Indore: India’s formidable home record will be put to a searching test when they take on a confident New Zealand in the decisive third ODI at the Holkar Stadium on Sunday. With both sides winning one game apiece, the series is finely poised at 1–1 and promises a fitting finale on one of the country’s most batter-friendly venues.
India have not lost a bilateral ODI series at home since March 2019, a streak that underlines their dominance in familiar conditions. Yet that proud run faces a genuine challenge after a sobering defeat in Rajkot, where New Zealand wrested control through sharper execution in the middle overs and superior handling of spin.
For the visitors, the context could hardly be more compelling. Despite touring India regularly since 1989, New Zealand have never won an ODI series here. The manner in which they levelled the series has fuelled belief that this could finally be their moment to rewrite history.
Middle-overs battle in focus
India’s setback in the second ODI was less about one explosive performance and more about how New Zealand dictated tempo between overs 15 and 40. Daryl Mitchell’s unbeaten hundred was a study in calculated aggression, particularly against spin, an area where India have looked increasingly vulnerable.
Indore offers little respite. Short boundaries and true surfaces mean bowlers operate on slim margins, and any lapse can quickly inflate totals beyond 350. India’s challenge, therefore, is as much tactical as technical—finding ways to keep the scoreboard moving without gifting wickets during the traditionally quieter overs.
Pressure on senior batters
Much of the spotlight will fall on Rohit Sharma, whose ultra-aggressive approach at the top has yielded mixed returns this series. Early dismissals have increased scrutiny, especially with India keen to seize early momentum on a ground tailor-made for powerplay dominance.
If there is a constant, it remains Virat Kohli, the fulcrum of India’s ODI batting. With limited 50-over cricket on the immediate horizon for senior players, fans will hope the Indore decider produces another authoritative display from the talisman.
Captain Shubman Gill also faces a selection conundrum. The choice between Nitish Kumar Reddy and Ayush Badoni pits seam-bowling depth and late-order power against composure and control against spin—an equation that could shape the middle overs.
Bowling combinations under scrutiny
The case for including left-arm pacer Arshdeep Singh grows stronger at Indore, where variations often trump raw pace. His swing with the new ball and yorkers at the death could offer India a different dimension, especially against New Zealand’s largely right-handed batting core. The trade-off, however, is complex, with Mohammed Siraj’s new-ball role making him difficult to displace.
New Zealand, meanwhile, arrive with quiet confidence. Support around Mitchell—from the likes of Devon Conway—has showcased a batting unit comfortable identifying match-ups and executing plans. Their bowlers, short on marquee names, have punched above their weight through discipline, hard lengths and smart changes of pace.
Everything to play for
At a venue where intent often outweighs method, the decider is likely to hinge on decision-making under pressure. For India and head coach Gautam Gambhir, it is a chance to reaffirm home supremacy and display tactical flexibility. For New Zealand, it is an opportunity to script a landmark triumph on Indian soil.
Fireworks are almost guaranteed at Holkar Stadium. What remains to be seen is which side handles the heat—and the moment—better when it matters most.
Source: ESPN Cricinfo, ET



















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