Fiji Sun

Check out what went wrong with India

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Adelaide: At the second semifinal of Internatio­nal Cricket Council Twenty20 World Cup 2022, India succumbed to a 10-wicket defeat to England.

With this, another loss was added to a list of cricketing heartbreak­s of team India fans. India had plenty of great moments with both ball and bat in the tournament.

But their journey once again saw them giving in to the pressure of big stages. Let us see what went wrong:

■Lack of utilisatio­n of powerplay:

India posted 168/6 in their 20 overs. It is a solid, competitiv­e total for a T20 WC semifinal. But it is not a great one on a batting-friendly surface like Adelaide Oval, where India’s star batter Virat Kohli has scored heaps of runs.

The score of 168 was only possible due to the all-rounder Hardik Pandya’s late fireworks. He ended with 63 off 33 balls and had a 61run stand with Virat Kohli (50 off 40 balls).

But a similar intent was not visible during the powerplay, a period during which batters try to make most of the fielding restrictio­ns of only two fielders outside the 30yard circle.

While England hammered Indian bowlers from ball one to reach 63/0 at the end of the powerplay in six overs, India could manage only 38/1 in their first six overs.

The evident run-a-ball approach of Men in Blue backfired during a phase where players let their arms loose.

■Lack of early wickets: The struggles during batting put India in difficulty. The total was competitiv­e and getting some early wickets, especially those of skipper Jos Buttler and Alex Hales could have put England under pressure.

But these wickets did not come. Skipper Rohit Sharma pointed out during the post-match presentati­on, “The way we started with the ball was not ideal.

“We were a little nervy. When Bhuvi (Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar) bowled the first over it swung today, but not from the right areas.

“We wanted to keep it tight, not give room because the square of the wicket was an area we were aware of - that is where the runs came today.” “If we keep it tight and the batsman still score runs, we will take it. But we did not do that today.”

■Lack of a strike bowler: In their group stage run, India used Bhuvneshwa­r Kumar and Arshdeep Singh and their ability to generate movement with the ball to get early wickets through power play.

While the Indian team’s strategy for the middle overs focused on spin, bowling into the pitch and later bringing back pacers in death overs. It was a strategy similar to England.

But both the attacks failed to get wickets and looked toothless. India today felt the absence of Jasprit Bumrah, their usual pace spearhead.

India did not have a banker of an option that Rohit could utilise. Pacers Bhuvneshwa­r, Ravichandr­an Ashwin and Pandya were smacked for more than ten-an-over.

Axar Patel was also hit for 30 runs and even Arshdeep failed to get those early wickets which the youngster got consistent­ly in the group stage.

With this, the final between England and Pakistan is set. Put to bat first by England, India posted 168/6 in their 20 overs.

Hardik Pandya (63 off 33 balls) and Virat Kohli (50 off 40 balls) were the stars for Men in Blue with the bat.

They put on a crucial stand of 61runs for the fourth wicket. Pacer Chris Jordan was the pick of the bowlers, taking 3/43. Adil Rashid and Chris Woakes got a wicket each.

Chasing 169, England put pressure on Indian bowlers right from the first over. India did not have an answer for the onslaught brought by Jos Buttler (80*) and Alex Hales (86*).

England chased the total with all 10 wickets in hand with four overs to spare. Hales (86* off 47 balls) was adjudged as the ‘Man of the Match’.

Brief score: India: 168/6 (Hardik Pandya 63, Virat Kohli 50; Chris Jordan 3-43) vs England: 170/0 in 16 overs (Alex Hales 86*, Jos Buttler 80*).

 ?? ICC ?? Indian cricket fans in Adelaide, Australia, were later disappoint­ed when their national team lost to England in the ICC Twenty20 World Cup semifinal on November 10, 2022. Photo:
ICC Indian cricket fans in Adelaide, Australia, were later disappoint­ed when their national team lost to England in the ICC Twenty20 World Cup semifinal on November 10, 2022. Photo:

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