ICC T20 World CUP: The Indian sensation Suryakumar Yadav has already had a year to remember, but Rohit Sharma, the team’s captain, thinks the best is yet to come. Little more than 18 months after making his international debut, the late-blooming Yadav has rapidly established himself as one of India’s important players by looking at ease on the greatest of stages. Follow IND vs ENG Semifinal LIVE & T20 World Cup 2022 LIVE updates with InsideSport.IN
- Suryakumar Yadav is India’s second-highest run-scorer in T20 World Cup 2022
- Suryakumar has a strike rate of 193.96 against England in T20Is
- India and England will face each other on Sunday, November 10 in Adelaide
That debut came in a T20I against England in March 2021 – the same opponents that India will face in an ICC Men’s T20 World Cup semi-final on Thursday. The 32-year-old has since surged to No.1 in the MRF Tyres ICC Men’s T20I batting rankings while becoming just the second batter to reach 1000 runs in the format in a calendar year, and will enter the semi-final in ominous form after smashing 61* from just 25 balls against Zimbabwe.
ICC T20 World CUP: Rohit Sharma reveals ‘SuryaKumar Yadav likes BIGGER GROUNDS, his best yet to come’: Follow IND ENG Semifinal LIVE
Yadav ended the Super 12 stage with 225 runs at a strike rate of 193.96 – a soaring rate boosted by frequently attacking bowlers from the start of each of his five innings at the T20 World Cup.
“He likes to bat in a similar fashion whether we were 10/2, or 100/2,” Rohit told reporters on Wednesday. “He likes to go out and express himself, and that’s probably the reason he was in the team in the last (T20) World Cup.
“Although we didn’t have a great World Cup, looking at what he’s done in the entire year from that World Cup onwards, as we say, the sky’s the limit for him.
“He’s shown great maturity, as well, has taken pressure from a lot of the guys the way he plays, and it rubs off on the others as well, when they bat around him.
“He understands he likes playing on the big ground. He hates playing on small grounds. “He doesn’t like the smaller boundaries, smaller grounds. He can’t see the gaps. I believe that he likes to see big gaps, and that’s where his strength is.”
Rohit said that his hand has “a little bruising, but it’s absolutely fine now” after copping a knock while batting in the nets on Tuesday and needing close attention before returning to face more balls.
But the India skipper was tight-lipped on whether Rishabh Pant might hold his spot in the India XI for the semi-final after the left-hander replaced veteran Dinesh Karthik for their final Super 12 match. Pant made three runs against Zimbabwe, while fellow keeper-batter Karthik has averaged 4.67 runs in three innings at the T20 World Cup.
“Rishabh was the only guy who didn’t get to play on this tour at all except the two games that we played in Perth. That was an unofficial practice game,” Rohit said. “We wanted to give him some time and have some options as well, if we want to make changes in the semis or the finals.
“It was a little tactical as well, considering we were not knowing which team we would be playing in the semis before that Zimbabwe game, so we wanted to just give a left-hander an opportunity to counter some of the spinners who bowled in the middle for New Zealand and England. What is going to happen tomorrow, I won’t be able to tell you right now, but both of the keepers will be in play for sure.”
Rohit leapt to the defence of spinner Axar Patel who has taken three wickets and has an economy rate of more than nine an over in four matches at the T20 World Cup. The left-arm spinner has been used sparingly, and only bowled one over when India played Bangladesh at the Adelaide Oval – the same venue for the winner-takes-all clash with England.
“Except that game against Netherlands, he’s not bowled full overs of his quota, only because of the conditions,” Rohit said. “We’ve got four seamers who have particularly bowled all of their quotas, which means the spinners will not bowl their overs.”
“If you look at the conditions, except Sydney, all the grounds we’ve played had a lot to offer to the seamers, which means we never got an opportunity to bowl Axar in the Powerplay, which is his specialty.
“(We) honestly have not looked too much into his bowling and gotten worried about his performance because we do understand his quality, and the series that we played before coming here he bowled exceptionally well.”
ICC T20 World CUP: Rohit Sharma reveals ‘SuryaKumar Yadav likes BIGGER GROUNDS, his best yet to come’: Follow IND ENG Semifinal LIVE
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