Originally posted by: SoniRita
World Cup campaigns are rarely remembered for how neatly they unfold. They are remembered for whether teams find a way through when the stakes are highest. India have reached that point. The flaws that have surfaced over the last fortnight do not disappear overnight, but for one afternoon at Lord's, they may not need to.
The middle order still carries an unsettled look, one in three catches are being put down, and the pace attack has struggled to make early inroads. None of those concerns have vanished. Yet, if India can somehow stitch together one performance of note against Australia, the imperfections can wait. Survival, for now, is all that matters. The timing of the fixtures means there will be no ambiguity by the time they take the field. South Africa's result against Bangladesh earlier in the day will have already set the stage: India will either be playing with the comfort of qualification already secured or in a winner-takes-all contest. Nothing in between.
But it is true that India have stumbled and rumbled their way to London, having withstood surprises and secured victories in Birmingham, Leeds and Manchester over the past couple of weeks.
And they couldn't have chosen a tougher opposition for this do-or-die clash than an in-form Australian team. Ironically, despite being the most dominant team in the tournament so far and having rolled past each of their four opponents, Australia haven't secured qualification yet, mathematically speaking.
But to expect anything else would be too far a stretch of miracle. If South Africa beat Bangladesh by 167 runs after scoring 200 and Australia lose to India by 91 runs or with 11.5 overs to spare, Australia's NRR will fail to qualify. The exact qualification requirement will be known to both teams by toss time, and in all likelihood, Australia will have booked a place in the semis by then.
But, for now, they are breathing easy. They know India are under pressure, and wish to double down. India, on the other hand, aren't ready to be bullied by the Australian threat. Seen them, known them, beaten them. And as Smriti Mandhana claims on behalf of the batters, 'everyone is itching to go'.
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