Big Picture: Is the GOAT really the GOAT?
Call it beauty, call it cruel, but this is reality.
India was so good that they pivoted twice. First, they brought back Ishan Kishan from Shubman Gill just before the start of this tournament and then Sanju Samson during the tournament. And the pieces fell into place seamlessly.
But if they don’t win in Ahmedabad on Sunday, they won’t be considered the GOAT. We don’t make the rules. This is how cricket works. In cricket, anything involving two or more teams, even any “league”, is a mixture of a league and a knockout.
Doing so in the most volatile format of the sport, where establishing a link between process and result is most difficult, could end up having the implicit campaign that India had. They are so good that that’s all they have to lose in this tournament.
Kipling’s two hustlers are more different in India than in any other team. This is not to justify a lack of scientific temperament, but there was an element of obsessiveness about India’s journey through the T20 World Cup. There were regular temple visits, avoiding training during a lunar eclipse and possibly changing hotels for finals. There aren’t enough controllable things in this format, so it starts trying to control everything it can.
New Zealand will not make the mistakes England bowlers made against India in the semi-final. They will research every hitter and come up with a plan ready to execute. Now India may still be strong enough to beat them but they won’t be fed.
Sunday will be tactical and emotional, full of skill and luck. And by the end of the night, the two teams will have to make up with whatever cheater. That’s the reality of the game.
Form Instructions
India They won all their matches except the Super 8 match against South Africa, followed by convincing wins against Zimbabwe and the West Indies, and defeated England in a high-scoring thriller in the semi-finals.
New Zealand They barely made it to the semi-finals, losing comprehensively to South Africa in the first round and England in the Super Eight, but then defeated undefeated South Africa in the semi-finals.
Spotlight: Jasprit Bumrah and Daryl Mitchell
Team News: Questions for Varun and Neesham
India (Possibly): 1 Abhishek Sharma, 2 Sanju Samson (cap), 3 Ishan Kishan, 4 Tilak Varma, 5 Suryakumar Yadav (captain), 6 Hardik Pandya, 7 Shivam Dube, 8 Axar Patel, 9 Arshdeep Singh, 10 Jasprit Bumrah, 11 Varun Chakravarthy/Kuldeep Yadav/Mohammed Siraj.
New Zealand (Am): 1 Tim Seifert (Lt), 2 Finn Allen, 3 Rachin Ravindra, 4 Glenn Phillips, 5 Mark Chapman, 6 Daryl Mitchell, 7 Mitchell Santner (capt), 8 Cole McConchie, 9 Jimmy Neesham/Jacob Duffy, 10 Matt Henry, 11 Lockie Ferguson.
pitch and conditions
The middle pitch of the square has been earmarked for the final, just as it was for the IPL final last year but not for the 2023 ODI World Cup. As of 2024, this particular surface, a mixture of red and black dirt, has a 5-3 advantage for the chasing side. In last year’s IPL final, Royal Challengers Bengaluru succeeded in defending 190 runs. Before that, Punjab Kings were at the top of the batting average, but the gap was only 11 runs after 243 runs. Another successful defense was South Africa’s performance against Canada in this World Cup. South Africa’s easy chase against the West Indies on the same surface will tell you that the stadium is packed with runs despite it being an evening match. India have said they want to bat first in Mumbai anyway, but that may not be the case if they win the toss, even bearing in mind that they failed to chase down 188 against South Africa earlier in the tournament at the same ground in a different stadium.
Statistics and Trivia
- Since 2019, New Zealand has won 2-2 against India in the knockouts of ICC tournaments. They won the semi-finals of the 2019 ODI World Cup and the final of the 2021 World Test Championship, but lost the semi-finals of the 2023 ODI World Cup and the final of last year’s Champions Trophy. New Zealand was the winner of the 2000 Champions Trophy final held in Nairobi.
- India’s win over England in the semi-finals was the first time they successfully defended their total since 2014 in a T20 World Cup knockout match at night.
- New Zealand has never won a limited-overs World Cup in either format, losing the final as recently as 2019 (ODI) and 2021 (T20I).
- Rachin took 11 wickets in the tournament. Only Trent Boult has more than 13 caps at the World Cup in New Zealand.
- Varun has taken at least one wicket in the last 21 T20Is. Only Wanindu Hasaranga, Adil Rashid and Sandeep Lamichhane have had longer streaks.
quotes
“Sanju’s inclusion was important because in the last bilateral series before the T20 World Cup, we saw how helpful the top three of Abhishek, Sanju and Ishan Kishan were and when we included him. [in this World Cup]“Things suddenly changed.”
indian captain Suryakumar Yadav
“I don’t mind breaking a few hearts to lift the trophy once.”
new zealand captain Mitchell Santner
Sidharth Monga is a senior writer at ESPNcricinfo.
Source Link : https://www.espncricinfo.com/ci/content/story/1527206.html?ex_cid=OTC-RSS