India’s shaky batting order was brutally exposed once more as the hosts crashed to a 51-run defeat in the second T20 International against South Africa. Asked to chase 214, India folded for 162 in 19.1 overs — a performance that reignited doubts over the form and consistency of key batters including Shubman Gill, captain Suryakumar Yadav and Hardik Pandya.
Gill’s Lean Patch Raises Tough Questions for Selectors
Shubman Gill’s form in T20Is continues to raise concerns. Despite his enormous talent, the opener has not delivered in the shortest format for an extended period.
In his last 10 T20I innings, Gill has not crossed 23 even once.
Even across his last 20 T20 innings, the pattern remains bleak — a string of single-digit scores, early dismissals, and difficulty adjusting to the tempo of T20 powerplays.
His ongoing run of failures has intensified the debate around his selection, especially because his inclusion has pushed Sanju Samson — who earlier showed promise as an opener — to the sidelines.
India invested heavily in Gill as a long-term opener, but with the team struggling for starts and several domestic batters performing strongly, the pressure on him has reached a critical point.
Suryakumar Yadav’s Bad Patch Continues Despite Leadership Role
Captain Suryakumar Yadav, widely regarded as one of the world’s best T20 batters, is also going through a prolonged slump.
Though his career numbers remain elite — strike rate above 160, multiple centuries, and match-winning knocks — his recent form has been underwhelming:
In the 2025 T20I season, he has scored only around 196 runs in 16 innings, averaging roughly 15.
He has gone 19 consecutive T20 innings without a fifty, a rare drought for a player known for outrageous consistency.
His dismissal in the second T20 — a faint edge attempting a drive — reflected a batter searching for momentum rather than controlling the innings.
Pandya Follows Up Brilliance With Off-Color Knock
Hardik Pandya, who delivered an all-round masterclass in the first T20I, failed to replicate that spark in the second match. Coming in at a vital phase where India needed to accelerate, Pandya struggled to find fluency and played a slow, momentum-stalling innings at a time when India needed big hits.
His inability to shift gears further widened the gap between required and achievable run rates.
Suryakumar Takes Responsibility, Defends Gill, Calls for Team Effort
Speaking at the post-match press conference, captain Suryakumar Yadav accepted responsibility for the defeat and admitted that the top order has not delivered.
“I think myself, Shubman, we could have given a good start because we can’t rely on Abhishek all the time,” he said.
“The way he’s been batting, he might have an off-day. Me, Shubman and a few other batters should have taken it.”
Gill, who was dismissed first ball by a beauty from Lungi Ngidi, was backed by his captain despite his ongoing lean run.
“It’s okay, Shubman got out on the first ball. But yeah, I should have taken that responsibility, batted a little deeper,” Suryakumar admitted.
He also defended the team’s decision to promote Axar Patel up the order — a move that didn’t fully pay off despite Axar showing promise.
“We have seen Axar bat well in the longer format. We wanted him to bat the same way today. He did bat well, but unfortunately it didn’t work the way we thought. We will see what’s up for the next game,” he added.
The skipper’s words reflected both honesty and urgency — a recognition that India can’t rely on Abhishek Sharma’s recent brilliance alone, and that senior batters must lead the way.
Series in Balance — But Pressure Mounts on Key Players
With the series level and heading to Dharamshala, India faces a crucial juncture:
Will Gill retain his spot?
Can Suryakumar rediscover his scoring touch?
Will Pandya add consistency to his explosive reputation?

Do Samson or other domestic performers deserve a chance?
The coming matches may shape India’s T20 planning for the next global cycle — and several reputations hang in the balance.



















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