India produced a clinical and composed performance to move 2–1 ahead in the five-match T20I series against Australia. On a pitch that offered little assistance to batters, India posted a competitive total before their bowlers ensured a comfortable defence, with all six taking at least one wicket. With just one fixture left, India are now guaranteed not to lose the series.
Batting first after losing yet another toss, India posted 167 for 8 in 20 overs, a total that proved more than sufficient on the sluggish surface. Australia, who made four changes to their playing XI, managed to keep India’s openers relatively quiet during the PowerPlay. By the sixth over, Abhishek Sharma and Shubman Gill had taken India to 49, with Abhishek contributing 22 off 18 balls. However, when faced with spin for the first time, Abhishek struck Adam Zampa for a six before being dismissed by the same bowler just two deliveries later.
Promoted up the order, Shivam Dube began hesitantly before a towering six down the ground boosted his confidence. Though India’s scoring rate hovered around eight runs an over, Gill struggled to accelerate, labouring to 34 from 30 balls. Nathan Ellis returned to the attack and promptly removed Dube, stalling India’s momentum. Suryakumar Yadav then strode in with characteristic intent, smashing consecutive sixes, and Gill followed suit in the next over to keep India on track for a strong finish.
However, Australia hit back in the closing stages. Ellis bowled Gill for 46 with a clever slower delivery, while Suryakumar departed soon after, leaving the middle order under pressure. Zampa then delivered a game-changing over, dismissing Tilak Varma and Jitesh Sharma in quick succession to leave India reeling. A late cameo from Axar Patel ensured India went past 160, giving their bowlers something tangible to defend.
In reply, Australia faltered from the outset. They managed just 11 runs from the opening two overs before Matthew Short briefly counter-attacked, targeting Arshdeep Singh and Varun Chakaravarthy. However, a successful DRS review saw Axar Patel remove Short in his very first over. Josh Inglis looked promising with two crisp boundaries off Jasprit Bumrah but was bowled by Axar soon after. Dube joined the attack and dismissed Mitchell Marsh using a well-disguised slower delivery, tightening India’s grip on the contest.
At 77 for 3 after 10 overs, the match remained delicately balanced. But when Dube dismissed Tim David with a short ball, India surged ahead decisively. Arshdeep returned to send back Josh Philippe, and Chakaravarthy completed an excellent spell by removing Glenn Maxwell, effectively ending Australia’s hopes. From that point, Australia required 65 runs from the final 30 deliveries with only four wickets in hand — a task well beyond reach. They collapsed meekly, losing their final few wickets to Washington Sundar, who picked up three of the last four dismissals.
Brief Scores
| Team | Score | Overs | Top Scorers | Best Bowlers | Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| India | 167/8 | 20 | Shubman Gill 46 | Nathan Ellis 3/21 | — |
| Australia | 119 | 18.2 | Mitchell Marsh 30 | Washington Sundar 3/3, Axar Patel 2/20 | India won by 48 runs |
With this emphatic win, India took an unassailable 2–1 lead in the series, leaving Australia to play only for pride in the final match.
