Focus on Jaiswal’s batting position as stronger India ready to make statement against Zimbabwe
The arrival of Jaiswal, Samson and Dube, who were part of the main team during the title-winning run last month, gives the Indian team a formidable look in the most important game of the series.
Published : Jul 09, 2024 12:49 IST , Harare - 3 MINS READ
India will find it tough to choose between Yashasvi Jaiswal’s seemingly effortless flamboyance and Abhishek Sharma’s uber-cool aggression at the top when it rejigs its combination to make space for World Cup-winning squad members in the third T20 International against Zimbabwe here on Wednesday.
The arrival of Jaiswal, Sanju Samson and Shivam Dube, who were part of the main team during the title-winning run last month, gives the Indian team a formidable look in the most important game of the series as visitors look to press home the advantage after the booster shot of a series-levelling 100-run victory in the second match.
Abhishek, the left-handed opener, did enough to live up to his pre-series hype with a 46-ball century in only his second game and did look the part opening the innings.
However, Jaiswal, with a handsome strike rate of 161 plus in 17 T20I matches, including a hundred and four half-centuries, does have the first claim to be skipper Shubman Gill’s opening partner by virtue of being the reserve opener of the first-choice T20I team.
Although rare but it is not uncommon for batters to be dropped in the very next match after a milestone innings.
Case in point was Manoj Tiwary, immediately after his maiden ODI hundred against the West Indies in 2011, and Karun Nair after his triple hundred in a Test match against England in 2016.
But it remains to be seen if Gill opts to have both Sharma and Jaiswal in the XI.
So, it could well be a case of one of the two southpaws batting at one drop. Sanju Samson, who normally bats at No. 3 for Rajasthan Royals, might come in at No.5, while Ruturaj Gaikwad, who batted at No.3, will probably drop down a place to No.4.
As far as the changes in the playing eleven are concerned, Jaiswal is likely to replace B Sai Sudharsan, who was selected only for the first two games.
READ | I batted with Gill’s bat as I often do in pressure games, says centurion Abhishek
Samson will come in place of Dhruv Jurel, who had a good outing behind the stumps.
Dube, the only player who was a part of the T20 World Cup playing XI, is likely to walk in to replace Riyan Parag. The imposing batter could be an even bigger nemesis for the Zimbabwean spinners during the back-10.
As far as Zimbabwe is concerned, its batting has left a lot to be desired with scores of 115 while batting first and 134 in the second essay chasing 235.
On the Harare Sports Club track where there is a bit of extra bounce available for the spinners, Ravi Bishnoi (6/24 from 8 overs) and Washington Sundar (3/39 in 8 overs) have proved to be unplayable at times.
Bishnoi, who normally bowls 20 to 22 googlies in his 24 balls per match, has varied his pace brilliantly and with home skipper Sikandar Raza being kept quiet, the other batters haven’t looked good enough to counter the Indian bowling attack.
The 13-run shock defeat in the opener was a timely wake-up call for the young visiting side and it did well to play without five specialist bowlers in the second game where batting first became an advantage.
For skipper Gill, a good score would be a necessity after two dry games. That could prove to be an ominous sign for the home team bowlers, who lack express pace.
In a nutshell, it could be another one-sided game.