🏏ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026: Final IND vs NZ in Ahmedabad 🏏 - Page 3

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missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 21 hours ago
#21

One last push - After 54 matches spread across India and Sri Lanka, 18 teams have bowed out, and only two remain standing in the battle for ultimate glory in the 2026 ICC Men's T20 World Cup. All the work that has gone on over the past year, perhaps even longer, now comes down to this one night. In the blue corner stand India, the defending champions, while in the black corner are New Zealand, ready to throw their punches as two heavyweights go head to head at Ahmedabad's Narendra Modi Stadium.

History beckons for India - The Men in Blue are featuring in their fourth T20 World Cup final, more than any other team in the tournament's history. Suryakumar Yadav and Co. have the chance to create history on multiple fronts. No host nation has ever won the Men's T20 World Cup, no team has successfully defended the title, and no side has lifted the trophy three times. India have never beaten New Zealand in T20 World Cups in the three meetings between the two sides, and they will be eager to break that hoodoo on the biggest stage.

Kiwis chase a long-awaited crown - As for New Zealand, they are in their second T20 World Cup final and are chasing their first ICC men's white-ball title since the 2000 Champions Trophy. The White Ferns claimed their maiden T20 World Cup crown in 2024, and Mitchell Santner's men will be hoping to follow in their footsteps. If they do, New Zealand would hold both the men's and women's T20 World Cup titles at the same time.

India's road to the final - The reigning holders came into the tournament as the hot favourites. During the group stage, while they progressed unbeaten, they looked only a shadow of the side that had dominated in the lead-up to the World Cup. Then came the heavy defeat to South Africa that knocked them off their stride. India, however, regrouped well, fought their way into the semifinals, and then secured a hard-fought win in a high-scoring thriller against England.

Is everything hunky-dory now? Not quite. Abhishek Sharma's lean patch refuses to end, while Varun Chakaravarthy, who had been such a reliable option over the past year, has suddenly been taken apart in the last four games. Do India persist with Varun, or do they make the brave call of bringing Kuldeep Yadav into the side? Washington Sundar is also an option, but the chinaman bowler brings the X factor, and Kuldeep looks the likelier replacement should the home side opt for a change.

The numbers against New Zealand offer some context. Varun has 4 wickets in 4 T20Is against the Kiwis at an average of 32.75 and an economy of 8.18. Kuldeep, meanwhile, has played 8 games against them and picked up 9 wickets at an average of 21.22 and an economy of 7.64. If India do stick with Varun, he will welcome the larger dimensions of Ahmedabad after being severely punished in Kolkata and Mumbai, where the square boundaries were shorter.

Batting finds its rhythm - While Abhishek has struggled for runs, the rest of the Indian batting has clicked at the right time. Sanju Samson, in particular, has been a key figure in their turnaround with the bat over the last couple of matches, while contributions came across the board in the run-fest semifinal in Mumbai.

Pandya's rise, Bumrah's test - One of the major positives to emerge from that high-intensity semifinal against England, apart from their improved catching, was Hardik Pandya stepping up with the ball to support Jasprit Bumrah. Bumrah may have picked up 10 wickets at an astonishing economy rate of 6.62, but he does not have the best numbers against New Zealand. Of the 21 times he has gone wicketless in T20Is, four have come against the Kiwis, the joint-most along with Australia and Sri Lanka, and on a couple of those occasions, his economy has gone past 10.

missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 21 hours ago
#22

From the group of death to the final - New Zealand emerged from what many called the group of death, one that included South Africa, Afghanistan, the UAE and Canada. In the semifinal, they produced a statement win against South Africa, who had been the team to beat in the tournament. The Kiwis have also achieved some remarkable feats in India over the past couple of years. In 2024, they handed India their first-ever home Test whitewash, and earlier this year, they secured their first ODI series win on Indian soil. Now they stand on the verge of another historic moment.

The Bash Brothers effect - Much of their success at this World Cup has been built on the explosive opening combination of Tim Seifert and Finn Allen. The pair have put together 563 runs in the tournament, accounting for 47.87 per cent of New Zealand's total runs, and have done so at a remarkable strike rate of 180.44.

Ravindra's dual impact - At number three, Rachin Ravindra may not have had the impact with the bat that many expected, but he has more than made up for it with the ball. He has picked up 11 wickets, the most for New Zealand in the tournament, while maintaining an impressive economy rate of 6.88. With conditions in Ahmedabad unlikely to offer much assistance for spin, New Zealand will need Ravindra to contribute more with the bat. His record against India in this format, however, is modest, with just 88 runs in 6 innings.

A match-up to watch - Just as he did against South Africa by removing Quinton de Kock and Ryan Rickelton early, Cole McConchie could prove to be a key matchup against India's left-handers. His battle against Abhishek Sharma will be particularly interesting, especially given that the struggling Indian opener has been dismissed 3 times by off-spin in 7 innings.

missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 21 hours ago
#23

Form Guide (Last 5 completed T20Is, recent first)

IND - W W W L W

NZ - W L W W L.

Tanya03Forums thumbnail
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India

Posted: 21 hours ago
#24

I heard India has never won a match against New Zealand In T20 WC
Aaj ye record bhi toot jaye hopefully

Edited by Tanya03Forums - 21 hours ago
missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 21 hours ago
#25

Need for an extra pacer? It might be something worth considering for both camps. At Ahmedabad in this World Cup, pacers have had far greater success than spinners. Fast bowlers have picked up 52 wickets at an average of 26.05 and an economy of 8.92, while spinners have managed only 21 wickets at an average of 35.57 and an economy of 9.33.

South Africa perhaps illustrated this trend better than anyone else, having played more games in Ahmedabad than any other side. In their five matches at the venue, their seamers accounted for 32 wickets, compared to just 7 for the spinners. India could therefore consider bringing Mohammed Siraj into the equation, while New Zealand may have a decision to make between Jacob Duffy and Kyle Jamieson, depending on how they want to structure their pace attack.

The case for batting first - Scoring trends also offer some insight. The average first innings score in the four night games played in Ahmedabad during this World Cup is 192, with three of those matches won by the team batting first. That pattern aligns with what was seen in the 2025 IPL as well, where 6 of the 7 night games at the venue were won by the side that set the target.

A tale of two approaches - 6 of India's 7 wins in the tournament have come while batting first. New Zealand, meanwhile, have been more comfortable chasing, with 4 of their 5 victories coming while pursuing a target. Under the lights in Ahmedabad, one team will script history while the other will be left wondering what might have been. All that remains now is for these two giants to step into the ring and deliver the final act of this World Cup.

missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 21 hours ago
#26

Originally posted by: Tanya03Forums

I heard India has never won a match against New Zealand In T20 WC
Aaj ye record bhi toot jaye hopefully

Yep! India has never won a final against Kiwis. If they win today, it'll not only break the jinx that Ahmedabad stadium seems to have got, it'll also break this record of Kiwis always winning against us when it matters!

Kiwis ki ghamand ko tutna hai aaj smiley36

Edited by missFiesty_69 - 21 hours ago
Tanya03Forums thumbnail
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India

Posted: 21 hours ago
#27

Originally posted by: missFiesty_69

Yep! India has never won a final against Kiwis. If they win today, it'll not only break the jinx that Ahmedabad stadium seems to have got, it'll also break this record of Kiwis always winning against us when it matters!

Kiwis ki ghamand ko tutna hai aaj smiley36


Hopefully aisa hi ho
A_Star39 thumbnail
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India

Posted: 21 hours ago
#28

Originally posted by: missFiesty_69

Yep! India has never won a final against Kiwis. If they win today, it'll not only break the jinx that Ahmedabad stadium seems to have got, it'll also break this record of Kiwis always winning against us when it matters!

Kiwis ki ghamand ko tutna hai aaj smiley36

I hope all weak points in team turn out to be strong and defeat kiwis

The kiwi captain is really determined to break a few hearts to win the cup.

I hope sky stops chewing the gum

missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 21 hours ago
#29

Big-match boss: Hardik Pandya is India's everywhere allrounder

He bowls in the powerplay and death, he finishes with the bat, and in the field India place him at hotspots during the high-pressure moments

He bowled the final over at the Chinnaswamy a decade ago. He bowled the final over at Kensington Oval two years ago. He bowled the 19th over on Thursday night at the Wankhede.

If India are bowling second in a T20 World Cup match of immense significance and the contest goes right down to the wire, Hardik Pandya is usually in the middle of it, ball in hand, typically bowling right after Jasprit Bumrah has finished his final over. Typically, Bumrah has bowled an incredible over that everyone will talk about for days afterwards, the pivotal over that has tilted the match India's way.

Typically, Hardik finishes the job. What he does is harder to pin down than what Bumrah does, because Hardik doesn't have Bumrah's freakish skillset or laser precision. He bowls a decent yorker and an extremely effective into-the-pitch cutter when the conditions offer grip, but you wouldn't count him among the best in the world at executing any one particular skill.

And sometimes, it feels like Hardik simply runs in and lets destiny do its thing. He was the bowler when Bangladesh imploded with one to get off three balls. He was the bowler when Suryakumar Yadav caught David Miller so close to the boundary cushions that conspiracy theorists still believe he stepped on them. And on Thursday, he was the bowler when Sam Curran picked out Tilak Varma at the midwicket boundary when England needed 32 off 10 balls. A couple of yards either side of the fielder…

In terms of skill, Hardik isn't a gun death bowler like Bumrah or Arshdeep Singh. But he's one of only 29 bowlers to have bowled at least 100 balls in the death overs (17-20) in T20 World Cups. And of those 29 bowlers, only eight have better economy rates than his 8.23.

Here's an incomplete list of the bowlers among those 29 with worse economy rates than Hardik's: Pat Cummins (8.24), Arshdeep (8.30), Sam Curran (8.29), Mohammad Amir (8.34), Lasith Malinga (8.57), Kagiso Rabada (8.88), Andre Russell (9.55), Shaheen Shah Afridi (9.65), Dwayne Bravo (9.81), Mitchell Starc (11.2).

And of the 29 bowlers to have sent down 100 balls in the death overs in T20 World Cups, Hardik is the only one to have also faced 100 balls in that phase as a batter. No one, in fact, has scored more runs than him (307) in that phase. And of the 13 batters with 100-plus runs, only two, Virat Kohli (197.50) and Michael Hussey (196.42) have better strike rates than Hardik's 193.08. Those two, unlike Hardik, are top-order batters who are typically well-set when the death overs begin.

Hardik, typically, has only just come to the crease at that point. As he had on Thursday, when he got off the mark off his third ball with a nonchalant, minimalist ramp to the fine third boundary off Jamie Overton. He proceeded to score 27 off 12, the last in a chain of frenetic, no-let-up innings from India's batters that took their total past 250.

This innings and the 19th over he bowled would have sufficed to add up to an outstanding day on the field, but they may not even have been his best or most impactful contributions on the night.

Hardik Pandya belted a few hits in the end, India vs Netherlands, T20 World Cup, Ahmedabad, February 18, 2026

Hardik Pandya is the only player to have bowled and batted at least 100 balls at the death in T20 World Cups.

That, instead, may have been the first over he bowled, the second of England's innings, in which he took out Phil Salt with a perfectly pitched outswinger - full, but not a half-volley - before bowling four successive dots (one yielding a leg-bye) to Jos Buttler, swinging the ball both ways without ever being floaty. He was, in fact, swinging the ball while landing on the shorter side of a good length.

There aren't that many specialist new-ball bowlers who can do this, and Hardik isn't even renowned for new-ball bowling. He bowls in that phase because it allows India to hold Bumrah back for later, but he wouldn't be doing that job if he didn't have the skills for it.

Hardik isn't widely renowned for his fielding either, but there's a reason why India always station him in the hotspots. There aren't too many others they would have wanted at long-off when Jacob Bethell drilled the first ball of the final over in that direction; Hardik moved swiftly to his left, his wrong side, picked the ball up while barely breaking stride, and swung around smoothly to throw to the far end, knowing England's danger man would make a desperate dash to keep the strike.

He had already won India the semi-final with the bat and with the ball at both ends of the innings. He had won it again with one final act in the field.

List all the ingredients you think you need if you're building a seam-bowling white-ball allrounder in a lab. India have had the flesh-and-blood version for a decade.


Basically they use Hardik like pickle -- jahan zaroorat padti hai wahan use karte hai. To his credit, he has done a decent job too!


missFiesty_69 thumbnail
Posted: 21 hours ago
#30

Originally posted by: A_Star39

I hope all weak points in team turn out to be strong and defeat kiwis

The kiwi captain is really determined to break a few hearts to win the cup.

I hope sky stops chewing the gum

fingers crossed!

@bold : kyun smiley37

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