Home Cricket England in India 2024/25, IND vs ENG 1st T20I Match Preview

England in India 2024/25, IND vs ENG 1st T20I Match Preview

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Big picture: Teams in transition

Gautam Gambhir and Brendon McCullum have many things in common. They were both stellar openers, they were both captain and coach of Kolkata Knight Riders at different times, they’re both known for their “aggressive” mindsets when it comes to approaching the game from the dugout, and, now, they both find themselves trying to shepherd two teams in transition.

India’s has been easier with three superstars calling time on their T20I career with T20 World Cup medals around their neck, and others fitting in rather smoothly with wins against Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and South Africa. But England’s has been trickier, with one of the most exciting white-ball teams in world cricket struggling in both ICC tournaments since their T20 World Cup win in 2022.

That has meant McCullum enters the India T20I series as England’s white-ball coach for the first time, with ambition of the team maximising its unfulfilled potential. And for Gambhir, the aim is to show that the T20I team remains unaffected by their Test side’s poor results that has shaken the establishment.

It’s in this backdrop that India and England meet in a five-match series that could test the limits of the shortest format. And as the lines between T20Is and ODIs keep blurring, there will be opportunities for some T20I specialists to stake their claim for future ODI positions – especially after the Champions Trophy concludes.

Five delectable T20I batting surfaces await the two sides across the next fortnight, and the first salvo in Kolkata will give a glimpse of what to expect.

Form guide

India WWLWW (Last five completed T20Is, most recent first)
England LWWWW

In the spotlight: Bethell and Shami

Very few youngsters right now have the aura of Jacob Bethell. He had blistering international debuts in all three formats at the back end of 2024. He has had a stint with Melbourne Renegades in the BBL, and has an IPL contract with Royal Challengers Bengaluru without playing a single game in India. The left-hand batter has developed a reputation of smacking spinners for fun, is a handy slow left-arm spinner himself, and is considered an electric fielder in the ring and on the boundary line. Could there be a more perfect T20 cricketer in this era? Slotted in at No. 6 for the first T20I against India, Bethell’s stocks have never been higher. England see him as one of their future superstars. Now all he has to do is ace the India challenge.

On the other hand, Mohammed Shami, at age 34, is making an international comeback after an ankle surgery and a knee niggle. He hasn’t played since India’s loss at the 2023 ODI World Cup final, and despite India trying other fast bowlers in the interim, there’s a feeling that Shami remains India’s second-best seamer, only behind Jasprit Bumrah. India have gambled by selecting him for next month’s Champions Trophy, and the focus in the T20Is and ODIs against England will be on how his body holds up. It’s also the perfect way to come back, at his domestic-cricket home ground.

Team news: Archer-Wood combine, but what of Bishnoi?

England captain Jos Buttler said he was especially pleased at having every first-choice T20I player available for this series. They have named their XI already, with Phil Salt taking the gloves, and Ben Duckett opening alongside him. Buttler himself will be at No. 3, with England also having the searing pace and fit bodies of Jofra Archer and Mark Wood to attack India. While Wood is the only one in the XI without a century in senior cricket, even he can crunch big shots, and that makes England one of the most dangerous batting outfits at the moment.

England: 1 Phil Salt (wk), 2 Ben Duckett, 3 Jos Buttler (capt), 4 Harry Brook, 5 Liam Livingstone, 6 Jacob Bethell, 7 Jamie Overton, 8 Gus Atkinson, 9 Jofra Archer, 10 Adil Rashid, 11 Mark Wood

India have two major decisions to make: how many spinners to play, and how long their batting should look? Arshdeep Singh, Shami and Hardik Pandya should be be the seamers, while Varun Chakravarthy and Axar Patel could be the two spin options. That probably leaves India deciding between going for seam-bowling allrounder Nitish Kumar Reddy, spin-bowling allrounder Washington Sundar, and an outright wristspinner in Ravi Bishnoi. England are right-hander heavy and struggle against fingerspinners, two factors which could decide India’s eventual choice.

India (probable): 1 Sanju Samson (wk), 2 Abhishek Sharma, 3 Tilak Varma, 4 Suryakumar Yadav (capt), 5 Hardik Pandya, 6 Rinku Singh, 7 Axar Patel, 8 Nitish Kumar Reddy/Washington Sundar/Ravi Bishnoi, 9 Mohammed Shami, 10 Arshdeep Singh, 11 Varun Chakravarthy.

Pitch and conditions: Dew and runs expected aplenty

Kolkata is going to offer a hard deck with true bounce. The boundaries are small, and the ball in January will get wet very quickly due to the dew. That means Eden Gardens should be a paradise for batting. Suryakumar and Buttler both said that the conditions will be the same irrespective of the toss result, so expect a belter.

Stats and trivia: Arshdeep closes in on Chahal

  • Among Full Members, England’s batting average of 26.8 against fingerspin since 2024 is the second-worst. Against top sides like Australia, South Africa and India, it drops to 13.88 at a run rate of only 6.74.
  • With 95 wickets in 60 T20Is, Arshdeep is only one wicket behind Yuzvendra Chahal, who leads the pack for India in the format. If Arshdeep gets to the landmark of 100 wickets in this five-match series, he’ll become the fastest bowler to get there in T20Is. Currently, Haris Rauf holds the record of reaching 100 T20I wickets the quickest, having achieved it in 71 games. Also, since Arshdeep’s T20I debut, no bowler has taken more wickets in the powerplay (40), and in the last five overs (46).
  • India have not lost a bilateral T20I series at home in the last six years. Their last defeat was against Australia in February 2019. In the 16 series since, India have won 14 and drawn two of them.
  • Since the T20 World Cup 2024, India have scored at 9.2 runs per over in the powerplay, an astonishing 10.3 from overs 7-15 and 10.9 in the last five overs. In this period, no team has had a better run rate between overs 7-15 or a better ball-per-boundary ratio (4.7).
  • Archer has the wood over both Suryakumar and Hardik, with both batters striking at only 116 against him while averaging 14.5 and 19 runs, respectively, against the quick.
  • Quotes

    “It’s a really exciting tour coming to India with what I’d say is a full line-up for us. Sometimes there’s so much cricket that certain players have to be rested or managed. But that’s certainly not the case for us at all in in this series.”
    Jos Buttler believes England have all bases covered

    “Eden Gardens is a special feeling, because this is where I played when I started playing regularly.”
    Suryakumar Yadav wants to make the most of the occasion on Wednesday

    Sreshth Shah is a sub-editor at ESPNcricinfo. @sreshthx

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