India beat South Africa to win T20 World Cup after fine death bowling and Suryakumar Yadav’s stunning catch | Cricket News

India beat South Africa to win T20 World Cup after fine death bowling and Suryakumar Yadav’s stunning catch | Cricket News



India edged South Africa to win their second T20 World Cup title and first since 2007 as an astounding catch from Suryakumar Yadav and excellent death bowling clinched a nerve-shredding seven-run victory in Barbados.

South Africa – playing in their first World Cup final in either T20 or 50-over cricket after winning a semi-final at the eighth attempt against Afghanistan – looked poised to reach their target of 177 when Heinrich Klaasen (52 off 27) took Axar Patel’s 15th over for 24, trimming the requirement to 30 from 30 balls.

However, Jasprit Bumrah (2-18) shipped only six runs combined from the 16th and 18th overs, while Klaasen snicked Hardik Pandya (3-20) behind in between and after the Proteas could muster only four runs off Arshdeep Singh’s 19th, the new ask became 16 off six.

Score summary – South Africa vs India

India 176-7 from 20 overs: Virat Kohli (76 off 59), Axar Patel (47 off 31), Shivam Dube (27 off 16); Keshav Maharaj (2-23), Anrich Nortje (2-26), Kagiso Rabada (1-36)

South Africa 169-8 from 20 overs: Heinrich Klaasen (52 off 27), Quinton de Kock (39 off 31), Tristan Stubbs (31 off 21); Hardik Pandya (3-20), Jasprit Bumrah (2-18), Arshdeep Singh (2-20)

David Miller (21 off 17) then thought he had crunched Hardik’s first-ball full toss for six, only for the twinkle-toed Suryakumar to pull off a spellbinding grab at long-off as he caught the ball, threw it back into play before his momentum took him over the rope, and then pouched it again when he returned to the field – it was a moment as breath-taking as it was important.

South Africa managed only eight further runs as they ended on 169-8 and India became the first team in the history of the Men’s T20 World Cup to go through a whole tournament unbeaten, dashing the Proteas’ hopes of claiming that achievement for themselves.

In the last over of the T20 World Cup final, India’s Suryakumar Yadav produced a stunning, juggling catch on the boundary to dismiss South Africa’s David Miller

India had last won a global ICC event at the 2013 Champions Trophy, with their previous World Cup success the 2011 50-over edition on home turf.

This T20 triumph for India comes seven months after they lost the 50-over World Cup final to Australia in Ahmedabad – their only defeat in that competition. History would not repeat itself.

Watch the moment India were crowned T20 World Cup champions after beating South Africa in Barbados.

Kohli back in the runs in thrilling World Cup final

Earlier, Player of the Match Virat Kohli (76 off 59 balls) – who has now confirmed his retirement from T20 internationals -ended a slump in form, which had seen him average less than 11 in the tournament with 75 runs in seven innings and a best of 37, by underpinning India’s total of 176-7 after his side had sunk to 34-3 inside five overs.

Rohit Sharma’s men were on the back foot as the skipper (9) and Rishabh Pant (0) both fell sweeping Keshav Maharaj in the second over, with their plight worsening when Suryakumar (3) holed out off Kagiso Rabada three overs later.

In his final T20 international before retiring from the format, Virat Kohli returned to form with 76 from 59 balls

But Kohli, who had struck three boundaries in Marco Jansen’s 15-run first over before reining himself in, found a fine ally in the enterprising Axar (47 off 31), with the latter dominating a fourth-wicket stand of 72 from 54 balls before he was brilliantly run out by Quinton de Kock.

Kohli also stitched a half-century alliance with Shivam Dube (27 off 16) as he notched a 38th T20 international fifty from 38 balls prior to being caught at deep midwicket off Jansen in the penultimate over.

India looted the highest score in a Men’s T20 World Cup final, eclipsing the 173-2 Australia posted against New Zealand in the 2021 final in the UAE, but Maharaj (2-23) and Anrich Nortje (2-26) limited their opponents to a gettable score.

Watch Quinton de Kock hit this huge six out of the Kensington Oval during the T20 World Cup final

It looked out of South Africa’s reach as the Proteas plummeted to 12-2 with Reeza Hendricks (4) bowled by a gorgeous out-swinger from Bumrah and captain Aiden Markram (4) edging Arshdeep behind on the drive.

De Kock (39 off 31) and Tristan Stubbs (31 off 21) rallied the first-time finalists with a quick-fire 58, with the sixes they smoked including one from De Kock off Kuldeep Yadav that went out the ground.

Stubbs was bowled around his legs by Axar but De Kock and Klaasen then added 36 off 23 deliveries and when De Kock was pouched at deep fine leg – straight after hitting a four in that area – Klaasen and Miller pounded boundaries, with Klaasen hammering three in a row off Axar to make South Africa favourites.

However, Bumrah’s frugal two-over spell, which also included castling Jansen, dragged India back into the game and his efforts came in a successful cause as Suryakumar’s scarcely believable catch went a long way to breaking South Africa’s hearts in Bridgetown.

South Africa captain Aiden Markram admit losing the T20 World Cup final to India in the last over will take some time to recover from

What’s next?

The next global event in men’s cricket is the 2025 Champions Trophy in Pakistan in February and March, at which the host nation will be joined by India, South Africa, England, Australia, New Zealand, Afghanistan and Bangladesh.

Another T20 World Cup will then be held in India and Bangladesh in early 2026.

Bangladesh will also host the 2024 Women’s T20 World Cup, with that competition beginning in Dhaka on Thursday October 3 and concluding in the same city on Sunday October 20.

The top two teams in each first-round group will qualify for the semi-finals.

Women’s T20 World Cup groups

  • Group A: Australia, India, New Zealand, Pakistan, Sri Lanka
  • Group B: South Africa, England, West Indies, Bangladesh, Scotland

Every match from the Women’s T20 World Cup will be live on Sky Sports, with England vs South Africa the opening game on Thursday October 3 (10am start UK and Ireland time).

India’s Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma retire from T20 international cricket after World Cup win over South Africa | Cricket News

India’s Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma retire from T20 international cricket after World Cup win over South Africa | Cricket News


Virat Kohli and Rohit Sharma have announced their retirement from international T20 cricket after India’s win over South Africa in the World Cup final in Barbados.

Kohli snapped a lean run of form in the tournament, which had seen him score just 75 runs in seven innings at an average below 11, by hitting 76 from 59 deliveries in his side’s total of 176-7.

After India limited South Africa to 169-8 in reply to win their second T20 World Cup and first since 2007, the 35-year-old confirmed in his Player of the Match interview that he was now quitting T20Is.

Captain Rohit, 37, then revealed in his post-match press conference that he was also retiring from the format after striking 4,231 runs in 159 matches with five tons and 32 half-centuries.

Kohli bows out from T20Is with 4,188 runs in 125 games at an average of 48.69, hitting 38 fifties and a sole hundred.

Kohli says it is time for India’s new generation to take the T20I team forward

‘It is time for the new generation to come through for India now’

He said: “This was my last T20 World Cup.

“It is time for the new generation to come through for India now. We have some amazing players coming through and they have to take this team forwards now.

“One day you feel like you can’t get a run but one day, things just click. I am so proud to get the runs for the team the day it mattered most.

“The occasion prompted that change for me. I felt like it was now or never.

Image:
Kohli’s innings underpinned India’s total of 176-7 against South Africa at Kensington Oval

“We have wanted to lift a trophy for a long time and the occasion made me put my head down, respect the situation and play the innings that the team needed from me.

“I wasn’t feeling myself before today. I wasn’t confident. So I am very grateful and humble right now. It has been difficult, so there are a lot of emotions.

“It hasn’t quite sunk in for me yet. It’s an amazing day, I am so thankful.”

Rohit Sharma (Getty)
Image:
Rohit Sharma captained India to their first T20 World Cup title since 2007

Rohit said: “This was my last game as well. There’s no better time to say goodbye to this format. I’ve loved every moment of this.

“I started my India career in T20 and this is what I wanted to do. I wanted to win the cup and say goodbye.”

Ad content | Stream Sky Sports on NOW

Stream Sky Sports live with no contract on a Month or Day membership on NOW. Instant access to live action from football, darts, cricket, F1, tennis, golf, rugby league, rugby union and more.

India vs South Africa: Captain Aiden Markram ‘gutted’ after Proteas fall agonisingly short of T20 crown | Cricket News

India vs South Africa: Captain Aiden Markram ‘gutted’ after Proteas fall agonisingly short of T20 crown | Cricket News


South Africa captain Aiden Markram said he was “gutted” after his sides heart-breaking defeat in the T20 World Cup final with Sky Sports Cricket pundit Eoin Morgan saying the Proteas “spectacularly fell apart”.

South Africa were favourites after Heinrich Klaasen (52) smashed 22 runs off the 15th over to slash their required total from 54 runs to 30 after muscling Axar Patel (1-49) for back-to-back sixes over long-on and hitting two boundaries either side of that over too.

However, superb death bowling from Hardik Pandya (3-20) and Jasprit Bumrah (2-18) removed the threat of Klaasen and Marco Jansen (2) respectively, with Suryakumar Yadav taking what commentator Ian Smith described on as “the greatest catch in cricket,” leading India to complete an epic win.

When Klaasen was dismissed in the 17th over, the camera panned to his skipper Markram crying in dugout. He knew with that wicket also fell much of South Africa’s hopes.

In the last over of the T20 World Cup final, India’s Suryakumar Yadav produced a stunning, juggling catch on the boundary to dismiss South Africa’s David Miller

“Obviously gutted for the time being, it will take us some time to have a reflection on the good campaign that we’ve had,” said Markram in the post-match interview.

“For the time being, like I’ve mentioned, it hurts quite a bit but having said that, I’m still incredibly proud of this group of players and everyone that’s involved in this team.

“We bowled well. I don’t think there was a lot to work with in the pitch so I thought they did well to restrict India to what we thought was a total we could chase.

“Thought we batted well and it came down to the wire. It was a really good game of cricket on all fronts. I’m really chuffed with the guys and incredibly proud of them.

“It did seem possible, we’ve seen with a lot of our games that it’s not over until it’s over. We never got comfortable and there was always that element of scoreboard pressure.”

South Africa captain Aiden Markram admitted losing the T20 World Cup final to India in the last over will take some time to recover from

South Africa reached the final with an unbeaten record throughout their campaign, winning over associate teams Nepal and USA, as well as Sri Lanka, Netherlands, Bangladesh, England, West Indies and Afghanistan.

Previously, South Africa had lost seven World Cup semi-finals across 20-over and 50-over cricket and overcame what seemed like an impossible hurdle in reaching the final.

“We got into a good position which proves that we’re worthy finalists,” Markram added.

“It’s gut-wrenching… the way this game went only adds to the emotions.

“I think one thing that is guaranteed about South Africans, wherever they are in the world, is that they are really competitive, respectful, and they go down with a fight. That’s something we pride ourselves on.

“Hopefully moving forward we can draw a lot from these things but it’s still a proud moment for us.”

Highlights of the 2024 Men’s T20 World Cup final as India fought back with the ball to beat South Africa by seven runs in a Barbados thriller

South Africa certainly did not go down without a fight.

Their bowlers exposed a nervy India side, reducing them to 34-3 within the powerplay after skipper Rohit Sharma won the toss and elected to bat.

Virat Kohli smashed a vital 76 in his final ever T20 World Cup to help India post 176-7, an above par score, and despite this South Africa still managed to get within touching distance of victory helped by Quinton de Kock (39), David Miller (21) and Klaasen.

“South Africa quite spectacularly fell apart,” said Sky Sports Cricket pundit Morgan.

“It wasn’t nice. You see the quality of the players they have in their line up with the likes of Quinton de Kock at the top of the order and Tristan Stubbs, it felt like the momentum was with South Africa today.

“They basically took the game to the brink of winning it and got so close, you’ve got to stick to the process for as long as possible and the process will take you to where you want to be. It’s incredibly disappointing for them.”

Image:
South Africa players after their loss against India in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup final at Kensington Oval in Bridgetown

With India’s T20 greats Kohli and Rohit bowing out after this campaign, as well as head coach Rahul Dravid, it felt like the stars had aligned for them to leave crowned as champions.

A 20-year-old Rohit Sharma was part of the India side that won the inaugural campaign in 2007.

Seventeen years later, he was able to lift the trophy once again.

This time as a captain, with his children celebrating alongside him, on his final day in international T20 cricket.

For South Africa, their silverware search continues. One that they hope is not too far away. As Ian Bishop said: “There is no doubt, Aiden, that your time will come in the future.”

Ad content | Stream Sky Sports on NOW

Stream Sky Sports live with no contract on a Month or Day membership on NOW. Instant access to live action from football, darts, cricket, F1, tennis, golf, rugby league, rugby union and more.

T20 World Cup final: Virat Kohli and Jasprit Bumrah step up in India’s time of need as title drought ends | Cricket News

T20 World Cup final: Virat Kohli and Jasprit Bumrah step up in India’s time of need as title drought ends | Cricket News


“He is probably saving himself for the final. We understand his class. We understand his importance in big games.”

It was almost as if Rohit Sharma knew what was coming.

The India captain was speaking after team-mate Virat Kohli fell for nine in the T20 World Cup semi-final against England in Guyana on Thursday, a dismissal that left one of the best batters on the planet with an alarmingly poor record in this year’s event.

In what his final T20 international before retiring from the format, Virat Kohli returned to form with 76 from 59 balls and helped India win the T20 World Cup

Kohli’s stats at that that point read 75 runs in seven innings at an average below 11. His best score was 37.

He had only made double figures twice. There were two ducks in there, one of them of the golden variety.

But fast forward two days and a man who previously couldn’t buy a run had racked up 76 of them in the final versus South Africa in Barbados, notching more in one knock than he had mustered in his previous seven combined, underlining his “importance in big games”.

Image:
Kohli was averaging less than 11 in the T20 World Cup but then played a decisive knock in the final

Rohit has got most things spot on as India captain and this was another example.

“No one was in doubt about Virat, he’s been on top of his game for the last 15 years,” said Sharma after a seven-run win clinched his side a second T20 World Cup title and a first slice of silverware in a global ICC event since the 2013 Champions Trophy.

India’s victory was largely crafted by Kohli, with the batter rallying his team from the parlous position of 34-3 in the fifth over as he parked the frenetic way he had batted throughout the tournament and reverted to the classy and composed method that had brought him over 4,000 runs in the format beforehand.

“We have wanted to lift a trophy for a long time and the occasion made me put my head down, respect the situation and play the innings the team needed from me,” Virat said afterwards, while accepting the Player of the Match award and announcing his immediate retirement from T20 internationals.

Kohli says it is time for India’s new generation to take the T20I team forward

But it was a victory largely executed by Jasprit Bumrah. If not for him, Kohli’s efforts may have come in a losing cause. If not for him, a South African – perhaps Heinrich Klaasen – may have bagged the Player of the Match accolade instead, shortly before going on to join his Proteas team-mates in lifting a World Cup for the first time.

Like Kohli, Bumrah underlined his importance in big games.

Bumrah brilliant as India fight back with the ball

After 15 overs of the chase, South Africa were favourites.

Klaasen had just donged India spinner Axar Patel for four boundaries in total, and three in a row, in a 24-run over. The ask was now a run-a-ball 30 from 30 with Klaasen on the cusp of fifty and fellow hard-hitter David Miller at the crease with him.

Surely this was where the Proteas broke their World Cup duck? No, it wasn’t, and it mainly wasn’t because of Bumrah, although his fellow death bowlers Arshdeep Singh and Hardik Pandya deserve kudos, too, as does fielder Suryakumar Yadav with his catch for the ages.

In the last over of the T20 World Cup final, India’s Suryakumar Yadav produced a stunning, juggling catch on the boundary to dismiss South Africa’s David Miller

Bumrah conceded only four runs in the 16th over but bettered that in the 18th when he shipped just the two runs and bowled Marco Jansen through the gate.

The India quick finished with figures of 2-18 from four overs, having castled South Africa opener Reeza Hendricks with a delicious out-swinger in the second over of the innings.

That eminently doable 30 off 30 was now 20 of 12. The game was slipping away from the Proteas and Arshdeep and Hardik, plus Suryakumar’s astonishing athleticism in the deep, ensured they could not retrieve the situation.

Jasprit Bumrah (Getty Images)
Image:
Jasprit Bumrah conceded only six runs combined across the 16th and 18th overs of South Africa’s run chase in Barbados

Score summary – South Africa vs India

India 176-7 from 20 overs: Virat Kohli (76 off 59), Axar Patel (47 off 31), Shivam Dube (27 off 16); Keshav Maharaj (2-23), Anrich Nortje (2-26)

South Africa 169-8 from 20 overs: Heinrich Klaasen (52 off 27), Quinton de Kock (39 off 31), Tristan Stubbs (31 off 21); Hardik Pandya (3-20), Jasprit Bumrah (2-18), Arshdeep Singh (2-20)

Heartbreak for South Africa again, albeit this time in a final as opposed to a semi-final – a stage they had never previously gone beyond after seven harrowing losses in the last four.

Aiden Markram’s side – who may take some time to get over this result – had the proverbial one hand on the trophy with some of their big players making telling contributions.

Klaasen’s 23-ball fifty. Quinton de Kock’s 39 off 31 balls at the top of the order. Keshav Maharaj’s wickets of Rohit and Rishabh Pant in the second over of India’s innings. Anrich Nortje’s tidy 2-26.

It’s just that India’s big players made the more telling contributions. Kohli the top-scorer, Bumrah the most economical bowler.

India skipper Rohit Sharma hit eight sixes during his swashbuckling 92 from 41 balls against Australia at the T20 World Cup

Rohit bows out after transforming India

But arguably the most telling contribution of all has been made by Rohit, who, like Kohli, has also revealed his T20I career is now done.

Perhaps not telling in the final, when he scored just nine before picking out Klaasen at square leg off Maharaj, although his decision to hand Bumrah the 16th and 18th overs later on as opposed to the seamer’s customary 17th and 19th may have been a masterstroke.

No, Rohit’s most telling contribution is transforming this team from the tentative one we saw plod along in the 2022 T20 World Cup semi-final against England in Adelaide to the front-foot outfit they now are. Sharma having embodied that with his 92 off 41 balls against Australia in this year’s Super 8s.

Watch India being crowned T20 World Cup champions after beating South Africa in Bridgetown

The irony is that it took Kohli shunning that approach and “putting his head down”, as he described it, to help India up to a winning score against South Africa. But that is possibly what he should always have done. Been the glue among the gung-ho gang.

Rohit and Kohli will now bow out from this format having underlined their importance in big games.

Opposition batters might secretly be wishing Bumrah would do the same but, at the tender age of 30, there appears zero chance of that. There will be plenty more big T20 games for him.

Ad content | Stream Sky Sports on NOW

Stream Sky Sports live with no contract on a Month or Day membership on NOW. Instant access to live action from football, darts, cricket, F1, tennis, golf, rugby league, rugby union and more.

India’s Virat Kohli retires from T20 international cricket after World Cup win over South Africa | Cricket News

India’s Virat Kohli retires from T20 international cricket after World Cup win over South Africa | Cricket News



Virat Kohli has announced his retirement from international T20 cricket after hitting a half-century in India’s win over South Africa in the World Cup final in Barbados.

Kohli snapped a lean run of form in the tournament, which had seen him score just 75 runs in seven innings at an average 11, by hitting 76 from 59 deliveries in his side’s total of 176-7.

After India limited South Africa to 169-8 in reply to win their second T20 World Cup and first since 2007, the 35-year-old confirmed in his Player of the Match interview that he was now quitting T20Is.

Kohli bows out from the format with 4,188 runs in 125 matches at an average of 48.69, with 38 fifties and one century – against Afghanistan in September 2022 – at a strike-rate of 137.04.

Kohli says it is time for India’s new generation to take the T20I team forward

He said: “This was my last T20 World Cup.

“It is time for the new generation to come through for India now. We have some amazing players coming through and they have to take this team forwards now.

“One day you feel like you can’t get a run but one day, things just click. I am so proud to get the runs for the team the day it mattered most.

“The occasion prompted that change for me. I felt like it was now or never.

Kohli says it is time for India’s new generation to take the T20I team forward

“We have wanted to lift a trophy for a long time and the occasion made me put my head down, respect the situation and play the innings that the team needed from me.

“I wasn’t feeling myself before today. I wasn’t confident. So I am very grateful and humble right now. It has been difficult, so there are a lot of emotions.

“It hasn’t quite sunk in for me yet. It’s an amazing day, I am so thankful.”

Ad content | Stream Sky Sports on NOW

Stream Sky Sports live with no contract on a Month or Day membership on NOW. Instant access to live action from football, darts, cricket, F1, tennis, golf, rugby league, rugby union and more.

India beat South Africa to win T20 World World Cup after Suryakumar Yadav’s stunning catch | Cricket News

India beat South Africa to win T20 World World Cup after Suryakumar Yadav’s stunning catch | Cricket News



India edged South Africa to win their second T20 World Cup title and first since 2007 as an astounding catch from Suryakumar Yadav and excellent death bowling clinched a seven-run win in Barbados.

South Africa – playing in their first World Cup final in either T20 or 50-over cricket after winning a semi-final at the eighth attempt against Afghanistan earlier this week – looked poised to reach their target of 177 when Heinrich Klaasen (52 off 27) took Axar Patel’s 15th over for 24, trimming the ask to 30 from 30 balls.

However, Bumrah conceded only six runs combined from the 16th and 18th overs, while Klaasen snicked Hardik Pandya behind in between and after the Proteas could muster only four runs off Arshdeep Singh’s 19th, the new requirement became 16 off six.

David Miller then thought he had crunched Hardik’s first-ball full toss for six, only for Suryakumar to pull off a spellbinding grab at long off as he caught the ball, threw it back into play before he tumbled over the rope, and then pouched it again when he returned to the field.

South Africa managed only eight further runs as they ended on 169-8 and India became the first team in the history of the Men’s T20 World Cup to go through a tournament unbeaten, dashing the Proteas’ hopes of claiming that achievement for themselves.

More to follow.

T20 World Cup final: Unbeaten sides India and South Africa collide in Barbados, live on Sky Sports | Cricket News

T20 World Cup final: Unbeaten sides India and South Africa collide in Barbados, live on Sky Sports | Cricket News


Ahead of Saturday’s Men’s T20 World Cup final between South Africa and India, Sky Sports pundits Nasser Hussain, Michael Atherton and Eoin Morgan assess where the match may be decided.

South Africa skittled Afghanistan for just 56 en route to a nine-wicket victory on a spicy track in Trinidad as they won a World Cup semi-final after seven failed attempts, while India thumped 2022 champions England by 68 runs on a slow surface in Guyana.

One of these teams will become the first to win the Men’s T20 World Cup having gone through the tournament unbeaten, so will it be a first World Cup success for South Africa or first since 2011 for India?

Highlights as India thrashed England by 68 runs in their T20 World Cup semi-final in Guyana

Watch how South Africa stormed into their first Men’s T20 World Cup final with a nine-wicket win over Afghanistan in Trinidad

Here is our pundits’ take ahead of the Barbados showdown, which you can watch on Sky Sports Cricket from 3pm (3.30pm first ball).

Is the pressure on India?

Sky Sports Cricket’s Nasser Hussain:

“You’d be a fool to say India beat England because of the conditions. They played on a bouncy pitch against Australia, who love those conditions, in St Lucia and won.

“Their batting line-up. Their pace attack. Their spinners. They have every base covered. And a slight advantage is that they have played a game here in Barbados and South Africa haven’t.

“South Africa have got that monkey off their back of seven semi-finals lost and if the pressure can be off, then it shifts to India.

India skipper Rohit Sharma hit eight sixes during his swashbuckling 92 from 41 balls against Australia in the Super 8s

“India have not won a title for a very long time. For all their resources and the players they have, they feel it is about time to win it and all of India will be expecting them to win it.

“As for South Africa, they made some difficult decisions, focusing on their franchise T20 competition and choosing not to send players to New Zealand for Test cricket.

“They took a gamble and copped a lot of stick for that [but it has paid off]. It would mean so much to South Africa but it means so much to India as well.”

Image:
Watch the Men’s T20 World Cup final between India and South Africa live on Sky Sports Cricket from 3pm on Saturday (3.30pm first ball)

‘Hopefully the pitch has pace’

Sky Sports Cricket’s Michael Atherton:

“The best two teams are in the final.

“On a slow, low holding pitch, India would be much stronger favourites, so I hope there is a pitch with pace. If it goes through, South Africa’s pace battery comes into it.

“It is a significant pace battery. We saw against Afghanistan that if there is a bit in the pitch, Kagiso Rabada, Anrich Nortje and Marco Jansen are dangerous.

Jasprit Bumrah, T20 World Cup cricket (Getty Images)
Image:
India fast bowler Jasprit Bumrah has taken 13 wickets in the T20 World Cup an an average of 8.15 and economy rate of 4.12

“However, Jasprit Bumrah has been the bowler of the tournament. He is not the leading wicket-taker but when he has ball in hand, he has been incredibly difficult to get away.

“As a chasing side, you almost fashion your chase around him. You can’t afford to get too far behind the rate for the 17th and 19th overs that he bowls.”

‘South Africa must go blow for blow with India’

Sky Sports Cricket’s Eoin Morgan:

“I think India, having been in finals before, are better equipped to apply pressure than South Africa and South Africa will have go blow for blow with the bat.

“If they don’t, India could bat them out of the game as they did to England in the semi-finals. Rohit Sharma embodies that shift in attacking mindset for India.

Reeza Hendricks hit the winning runs as South Africa beat Afghanistan in the semi-final in Tarouba

“India have had a short turnaround from playing in the second semi-final but they will be used to that from the IPL. You may play three games in five days and be dotted around all four corners of India.

“South Africa had quite a light workout against Afghanistan and should be fresher, but India will be immune to [the tiredness].”

Watch the T20 World Cup final between India and South Africa, at Kensington Oval in Bridgetown, Barbados, live on Sky Sports Cricket from 3pm on Saturday (3.30pm first ball).

Ad content | Stream Sky Sports on NOW

Stream Sky Sports live with no contract on a Month or Day membership on NOW. Instant access to live action from football, darts, cricket, F1, tennis, golf, rugby league, rugby union and more.

T20 World Cup: Should India’s Virat Kohli return to old approach for final after lack of runs? | Cricket News

T20 World Cup: Should India’s Virat Kohli return to old approach for final after lack of runs? | Cricket News


One India opener is in prime form ahead of Saturday’s T20 World Cup final against South Africa. The other very much isn’t.

While Rohit Sharma has struck 248 runs – 92 of them from 41 balls in a cavalier innings against Australia – at an average north of 40, Virat Kohli has mustered just 75 at an average south of 11.

Rohit has racked up three half-centuries in seven knocks. Kohli two ducks and just two double-figure scores in his seven.

The aggressive brand of cricket India have adopted since a meek T20 World Cup semi-final defeat to England in Adelaide in 2022 – a result they avenged in Guyana on Thursday to reach the 2024 final – has been instigated by Rohit and he is thriving while playing it.

Kohli not so much.

Kohli nicked off for a golden duck against USA in the first round of the T20 World Cup

Rohit was quick to praise Kohli’s “intent” after his run-a-ball nine against England – six runs of which came off one delivery when he launched Reece Topley over wide long-on.

Kohli may be following the team mantra, then, but is that to the detriment of his own game?

Take out that sublime six and Kohli’s innings was highly skittish.

He charged down the pitch to Topley second ball and swiped at fresh air. He was beaten by Jofra Archer’s fifth delivery attempting a booming drive outside off stump.

Image:
This year’s T20 World Cup has been a tough slog for Kohli

The ball before Kohli got out, he scuffed Topley into the off-side for two off a thick leading edge. The next delivery he was castled leg stump heaving across the line. Off he trotted. Frustrated. Angry.

This low knock followed a five-ball duck against Australia in which he perished looking to get off the mark with a boundary and was caught off Josh Hazlewood at deep midwicket.

“Surely he just has to bat normally? He is world class and has done it for a very long time,” said Sky Sports‘ Nasser Hussain following Kohli’s aforementioned wild waft against Archer.

“I couldn’t agree more,” added former India player and head coach Ravi Shastri. “Be the playmaker. Rohit is the one that will go after it.”

Kohli was out for a duck against Australia as he looked to get off the mark with a boundary

‘This is not Kohli’s game, he is going too early’

Kohli entered the tournament as the all-time leading run-scorer in men’s T20 international cricket – he has since slipped to third on that list, behind Rohit and Pakistan’s Babar Azam – with 37 fifties and one ton along the way, against Afghanistan in September 2022.

His old style appeared to work and Shastri wants him to revert to it, saying on Star Sports after his dismissal against England: “This is not his game. He is going too early for it, especially with Rohit playing aggressively at the other end.

“He can make up quite easily once he spends a little more time at the crease. He is more orthodox. When he tries to get out of his zone, he will get out in that fashion.”

Kohli holed out at long-off as he fell for 24 against Afghanistan

This debate is a familiar one for fans of English Test cricket, with Joe Root’s more aggressive streak under Bazball often called into question when he falls doing something funky, as he did in the Test series against India this winter when out on the reverse scoop.

Should one of your classiest players, with oodles of runs behind them over a number of years, be left to their own devices amid a dramatic shift in team mindset or tow the party line?

If Kohli adopted the “playmaker” role Shastri referenced earlier, then India have the hitting around him to compensate: Rohit up top, Rishabh Pant at No 3, Suryakumar Yadav, Hardik Pandya, Shivam Dube, Ravindra Jadeja and Axar Patel to follow.

Take a look back at Kohli’s batting masterclass against Pakistan at the MCG during the 2022 T20 World Cup

Rohit pinpointed the “intent” and that is the big play here – to put pressure on the opposition immediately, to not let the bowlers settle. Rohit executed that to perfection against Australia when he took the third over, bowled by Mitchell Starc, for 29.

He could, perhaps fairly, argue that Kohli’s 28-ball 37 against Bangladesh was crucial in that 50-run victory, too, with his opening partner’s early runs putting India on top before he was bowled.

Intent is great but results matter and Kohli has been short of those.

Kohli’s enterprising innings against Bangladesh ended when he was bowled by Tanzim Hasan.

His run-a-ball 24 against Afghanistan was the only other time he has passed nine. Blob against Australia. Blob against USA. Four against Pakistan. One against Ireland. Now nine against England.

India may not have needed peak Kohli to win eight from eight in this World Cup, such is their strength in depth in both batting and bowling, but they may do when they come up against fellow unbeaten outfit South Africa in Barbados.

“He is probably saving himself for [that game],” quipped Rohit as he gave Kohli a ringing endorsement after the win over England. “He is a quality player. Any player can go through [a lean patch].

India captain Rohit Sharma is backing Kohli to perform at his very best in the T20 World Cup final against South Africa

“When you have played for 15 years, form is never a problem. We understand his class. We understand his importance in big games.”

India have undoubtedly changed for the better but perhaps, in this big game, Kohli should change back to what has brought him so much success in the past. Be the playmaker. Bat normally.

Watch the T20 World Cup final between India and South Africa, at Kensington Oval in Bridgetown, Barbados, live on Sky Sports Cricket from 3pm on Saturday (3.30pm first ball).

Ad content | Stream Sky Sports on NOW

Stream Sky Sports live with no contract on a Month or Day membership on NOW. Instant access to live action from football, darts, cricket, F1, tennis, golf, rugby league, rugby union and more.

Jos Buttler: England captain reflects on T20 World Cup exit and promises review after India thrashing | Cricket News

Jos Buttler: England captain reflects on T20 World Cup exit and promises review after India thrashing | Cricket News



England captain Jos Buttler promised a thorough review will take place after his side’s up-and-down T20 World Cup that ended with a semi-final thrashing at the hands of India.

When England won the tournament in 2022 they blitzed the same opponents at the same stage by 10 wickets in Adelaide, but this time the boot was on the other foot.

Chasing 172 on a difficult batting pitch Buttler’s side were bundled out for 103, crashing to a 68-run loss to ensure they leave the Caribbean on the back of a bitter defeat.

Jos Buttler, Phil Salt and Jonny Bairstow were out in quick succession in England’s chase of 172 against India.

Their efforts in the tournament have at least been an improvement on their previous title defence, a miserable 50-over World Cup campaign last year that saw them rack up six defeats from nine games, but there are still questions to answer.

While England proved far too much for associate nations Oman, Namibia and the United States, they stacked up poorly against their more prestigious rivals, losing to Australia, South Africa and India over the course of the tournament.

Highlights of the T20 World Cup final semi-final between India and England in Guyana.

“We will review everything and come up with a plan, absolutely,” Buttler told reporters after his side’s World Cup exit.

“You have to review what we need to do better as a team, if that is the way we play, personnel, style of cricket.

“After a loss like that you are ready for a bit of space to take it in and process it so you can review not just this game but the last few months.

“I think there is lots of talent in the English game. It is up to us as an England team and country to harness that talent, develop and make sure we can continue to have a good team moving forward. There’s some time between today and the next matches so we’ll see what happens.”

England lose their eighth wicket to sum up their calamitous innings as miscommunication between Liam Livingstone and Jofra Archer results in a messy run out.

In the short term, Buttler will head back home to spend time with his family, particularly his newborn third child who arrived shortly before the tournament.

“To be honest, I’m just looking forward to some time away from the game,” he added.

“You can sit here and be emotional after a loss but I don’t need to dive too deep into it right now.

“I think reaching a semi-final is an achievement but we wanted to go all the way. That’s what we came here for. We played well enough to get to this stage but unfortunately we’ve fallen short.”

Watch the T20 World Cup final in Barbados from 3pm on Saturday (3.30pm first ball), live on Sky Sports Cricket.

England vs India: Jos Buttler’s side crash out in T20 World Cup semi-final after being skittled for 103 | Cricket News

England vs India: Jos Buttler’s side crash out in T20 World Cup semi-final after being skittled for 103 | Cricket News



India’s spinners crushed a woeful England side in the T20 World Cup semi-final as they secured a dominant 68-run victory at the Guyana National Stadium.

India will meet unbeaten side South Africa, who earlier thrashed Afghanistan for 56 all out, in the final in Barbados on Saturday (3pm), live on Sky Sports.

Rohit Sharma’s men posted 171-7 in a rain-interrupted innings after being asked to bat first, and then bowled England out for 103 with 20 balls to spare, with left-arm spinner Axar Patel (3-23) and wrist-spinner Kuldeep Yadav (3-19) doing the damage as the defending champions were unable to counter the attack.

England looked in trouble when they lost Jos Buttler (23) and Phil Salt (5) early on in the powerplay and were unable to recover during their innings, losing their final five wickets for only 35 runs against a rampant India side as they fell from 68-6 in the 11th over to 103 all out.

Earlier, Rohit Sharma (57) brought up his third half-century of the tournament and shared a 73-run partnership with Suryakumar Yadav (47) between the rain delays, to help their side post a strong total on a pitch with low bounce and high turn.

England’s Chris Jordan (2-27) took two wickets in two balls in the 18th over, removing Hardik Pandya (23) and Shivam Dube (0), while Adil Rashid, Reece Topley, Jofra Archer and Sam Curran all took one wicket each.

More to follow…

Watch the T20 World Cup final in Barbados from 3pm on Saturday (3.30pm first ball), live on Sky Sports Cricket.