Close Menu
WTX News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Kate Garraway trapped outside home by unreal 12-tonne delivery
    • Four people injured in shooting at Birmingham nightclub
    • Not all boxes ticked but India get what they want from Oman contest
    • McLaren damage leads Ferrari 1-2 in Azerbaijan GP practice
    • Jonathan Pie: British satirist’s free speech warning to UK after Jimmy Kimmel show taken off air
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
    WTX News
    • Live News
      • US News
      • EU News
      • UK News
      • Politics
      • COVID-19
      • Business
      • Tech zone
    • World news
      • Middle East News
        • UAE News
        • Palestine News
      • Europe
        • Italian News
        • Spanish News
      • Africa news
      • South America
      • North America
      • Asia
    • News Briefings
      • UK News Briefing
      • World News Briefing
      • Live Business News
    • Sports
      • Football News
      • Tennis
      • Women’s Football
    • MY World
      • Climate Change
      • In Review
      • Expose
      • Special Reports
        • Conscience Convoy
        • Rohingya Report
    • Entertainment
      • Insta Talk
      • Royal Family
      • Gaming News
      • TV Shows
      • Streaming
    • Lifestyle
      • Fitness
      • Fashion
      • Cooking recipes
      • Luxury
      • Money Saving Expert
    • Travel
      • Culture
      • Holidays
    • Sign Up
      • Log In
    WTX News
    • Live News
    • World news
    • News Briefings
    • Sports
    • MY World
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Sign Up
    Home - Cricket - Not all boxes ticked but India get what they want from Oman contest
    Cricket

    Not all boxes ticked but India get what they want from Oman contest

    By WTX Sports Team6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Telegram WhatsApp
    Not all boxes ticked but India get what they want from Oman contest

    Cliff Notes – Not all boxes ticked but India get what they want from Oman contest

    • Hardik Pandya’s spectacular catch highlighted the effectiveness of innovative fielding drills, showcasing India’s preparation ahead of the Super Four stage.
    • The match provided valuable batting time for India’s middle-order, with players like Sanju Samson and Tilak Varma gaining crucial experience despite mixed performances.
    • Oman’s competitive display injected excitement into the tournament, offering India a challenging scenario before their upcoming clash with Pakistan.

    Not all boxes ticked, but India get what they want from Oman contest

    As Hardik Pandya stopped himself a quarter of an inch before the advertising triangles at fine leg to complete a stunning catch to dismiss Oman’s Aamir Kaleem, fielding coach T Dilip was full of fist-pumping joy in the dugout.

    He had followed the trajectory of the ball like a hawk, silently hoping that hours of the innovative catching drills that had challenged fielders to be goalkeepers (even Superman at times), would lead to a something spectacular. Sat next to him, the usually stoic Gautam Gambhir had been frantically chewing his nails until then. The first two balls of the 18th over, bowled by Harshit Rana, had been picked away for boundaries, and the equation was down from 48 off 18 balls to 40 off 16.

    Even then, you felt this was India’s match to lose. But with their least experienced bowler pitted against a 43-year-old journeyman cricketer revelling in the spotlight, the coaches’ restlessness spoke of the tension that had been bubbling. Oman eventually finished 21 short, but the contest offered India more than just a ‘W’ and two points.

    Editor’s Picks

    2 Related

    For the first time in three games, India had the luxury of batting 20 overs, on a sluggish surface with ground dimensions far bigger than in Dubai, where they will play out the rest of their Asia Cup campaign.

    It also stretched them on the field, with Suryakumar Yadav employing as many as eight bowling options – although he wouldn’t have imagined having to make up for Axar Patel’s overs at any point: Axar bowled just one over and was off the field for the last five-and-a-bit overs after hitting his head on the turf while attempting a catch.

    That they were able to get such a workout in a setting where the focus was, for a change, entirely on the cricket, helped tick a few boxes. If a workout before the Super Four is what they had hoped for, they certainly got it.

    India’s middle-order batters, who had twiddled their thumbs in the first two games because they had polished off their chases of 58 and 128 in a combined 20.2 overs for a combined loss of four wickets, got a decent hit, even though none of them could set the stage alight.

    play

    3:04

    What are the challenges of India’s fluid batting order?

    Abhinav Mukund and Wasim Jaffer on what flexible batting positions really entail

    Every batter, barring Suryakumar who delayed his entry until the overs ran out, got time in the middle.

    Suryakumar didn’t bat because Arshdeep Singh, padded up and itching for a hit, leaned in to his captain and declared he was going next when the seventh wicket fell. And then Kuldeep Yadav went in. India finished eight down and Suryakumar had a “DNB” against his name. He revealed with his trademark humour later that it wasn’t a request from Arshdeep but an instruction, one that had the potential to be viewed under a microscope had India been upset. Luckily, though, they were saved that.

    The only aspect India didn’t experiment with in the batting was their locked-in opening pair of Shubman Gill and Abhishek Sharma. This is in line with what they have emphasised through the tournament: the need for the rest of the batters, from No. 3-8, to be flexible, while the openers remain set.

    For once, though, India deviated from their set left-right policy. This gave Sanju Samson an opportunity at No. 3 after Gill was out early. Samson was scratchy at best, but batted long enough to carve out a half-century.

    Tilak Varma played a number of adventurous shots AFP/Getty Images

    He was helped to a large extent by Abhishek, whose great strength has been to keep bowlers second guessing. When he advances to fast-bowlers, he has an array of options. Like the slice over point, the lofted hit over the covers, or the swat over mid-on – shots he exhibited to similar deliveries off Mohammed Nadeem in the fifth over.

    This helped Samson ease in after he had struggled for any kind of fluency, pottering to 1 off 7 before finally breaking the shackles when he received a leg-stump half-volley that he flicked for six. That should have flicked a switch, but it didn’t, underpinning the fact that nothing matches time in the middle, even if you look a million dollars in the nets.

    Tilak Varma showed he can adapt lower down the order if required, hitting 29 off 18 balls. Axar flexed his batting muscle against spin, even as Hardik and Shivam Dube missed out. Hardik was the unluckier of the two, as he was run out to a deflection off the bowler’s hand at the non-striker’s end.

    Then with the ball, Arshdeep bent the new ball and got it to hold its line, but Harshit was erratic. Kuldeep was his usual self – befuddling batters even as two other wreckers-in-chief, Jasprit Bumrah and Varun Chakravarthy, ran drinks.

    play

    2:20

    Mukund on Abhishek’s 15-ball 38: This is how he should always bat

    Abhinav Mukund and Wasim Jaffer discuss yet another high-flying start from Abhishek Sharma

    But the revealing aspect of India’s workout was giving the new ball to Hardik despite having two frontline pacers – perhaps a sign that, like with the batting, they were focused on continuity looking at the bigger picture.

    The match itself was one of those exercises where India’s follies were looked at indulgently, until it got too close for comfort.

    In the Asia Cup circles around the UAE, the running joke ahead of Friday’s game was whether India’s commute from their Dubai hotel to the Zayed cricket Stadium in Abu Dhabi would end up lasting longer than the match itself. The India vs UAE game had wrapped up in barely two hours, and a repeat was anticipated had Oman batted first.

    But in pushing India right till the end, Oman not only enhanced their own credentials, but also injected some interest into a tournament that had been drifting from one controversy to another while seeing more than its fair share of one-sided contests.

    For India, it was the closest thing to a dress rehearsal before the Super Four: it was imperfect in parts, yet valuable in every way ahead of round two against Pakistan on Sunday.

    Sports featured
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram WhatsApp
    Previous ArticleMcLaren damage leads Ferrari 1-2 in Azerbaijan GP practice
    Next Article Four people injured in shooting at Birmingham nightclub
    WTX Sports Team

    The Sports Team is responsible for delivering your Sports Brief. Weekly roundup to cover all things Football, Cricket, Tennis Formula 1, Boxing and Olympics and more.

    Related Posts

    Ind vs Oman Highlights – भारत ने लगाई जीत की हैट्रिक, ओमान के कलिम और मिर्ज़ा ने किया प्रभावित
    Cricket

    Ind vs Oman Highlights – भारत ने लगाई जीत की हैट्रिक, ओमान के कलिम और मिर्ज़ा ने किया प्रभावित

    Kuldeep: ‘You learn a lot when you don’t play’
    Cricket

    Kuldeep: ‘You learn a lot when you don’t play’

    Pycroft given a few moments’ notice ahead of India-Pakistan handshake gate
    Cricket

    Pycroft given a few moments’ notice ahead of India-Pakistan handshake gate

    Inglis out of T20 tour of New Zealand with a calf strain, Carey called up
    Cricket

    Inglis out of T20 tour of New Zealand with a calf strain, Carey called up

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Advertisment
    News Headlines
    Four people injured in shooting at Birmingham nightclub

    Four people injured in shooting at Birmingham nightclub

    Jonathan Pie: British satirist’s free speech warning to UK after Jimmy Kimmel show taken off air

    Jonathan Pie: British satirist’s free speech warning to UK after Jimmy Kimmel show taken off air

    Save 70% on VIP subscription
    News Briefings - the way to a better life
    News Briefings - the way to a better life
    Advert by Sponsors
    More from WTX News
    The latest gaming news - with game reviews and tips and tricks. updated 24 hours a day.
    The latest gaming news
    Hot off the press!
    • Kate Garraway trapped outside home by unreal 12-tonne delivery September 20, 2025
    • Four people injured in shooting at Birmingham nightclub September 20, 2025
    • Not all boxes ticked but India get what they want from Oman contest September 20, 2025
    • McLaren damage leads Ferrari 1-2 in Azerbaijan GP practice September 20, 2025
    • Jonathan Pie: British satirist’s free speech warning to UK after Jimmy Kimmel show taken off air September 20, 2025
    WTX News latest breaking news sports and travel
    Latest News and analysis - Deciphering through the BS with exclusive News Briefings
    Facebook X (Twitter) TikTok Instagram

    News

    • World News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • EU News
    • Business
    • Opinions
    • News Briefing
    • Live News

    Company

    • About WTX News
    • Register
    • Advertising
    • Work with us
    • Contact
    • Community
    • GDPR Policy
    • Privacy

    Services

    • Fitness for free
    • Insta Talk
    • How to guides
    • Climate Change
    • In Review
    • Expose
    • NEWS SUMMARY
    • Money Saving Expert

    News delivered to your inbox

    Copyright WTX News 2025

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.