Former England captain Michael Vaughan believes England possess a stronger spin attack than India and says he has a “funny feeling” Harry Brook’s side can win Thursday’s T20 World Cup semi-final in Mumbai.
India began the tournament as overwhelming favourites but suffered a Super 8s defeat by South Africa and were less than convincing in the group stage. England, meanwhile, have yet to deliver a flawless performance but arrive in the last four on the back of five consecutive wins, repeatedly finding a way through tight contests.
“They seem to have found a way of winning,” Vaughan said on the Test Match Special podcast. “The win against New Zealand, even though it was a dead rubber, to get over the line was a great effort.”
Spin Could Decide the Semi-final
England’s batting has misfired for much of the competition. Captain Harry Brook’s century against Pakistan stands out, but consistent match-winning contributions have been scarce. Vaughan, however, sees the bowling unit as the decisive factor.
He singled out the spin trio of Adil Rashid, Liam Dawson and Will Jacks as the most effective combination in the tournament. “England have a better spin attack than India,” Vaughan said. “Dawson, Rashid and Will Jacks have been the best trio in the tournament in terms of spin.”
India’s Varun Chakravarthy is their leading wicket-taker but has proved expensive in key fixtures, conceding heavily against West Indies and South Africa. The hosts could recall wrist-spinner Kuldeep Yadav, who boasts an impressive record against England, though he has featured sparingly so far.
Beyond spin, Vaughan also praised England’s sharpness in the field and between the wickets, describing those controllable “small percentage things” as areas where England have excelled.
Buttler and the Big Occasion
Jos Buttler’s lean run continues to concern, with five successive single-figure scores. Vaughan suggested the opener may be overthinking his technique rather than trusting his natural hand-eye coordination. He believes the Wankhede pitch could suit Buttler’s trademark ramp shots, provided he commits fully.
The semi-final marks the third successive T20 World Cup meeting between the sides at this stage. England famously thrashed India by 10 wickets in 2022 before India returned the favour in 2024. Both teams went on to lift the trophy in those editions.
All-rounder Sam Curran said the 2022 performance remains the blueprint. “If we are searching for a perfect game, that’s something we can hopefully model ours on,” he told BBC Sport.
With a partisan Mumbai crowd expected at the Wankhede Stadium, pressure will be intense. Yet Vaughan’s belief is clear: if England’s spinners control the middle overs and their fielding standards hold firm, they have every chance of upsetting the hosts and reaching another final.



















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