How effective are India’s T20I all-rounders?
Shivam Dube’s half-century was a highlight at Thiruvananthapuram, but are India’s all-rounders good enough?
Shivam Dube’s half-century was a highlight at Thiruvananthapuram, but are India’s all-rounders good enough?
India will field a new-look side against Bangladesh in the T20 series, and some players will want to nail down their place.
India does not seem to know its best middle-order and support bowlers to Bumrah in T20s.
The new spin trio โ Ravindra Jadeja, Krunal Pandya and Sundar Washington โ havenโt been striking as often as Kuldeep Yadav and Yuzvendra Chahal, but thereโs definitely more control.
Krunal has played 14 T20Is for India and has been a part of every T20I India have played since his debut.
An exciting few matches await us this week with Australia, England, India and South Africa all taking the field.
Since his debut, Krunal Pandya is the only player among the top 10 T20I teams to make 100 or more runs and pick 10 or more wickets.
In a mean world of vicious hard-hitting batsmen, there came a point when it was believed the breed of spinners, especially the wrist-spinners, would go extinct. The logic was simple and subtle; T20 format had come into province and the batsmen had become risk-free. Hence that agitation of conceding more runs was obvious.