Spinners & Mitchell fashion first win on tour as New Zealand take 1-0 lead in T20I series
RANCHI: Mahendra Singh Dhoni was at the stadium here on Friday. One wishes the former India skipper – one of the finest cricketing brains and probably the best finisher in his prime – was on the field instead on a tricky, spin-friendly track at the JSCA International Cricket Stadium.
Skipper Hardik Pandya had said on the eve of the match that he had "squeezed a lot of knowledge out of him (MSD), there's not much left now", but there appeared to be moments in Friday's game when Pandya could have done with Dhoni's advice.
With his spinners (10-0-56-3) returning far better figures than the pacers (10-0-119-3) combined, Pandya paid the price for not completing Deepak Hooda's quota after the off-spinning allrounder gave only 14 runs from his two overs.
Left-arm seamer Arshdeep Singh's 27-run last over, with Daryl Mitchell swinging his bat around, and the skipper's 16-run 17th over proved too costly in the end as India succumbed to a 21-run defeat in the first T20I to hand the Kiwis a 1-0 lead in the three-match series, and their first win on this tour.
However, the captain is not the only one to blame as his batters, especially the top order, failed spectacularly, and the 177-run target proved a tall ask in the end.
India were down to 15/3 in 3. 1 overs. Suryakumar Yadav and Pandya arrested the slide and then tried to build a partnership, but SKY's untimely dismissal in the 12th over meant another setback. The pair's 68-run stand off 51 balls for the fourth wicket did raise the hopes of a jampacked stadium but Surya miscued a googly off Ish Sodhi to wide long-on to dampen the mood.
The captain departed next over, top-edging a straighter delivery from off-spinner Michael Bracewell. No. 6 Washington Sundar then waged a lone battle for a 28-ball 50 but that was not enough to see India home.
Earlier, the Kiwis started on the fast lane, racing to 37 for no loss in the first four overs. Then spinners Sundar, Hooda and Kuldeep Yadav did an excellent job in the middle overs to peg back the visitors, who were only 123/3 after the end of the 16th over.
But the two big overs in the end swung the deal. Half-centuries by opener Devon Conway (52 off 35 balls, 7x4, 2x6) and Daryl Mitchell (59*off 30b, 3x4, 5x6) were the highlights.