Tag: Hardik Pandya

  • Ishan Kishan fires warning as India brace for Usman Tariq threat vs Pakistan: ‘Preparation done, just watch the ball and play’ | Cricket News – The Times of India

    Ishan Kishan fires warning as India brace for Usman Tariq threat vs Pakistan: ‘Preparation done, just watch the ball and play’ | Cricket News – The Times of India

    ‘Preparation done, just watch the ball and play’: Ishan Kishan fires warning as India brace for Usman Tariq threat vs Pakistan
    Ishan Kishan (Pic credit: BCCI)

    NEW DELHI: India’s preparations for the high-voltage T20 World Cup clash against Pakistan have taken a clear tactical direction, with wicketkeeper-batter Ishan Kishan insisting that the team is already equipped to tackle the unique challenge posed by spinner Usman Tariq. Fresh off a commanding win over Namibia, Kishan revealed that facing Namibia skipper Gerhard Erasmus — who also bowls with a sidearm action — offered valuable rehearsal ahead of the much-anticipated showdown.Go Beyond The Boundary with our YouTube channel. SUBSCRIBE NOW!Kishan’s explosive 24-ball 61 laid the foundation for India’s imposing 209/9, ensuring momentum even during a middle-overs slowdown. Speaking after the match, the left-hander emphasised that India’s batters have already completed their homework against Tariq’s unconventional action.

    T20 World Cup | Tilak Varma provides update on Abhishek’s fitness, mindset during rehab

    “No, I think we have already done the preparation part, and now it is just time to watch the ball and play our natural game,” he said, underlining the team’s belief in sticking to basics despite the hype around the Pakistani spinner.According to Kishan, video analysis and on-field exposure to Erasmus’ bowling proved crucial. “At this level, we just watch a few videos, and we get an idea of what kind of bowling is going to happen. So we are just keeping it simple. Yeah, he [Erasmus] bowled pretty well today, and I think there was quite a bit of learning for us,” he added, suggesting that India’s approach will revolve around clarity rather than overthinking.

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    Reflecting on the Namibia clash, Kishan explained that although the surface looked flat, the ball initially held up, forcing him and Sanju Samson to pick their moments carefully. The attacking opener’s knock, combined with Hardik Pandya’s blazing fifty, powered India to a total that proved far beyond Namibia’s reach as spinners later dismantled the chase.Kishan also spoke candidly about his personal evolution after leading Jharkhand to a maiden Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy triumph. “I think I am a changed man now… earlier I used to joke around 24×7, but now it is just two-three hours. I am focusing more on batting and my wicket-keeping,” he admitted, highlighting a more disciplined mindset.Looking ahead to the Pakistan encounter, Kishan acknowledged the magnitude of the occasion but stressed that preparation remains process-driven. “Pakistan clash, obviously, it would be a special one for everyone… once we get there, we look at the wicket and just play accordingly,” he said.

  • T20 World Cup 2026: India register convincing wins against USA, Namibia but expose a few cracks | Cricket News – The Times of India

    T20 World Cup 2026: India register convincing wins against USA, Namibia but expose a few cracks | Cricket News – The Times of India

    T20 World Cup 2026: India register convincing wins against USA, Namibia but expose a few cracks
    India’s Axar Patel is bowled out by Namibia’s captain Gerhard Erasmus during the T20 World Cup cricket match between India and Namibia in New Delhi. (AP)

    New Delhi: 45/1 to 77/6 against the USA. 205/4 to 209/9 against Namibia.India won their first two T20 World Cup contests rather convincingly but two batting collapses, occurring at different junctures of the game, should serve as a wake-up call for the batters ahead of the game against Pakistan on February 15 in Colombo.

    T20 World Cup | Ishan Kishan press conference: On fifty vs Namibia, India’s batting collapses

    In both matches, the word from the Indian camp remained constant. They expected the wicket to be flatter and behave a certain way but the sluggishness in Mumbai and the odd low bounce in Delhi caught them off guard. Colombo is expected to be no different and will require a lot of adaptation and unlearning for a destructive batting unit which has feasted on batting paradises in the bilateral fixtures which preceded the multi-nation tournament.The sample size isn’t that big but both Shadley van Schalkwyk and Gerhard Erasmus have provided a blueprint to the remaining teams. If you must stop this marauding Indian unit, be tactically smart: mix up your approach and have different plans ready. This Indian XI boasts of as many as five, even six when Abhishek Sharma played the first game, left-handers in the top-eight but they are all different. What works for Ishan Kishan may not work for Abhishek and a similar plan will not get the job done for the likes of Tilak Varma, Shivam Dube, Rinku Singh and Axar Patel. From their approach to hitting arcs to technicalities, there is very little similarity, which makes it all the more important to have clear and precise plans for each one.

    India v USA:  ICC Men´s T20 World Cup India & Sri Lanka 2026

    Shadley van Schalkwyk celebrates a wicket during the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup match between India and USA at the Wankhede Stadium. (Getty Images)

    Schalkwyk mixed up his bumpers based on advice from his USA teammates and Erasmus was very smart in using angles, different release points and the crease. The delivery which got Tilak Varma took forever to reach the India batter because the bowler released it from far behind the crease. Even the step-out didn’t achieve the desired connection. Namibia coach Craig Williams praised his skipper, lauding his ability to deliver the toughest overs of an innings.“He trains incredibly hard at all these variations, and I think – he plays cricket around the world in some leagues and bowls all the difficult overs, he bowls some really tough overs. And, he’s continuously working on his game and trying to see how he can be more effective against batters. And I think tonight, again, against a world-class cricket team, he showed the world again what he’s got and his execution was just really good tonight. “I think his first three overs went for 16 or something and then to bowl that 19th over as all under pressure – first ball going for six and then pulling it back, I think it was just really fantastic so I’m really happy for him he trains hard and he works hard at these variations in his game,” said Williams at the post-match press conference.

    Gerhard Erasmus (1)

    Namibia’s Gerhard Erasmus troubled India’s batting in the T20 World Cup. (Agencies)

    Erasmus certainly came prepared. While the occasional sling in the action can disrupt a batter’s concentration, Ishan felt it only takes a couple of balls to get used to it and clear it from one’s mind. Does it affect the plans to go big? Not really!“It might play in your head for a couple of balls, but I think at this level you need to have trust on your own strength as well. Even if he is trying to do something, we can go for sixes or boundaries at the same time. So important thing is how we are thinking at that point of time when the bowler is trying to do something different. But if we are just looking for boundaries and sixes and we are believing in our own strength I think that helps the batters more so we are just doing trying to keep it simple yeah some batters might score on, some batters won’t but it’s part of game and you keep on learning game by game,” said Kishan.India were set for another big total vs Namibia but ran out of steam in the last two overs, losing five wickets and added just four runs off the ten deliveries they faced. The set pair of Hardik Pandya and Shivam Dube departed off consecutive balls, Axar Patel didn’t score, and the ending starkly contrasted the explosive start Ishan and Sanju Samson provided. Ishan echoed the team’s sentiment on the pitch but felt the unit fared well with the bat and appreciated the opposition for executing their plans under pressure. The wicketkeeper-batter expects his side to take learnings from this fixture into the remaining games of the tournament.

    Ishan Kishan

    Ishan Kishan smashed a 24-ball 61 against Namibia in the T20 World Cup. (Pic credit: BCCI)

    “I think they batted pretty well. In both the wickets, I feel it was a bit different from what we expected to happen. And today, looking at the death overs, when we were not able to regularly hit big sixes, I think we need to also give credit to Namibia bowlers because they were bang on with their yorkers, they were bang on with their slow ones. “So yeah it was a good learning maybe if some other team is doing the same thing maybe we can use the crease more or we can do something different which can irritate the bowler. So it was a good learning in this game and especially I think It was not about our batters not able to hit sixes, but it was more of them bowling very well in the death overs,” explained Ishan.The USA had India on the mat, Namibia had their moments and an immediate course correction with the bat is needed to cover all bases against a spin-heavy Pakistan, who have already experienced the Colombo strip. The Suryakumar Yadav-led unit has bludgeoned attacks in the build-up to the World Cup but what worked yesterday may not work today and tomorrow is always a dive into the unknown. The muscle memory of tonking bowlers on flat pitches will need a quick unlearn as Colombo, and remainder of the tournament, may not follow the script everyone is so used to seeing played on loop.India’s remaining opponents would surely have noted the cracks that both the USA and Namibia exposed.