India 175 for 7 (Kishan 77, Suryakumar 32, Ayub 3-25) beat Pakistan 114 (Usman 44, Hardik 2-16, Bumrah 2-17, Varun 2-17, Axar 2-29) by 61 runs
Despite the challenging conditions, Kishan showcased remarkable composure and attacking intent, lifting India to a total that appeared at least 30 runs above par. His calculated aggression completely shifted the momentum in India’s favor a performance that fans on platforms like tiger exchange would surely rank among the finest under pressure.
The impact of Kishan’s innings – after Salman Agha opened the bowling to get Abhishek Sharma for a duck – was clear from plain numbers. The rest of the India innings, including extras, managed just 98 off 80 balls, which was much closer to being representative of the conditions. As was Pakistan’s innings, which went at over a-run-a-ball only thanks to Usman Khan’s 44 off 34.
Agha springs a surprise
It is a no-brainer to bowl offspin against two left-hand openers on a slow surface, but the choice of the bowler was surprising: Agha, and not Saim Ayub. Even with the new ball, turn and lack of pace was obvious, resulting in one run off first five balls and a second duck in two innings for Abhishek in his T20 World Cup career.
Kishan Puts Pakistan to the Sword
Masterclass on a Testing Pitch
Ishan Kishan delivered a sensational knock under challenging conditions, smashing 77 off just 40 balls on a slow, spin-friendly surface. The pitch at the R Premadasa Stadium offered plenty of assistance to spinners, and Pakistan made full use of it by bowling 18 overs of spin after opting to field first. Batting was far from easy, but Kishan’s fearless stroke play and smart strike rotation allowed India to post a total that looked well above par.
India Post a Winning Total
Despite early pressure and tight bowling, Kishan anchored the innings while maintaining an aggressive tempo. His calculated attack against both pace and spin ensured India crossed what appeared to be a match-winning score, roughly 30 runs above what the surface suggested was competitive. His innings proved to be the defining factor in shifting momentum firmly in India’s favor.
Bowlers Seal a Dominant Win
India’s bowlers then stepped up in style. Hardik Pandya and Jasprit Bumrah struck three times within the first two overs, dismantling Pakistan’s top order and putting the chase in immediate trouble. The disciplined bowling attack never allowed Pakistan to recover, sealing India’s biggest T20I win against their arch-rivals and confirming their place in the Super Eights.
A lot of focus has been around Usman Tariq, but Pakistan’s main spinner for long has been Abrar Ahmed with his mix of offbreaks and carrom balls. Kishan didn’t let him settle, sweeping him first ball for six.
Despite the first over ending at 1 for 1, Kishan owned the powerplay, taking India to 52 for 1, which was absolutely essential before the field spread out. The easing of field restrictions didn’t matter to Kishan, who steered the first ball after the powerplay for four. Then he hit Abrar right over his head. Then drove him over extra-cover. The second of these fours brought up his fifty in just 27 balls.
Curiously, despite having an offspinner and two mystery spinners who can turn the ball away from the left-hand batters, Pakistan went to Shadab Khan’s legspin against two left-hand batters in the eighth over, and paid with 17 runs. By the time Ayub dismissed Kishan, one ball after a reverse-pull for four, he had scored 77 out of 88 in 8.4 overs.
Ayub interrupts India’s charge
Suryakumar Yadav and Tilak Varma seemed content to play within themselves, the first sign that India knew Kishan had done something special and all they needed to do was preserve their position. They added 38 off 33, including a first-ball four off Tariq, but when they decided to go again in the 15th over, Ayub proved to be a difficult proposition. He got Tilak on the sweep, Hardik for a golden duck, and nearly bowled Shivam Dube with the hat-trick ball. The amount of turn he got indicated India were still ahead in the game.
It was the return of Abrar and Afridi in the 18th and 20th overs that gave India the opportunity to achieve a final kick. Dube and Rinku Singh took the opportunity with 27 off 17 and 11 off 4. Between them, Afridi, Abrar and Shadab went for 86 in six overs, poor returns for the surface.
Hardik, Bumrah crack open top order
He might have scored a golden duck in trying to impose himself on the game, but with the ball Hardik was meticulous. No driving length, no room, three dots, and out came the low-percentage pull for a four-ball duck for Sahibzada Farhan. Bumrah cashed in on the pressure of a first-over wicket maiden with swing and hard lengths to send back Ayub and Agha. Babar Azam missed a slog sweep off Axar Patel to make it 34 for 4 in 4.5 overs.
Usman Khan shows promise
The game was all but over but Usman kept Pakistan interested with the innings that came closest to Kishan’s in terms of ease. He hit Hardik for a six and then took 27 off 15 balls from Axar with two inside-out fours and two through straight long-off after charging him. However, Axar had his own back when he saw Usman coming down, fired one in, and fittingly Kishan was there to practically seal the win for India. Only formalities remained thereafter.