Power India to T20 World Cup final

Rohit Sharma Captaincy

power India to T20 World Cup final this is possible because of Rohit Sharma allowed himself a visibly irritated grin and a sharp glare, the one that gives questions he doesn’t want to delve deep into. The question was about packing four spinners to the West Indies. Sharma took a deep breath and explained in an assertive tone: “I don’t want to go into details on this. I definitely wanted four spinners. There are technical aspects involved in this. I won’t reveal it now.”
Rohit exuded a resounding conviction about the quartet, which has been gloriously vindicated as the tournament has progressed. If India’s pace trio had grabbed most of the bouquets in the group games, the spin trio had spread their wings and fluttered in the latter games of Super Eight and the semifinal against England. Sharma knew exactly when to unleash them-Kuldeep Yadav was preserved for the Super Eight, and his wristy cunningness makes him as dreaded a proposition as Jasprit Bumrah.
Irrespective of how the strip in Kensington Oval in Barbados for the final behaves, he daunts on South Africa’s batsmen. And Sharma knew exactly when to use him.

Guyana Pitch

The Guyana pitch shared the soul and habits of a third-day subcontinent pitch. A distant cousin of the Green Park deck in Kanpur. The bounce was low, the pace was slow, some balls turned, though not sharply, and some did not. The semi-filled stands swayed to Bhojpuri and Bhangra tunes, ringing in subcontinental festivity. So he summoned Axar Patel, the prince of parsimony, but here in the terminator’s armour. Of all his spinners, Patel hits the stumps the most, he is the smartest exponent of using the crease and varying the releasing points.

Jos Buttler

So, as early as the fourth over, Sharma threw him the ball. And clapped, as though exhorting him to “go for the kill.” And so he did. As though he had mastered the mind of Jos Buttler, the England captain and their biggest hope in taking them a step closer to defending the title, he flung in a flat ball from wide of the crease at Buttler, as though anticipating a reverse sweep. But he did exactly that, only the ball dipped and arrived at a much slower pace than Buttler had anticipated. That he toe-ended rather than top-edged shows how early the England batsman was into the short.

Yadav Took 3 Wickets

Soon, Yadav took over the show and whipped up three wickets including the priced one of Harry Brook, twinkling him out with delectable drift. Yadav is perhaps the antithesis of Patel, wields the most exotic of arts in the game, has an aura around his the edges of curls and a deep pocket of tricks. For Sharma, they are but two men treading different paths to the same goal of influencing games. Another box too was ticked-the sparsely used Jadeja bowled three overs of stifling lines. He showed no rust or restlessness in being used as a bit-part bowler.

That Sharma could afford to slot both Jadeja and Patel in the eleven is partly due to their batting skills. Both emphasised that in Georgetown. Jadeja’s nine-ball 17 and Patel’s six-ball 10 are the sort of mini cameos modern day teams expect from all- rounders. Suddenly, the team could boast a splendid balance-three spinners, of which two could crunch boundaries, three seamers, of which one could launch lusty blows. Give Sharma any type of track, he has the ammo to blast opponents. New York was seam friendly, so he unbolted his seamers, St Lucia was a shirtfront, so he harnessed the best of his pitch-transcending bowlers, Bumrah and Yadav; Guyana was spinner-friendly, so pushed Patel upfront. It’s a classic case of a resourceful bowling firm used resourcefully by a worldly-wise Sharma. The nature of the Kensington Oval pitch would hardly pique Sharma in the hasty dash to the final. And by now, he has eloquently answered the spinner question.

FAQ’s:

How many times did India enter the World Cup final?

The correct answer is three. India has reached the Cricket World Cup Final four times in 1983, 2003, 2011.

How many finals has India lost?

India had lost ICC KnockOut (Champions Trophy) 2000, ODI World Cup 2003, T20 World Cup 2014, Champions Trophy 2017 and WTC 2021 finals.

When did Dhoni retire?

While Dhoni did not announce retirement after the match, he confirmed the end of his international career on August 15, 2020 in a famous Instagram post.

What happens if it rains on T20 finals day?

The final, thankfully, has a reserve day. However, if that match is also not completed, both teams will be declared joint winners.

 

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