India steamroll New Zealand to seal T20 series as depth and firepower send World Cup warning

India steamroll New Zealand to seal T20 series as depth and firepower send World Cup warning

What made this triumph particularly ominous for the rest of the world was how routine it looked. With the T20 World Cup looming at home, India dominated despite fielding players who are not guaranteed starters in their strongest XI, underlining the depth and flexibility at their disposal.

The contest was effectively shaped in the first half. New Zealand, asked to bat, were never allowed to settle as India's pace attack struck immediately. Harshit Rana removed Devon Conway yet again, continuing an extraordinary personal match-up, before Jasprit Bumrah produced a trademark opening spell that combined pace, accuracy and menace. His first-ball dismissal of Tim Seifert - the off stump flattened - was a reminder of why he remains the most feared fast bowler in the format.

Ravi Bishnoi, handed a role usually reserved for Varun Chakravarthy, was equally stifling in the powerplay, conceding almost nothing with his skiddy, awkward trajectory. At 34 for 2, New Zealand were already chasing the game. Glenn Phillips and Mark Chapman briefly steadied the innings with a 52-run stand, but once Bishnoi removed Chapman, wickets fell steadily as the visitors were forced into risk-taking.

Mitchell Santner's late 27 provided some respectability, but Bumrah returned to end the innings with figures of 3 for 17, restricting New Zealand to 153 - a total that felt light on a good batting surface.

Any lingering hope New Zealand carried was punctured almost immediately in the chase. Sanju Samson fell first ball, but what followed bordered on brutal. Ishan Kishan exploded from the outset, dismantling Matt Henry and setting the tone with a rapid 28 from 13 balls. At the other end, Abhishek Sharma took the attack to extraordinary levels.

Repeatedly targeted with leg-side lines, Abhishek simply charged the bowlers, created room, and sent the ball soaring over both sides of the field. His half-century came up in just 14 balls - the second-fastest by an Indian - and by the end of the powerplay India were 94 for 2, agonisingly close to their highest-ever six-over total.

If Abhishek supplied the chaos, Suryakumar Yadav supplied control. Batting with growing freedom as the field spread, the captain found his trademark touch on both sides of the wicket, unfurling flicks, ramps and drives with ease. His unbeaten 57 ensured there were no alarms, and India reached the target with a full ten overs to spare.

Related News

Kishan, Suryakumar star with the bat as India power past New Zealand in 2nd T20I

Kishan, Suryakumar star with the bat as India power past New Zealand in 2nd T20I

  • 2 days ago

India's explosive batting depth was on full display in Raipur as Ishan Kishan and captain Suryakumar Yadav dismantled New Zealand to secure a seven-wicket win in the second T20I and take a 2-0 lead in the five-match series.

New Zealand lose Adam Milne due to injury ahead of T20 World Cup

New Zealand lose Adam Milne due to injury ahead of T20 World Cup

  • 3 days ago

New Zealand fast bowler Adam Milne has been ruled out of the T20 World Cup after picking up a hamstring injury during his stint playing for Sunrisers Eastern Cape in SA20.

India draw first blood in five-match T20I series at home against New Zealand

India draw first blood in five-match T20I series at home against New Zealand

  • 4 days ago

India drew first blood in the five-match T20I series against New Zealand after a comfortable 48-run victory in Nagpur on Wednesday.

Daryl Mitchell: Cool to be part of a group of New Zealanders achieving history

Daryl Mitchell: Cool to be part of a group of New Zealanders achieving history

  • 7 days ago

Daryl Mitchell is basking in the glory of helping New Zealand make history with a first-ever ODI series victory in India.