper in a ICC T20 World Cup knockout match.

  • The Holder-Powell Blitz: The unbeaten 76-run partnership between Holder and Powell is the highest 5th wicket stand for West Indies against India in T20Is.

  • Record Aggregate: The total of 394 runs scored in this match is the highest match aggregate between India and West Indies in ICC men’s T20 World Cups.

  • Six-Hitting King: Rovman Powell became the first West Indian to hit 150 sixes in T20Is during his innings.

Image Courtesy: ICC

What Lies Ahead: The Semi-Final Showdown

With the Super Eights done, the stage is set for two blockbuster semi-finals.

First Semi-Final: South Africa vs New Zealand (March 4, Eden Gardens, Kolkata)
The Proteas come into this as the only unbeaten side in the tournament, having dismantled everyone in their path . They boast a balanced attack and a confident batting line-up. New Zealand, however, are the great escape artists. Despite a loss to England, they scraped through on net run-rate. The Eden pitch will still be good for batting, but South Africa‘s psychological edge over the Kiwis in knockouts might just be the deciding factor.

Second Semi-Final: England vs India (March 5, Wankhede Stadium, Mumbai)
This is the box-office clash. England have been superb in the Super Eights, defeating Pakistan, New Zealand, and Sri Lanka. They are aggressive, fearless, and love the big stage. India, buoyed by this miraculous chase, have the momentum. The Wankhede is a batsman’s paradise—small boundaries, fast outfield. If the pitch is flat, we could be in for a 220+ shootout. India‘s spinners vs England‘s hard-hitting lineup will be the battle within the battle.

In the end, Kolkata witnessed a changing of the guard. Sanju Samson didn’t just win a match; he announced that the new generation of Indian cricket is ready to take on the world. Bring on Mumbai.

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Abhishek, Hardik, and Tilak Run Riot: India’s 256 Crush Zimbabwe Before West Indies Clash

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Bharatnewsupdates - Hardik And Tilak IND vs ZIM

The Chennai Chase: When 184 Feels Like a Wake-Up Call

If you were at the MA Chidambaram Stadium in Chennai on Thursday, or just watching on big screen, you witnessed a game of two contrasting different stories. On one hand, India’s batting lineup treated the crowd to a fireworks display, smashing and scoring 256 runs—the highest total target of this ICC World Cup 2026. On the other hand, if you were an Indian bowler or fielder, you probably left the field with mixed feelings. Let’s break down what really happened at Chepauk Stadium, Chennai.

Bharatnewsupdates - Team India against Zimbabwe

The Surface and Condition: Not Quite the Chepauk of Old

Chennai is usually known for its spin-friendly, slow turners track. But this ground? It was a batter’s paradise. The ball came onto the bat nicely, and the outfield was lightning quick. There wasn’t much spin scope for the spinners, and the short boundaries on one side made bowling a nightmare. If you had score on the scoreboard, it was an easy wicket to bat on. If you were chasing, it offered a rays of hope—which is exactly what Zimbabwe held onto.

Indian Batters: Balanced, Fearless, and Ruthless

India’s innings was a showcase of aggressive T20 batting — powerplay intent, middle-over acceleration, and explosive end over finishing with bigger hits.

Key performers

  • Abhishek Sharma: 55 (30) — aggressive tempo-setter

  • Hardik Pandya: 50 (23) — power and composure combined

  • Tilak Varma: 44 (16)* — death-overs demolition

  • Support came from quick scoring batsmen like Sanju Samson, Ishan, Captain Suryakumar across the order

The highlight was India’s balance — youth providing spark and experienced finishers delivering mastery.

Boundary domination

  • 17 sixes — among India’s highest in T20 World Cup history

  • 17 fours

  • 170 runs in boundaries

India crossed:

  • 150 in 13 overs

  • 200 in 17 overs

  • 250 in final over

The finishing torpedo from Hardik and Tilak turned a big score into a massive one.

Bharatnewsuodates - Hardik & Tilka IND Vs ZIM ICC World Cup 2026

Image Courtesy : BCCI, India

Zimbabwe bowling: Ray of discipline but overwhelmed

Zimbabwe’s bowlers struggled with length consistency on a flat pitch.

Positives

  • Aryan Dutt’s tidy spell (2/19)

  • Occasional middle-over control

Issues

  • Missed yorkers at the death

  • Predictable pace on the ball

  • Fielding lapses, including dropped catches

Against a lineup in full flow, Zimbabwe needed perfection — and never quite controlled it.

Zimbabwe Batters: Bennett’s brilliance with limited support

Zimbabwe’s chase revolved around Brian Bennett’s outstanding 97 (59)* score — one of the most complete knocks of the tournament.

His innings featured:

  • 8 fours

  • 6 sixes

  • Calm shot selection despite pressure

Support acts

  • Sikandar Raza: 31

  • Others struggled to convert starts

Zimbabwe’s steady powerplay (44/0) showed promise, but regular wickets restricted the momentum.

The Indian Bowling Concern: Why 184 Runs is a Talking Point

Here’s where the honest conversation begins. India scored 256. India won by 72 runs. But the fact that Zimbabwe—a team already knocked out—managed to score 184/6 is a slight worry.

Yes, the pitch was flat. Yes, the pressure was off Zimbabwe. But defending champions cannot afford to be self-satisfied with the ball.

  • Arshdeep Singh was the pick of the bowlers with 3/24, bowling smartly at the death over. But the bowlers like Shivam Dube ought to work on their bowling’s line and length.

  • However, the middle overs looked a bit loose at times. Shivam Dube conceded 42 runs off 2 overs. If a relatively inexperienced Zimbabwe lineup can put up 184, what would a stronger batting side do on a similar track?

It’s a minor red flag. The fielding also had its moments of sloppiness, something that needs to be tightened up immediately.

The Bigger Picture: Group Standings and the Kolkata Revenge

This win kept India’s title defense alive, but the tournament situation is tense.

  • Group A Status: South Africa has already booked their spot in the semi-finals. Zimbabwe is officially out after losing to India.

  • The Decider: This leaves one spot open, and it will be fought between India and the West Indies at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata on 1st March 2026.

For India, winning against the West Indies is non-negotiable. It’s a knockout game.

What India Must Focus on Against West Indies

The West Indies are a dangerous side. They have power hitters who can demolish any bowling attack, as they showed against Zimbabwe by scoring 254 themselves.

  1. The Bowling Attack Needs Variation: In Kolkata, which can also be a good batting track, India cannot rely on pace alone. They need to use their spinners—Varun Chakravarthy and Axar Patel—as wicket-takers in the middle overs, not just run-containers.

  2. Fielding needs to Be Superb: Against a team like West Indies, dropping catches is a lethal mistake. The team needs to be agile and sharp on the boundary line to save those crucial 10-15 runs.

  3. Batting Depth Utilization: The top order did the job in Chennai, but against a pumped-up West Indies, the middle order (Hardik, Tilak, and Jadeja) might need to step up earlier.

Sunday at Eden Gardens isn’t just another league match; it’s the match that decides India’s fate. If the batting shines like it did in Chennai, and the bowlers, fielders learn to tighten the screws, India has a great chance. But they’ll need to be at their absolute best to silence the Caribbean storm.

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The Upcoming Hundred League Controversy: Indian Owners and the Pakistan Players Auction Debate

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When Strategy Beats Sentiment in the Auction Arena, Why Is the Selection Question Dividing Cricket Fans Worldwide?

Teams Are Built on Performance, Not Passports

The noise around the upcoming auction of The Hundred has grown louder.

The build-up to the next season of the The Hundred was supposed to be about tactics, auction strategy and fresh rivalries. Instead, conversation has shifted toward a rumour that has stirred strong emotions across the cricketing world: four franchises linked to Indian investors may not sign Pakistani players at the upcoming auction.

The teams reportedly under the spotlight include Manchester Super Giants, MI London, Southern Brave and Sunrisers Leeds. While nothing official has been publicly confirmed, reports referencing comments attributed to the England and Wales Cricket Board and coverage by Anti India BBC Sport suggest that Pakistani players may struggle to attract interest from franchises with IPL links.

But strip away the emotion, and one fundamental truth remains: franchise teams are built on performance, role clarity and strategic fit — not nationality.

And that truth is uncomfortable only for those who want sport to serve political storytelling.

Auctions are not diplomacy rooms

Modern franchise cricket is brutally simple. Owners invest money, accept risk and carry the pressure to deliver results. Their responsibility is not international representation; it is competitive success.

The franchise cricket transformation is visible across the globe:

  • SA20 – dominated by IPL-linked ownership

  • ILT20 – strong Indian franchise presence

  • Major League Cricket – multiple IPL partnerships

  • Caribbean Premier League – several Indian investors

  • Expansion influence from the Indian Premier League ecosystem

Whether the teams in question — Manchester Super Giants, MI London, Southern Brave and Sunrisers Leeds — pick Pakistani players or not should therefore be viewed through a sporting lens.

Owners do not sit in auction rooms thinking about geopolitics. They think about:

  • batting strike rates

  • bowling matchups

  • injury history

  • availability windows

  • dressing-room balance

  • tactical roles

  • brand alignment

  • tournament conditions

This is not ideology. It is team construction.

Merit is the only currency that survives auctions

Players like Babar Azam and Shaheen Afridi are world-class talents. If franchises believe they fit their plans, they will be picked. If not, they won’t.

The auction does not operate on sympathy. It operates on demand.

Cricket history is full of examples where top players went unsold simply because their role did not match a team’s strategy. That is painful but normal.

Turning every non-selection into a geopolitical controversy distorts how franchise sport actually works.

Personal identity vs professional expectation

The modern cricketer carries multiple identities — national, cultural, personal and professional. But once inside a franchise environment, only one identity matters: the role within the team.

Players expressing personal faith or rituals on the field has long been part of cricket’s diversity. The sport has historically accommodated various cultural expressions without controversy.

But franchise selection ultimately remains a professional evaluation, not a judgment on personal identity.

Conflating the two risks creating narratives that oversimplify complex sporting decisions.

The Indian IPL example exposes the contradiction

Critics arguing that non-selection of Pakistani players reflects exclusion often ignore a practical precedent: the Indian Premier League has not featured Pakistani players for years.

Yet during this period:

  • Indian cricket has grown stronger

  • global leagues have flourished

  • Pakistani cricket has continued producing talent

  • bilateral competition has remained intense

  • fan interest has expanded

The absence of players from a particular league did not weaken the sport itself.

This demonstrates a key reality: franchise participation is not the sole measure of cricket’s health or a player’s quality.

Ownership rights are fundamental to franchise sport

A central principle often overlooked in this debate is simple: franchise owners have the right to build their teams as they see fit.

They bear:

  • financial risk

  • reputational pressure

  • performance accountability

  • fan expectations

  • sponsorship obligations

With those responsibilities comes decision-making autonomy.

Demanding moral or political justification for selection decisions undermines the very concept of private franchise leagues.

The danger of victim narratives

Repeatedly framing non-selection as systemic exclusion risks creating victim narratives that harm players more than they help them.

Auctions are dynamic markets. A player unsold in one league can become highly sought after in another. Performance cycles, tactical evolution and format demands constantly reshape demand.

Reducing this fluid process to a fixed geopolitical storyline oversimplifies cricket’s competitive ecosystem.

Players are professionals navigating markets, not symbols trapped in political binaries.

Cricket does not need forced symbolism

There is a romantic belief that sport must act as a diplomatic bridge. While that ideal is admirable, forcing symbolic inclusivity in franchise selection is unrealistic.

True inclusivity in sport emerges organically from competition, not obligation.

Franchise leagues succeed precisely because they prioritize performance over symbolism. Altering that principle risks undermining the credibility of the competition itself.

A reality check for fans

Fans often expect sport to operate in an ideal world detached from strategy, economics and competitive logic. But franchise cricket is unapologetically pragmatic.

Selection decisions can be:

  • ruthless

  • unpopular

  • misunderstood

  • strategically opaque

But they are rarely political declarations.

Assuming geopolitical motives behind every auction outcome reflects fan anxiety more than franchise intent.

Final thought: respect the auction room

The upcoming Hundred auction will ultimately reveal its own story. Some players will be picked, others will not. Careers will rise, reputations will shift and strategies will be questioned.

That is the nature of competitive sport.

What must be respected is the autonomy of team owners to make those decisions without being forced into ideological interpretations. Selection freedom is not exclusion — it is the core mechanism of franchise cricket.

Cricket’s strength lies in its diversity of leagues, opportunities and pathways. One league’s choices do not define a player’s worth or a nation’s cricketing stature.

In the end, auctions reward form, role and timing — not passports, not narratives and not outrage.

And perhaps the healthiest way to view the debate is this: the auction room has no national anthem, only strategy.

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