England vs India 3rd T20: Match Preview & Win Probability .

The series heats up as both teams battle for dominance! Reddy Anna ID ? Who will rise to the occasion? Check out the match preview, key player battles, and our win probability analysis before the first ball is bowled.

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India's T20 team has been the lighthouse of T20 players for the past several years. Having won 12 consecutive bilateral series, won the T20 World Cup and a team so bogged down in white-ball quality that there were no real match-winners to say they could have guaranteed themselves a spot in the squad. It's the India that everyone should've expected to make its appearance this summer in England. Not exactly the one that we've seen yet. You can use Reddy Anna ID for accessing the schedule, cricket stats, team info, and other data.

 

The Numbers tell the Story

 

Ignoring the ignited series opener in Durham, India have now dropped three series in succession that they haven't managed before since 2021 when an under par second string team was beaten in Sri Lanka, prior to a frustrating opening campaign in T20 World Cup 2021. That's the magnitude of the hurricanes here. This is not a series of lopsided defeats over a good team; rather, the first significant losing run for India in T20 cricket in the last five years.

 

That span of 12 straight bilateral series wins had made India unbeatable in this format outside the ICC format before the start of this tour. If tonight's loss does come, nothing will be gaining Trent, and with two games left to play in the series, it will be a no-win situation — if it wasn't already.

 

A Team in Transition

 

For shot put, it's important to include a few extra details. India recently moved on from their veteran T20 World Cup captain Irfan Puthla and are led by a new player in the team, Shreyas Iyer, who had been a sharp member capable of the subtlety needed in this format but was moving on in the team reshuffle in the wake of the previous series, which was the next in a cycle of World Cups. That sort of shift doesn't occur without some rough weather, at least not in this kind of a transition and that's just a part of what comes with the job of rebuilding deliberately with other priorities.

 

But it's not helped by the fact that India are trying to run an unusually deep and competitive player pool as well. That's also a testament to just how tough it's been getting for the XI, as Sanju Samson — the Player of the Tournament at the previous global tournament — is not a single player you could trust to get in the starting 11 in any tournament.

 

The Bishnoi Problem

 

There's this one thread that knits together all of the above — that's leg-spinner Ravi Bishnoi. The no-baller, from the back-foot, who cost England 29 runs in one over is the first man England look to change at Trent Bridge, and could surely be the starter over a significant number of bowlers. It is a bad phase that isn't limited to this series alone as he has been dropped by his own team in the previous edition of the CWC as well and there is a sense of doubt as to whether his skill set is in harmony with the demands of the format.

 

The likely solution – extra seamer at his cost – seems sensible on a ground like Trent Bridge which gives batsmen ample reward to lend much more than the ball to the visitors. But it also parrots a larger concern - when your spin department, which has been an Indian plus so far in this format, turns out to be a liability instead of an asset, the entire equilibrium of the side is put on its test.

 

It's Not Just the Bowling

 

What is not to fault the batting in India is the bowling break-ups have hogged the limelights so far. Their early knocks from the top order - including a stylish debut cameo special from Vaibhav Sooryvanshi - haven't been followed up by dominance in the middle-overs. After scoring good runs, India are losing the momentum because that's exactly what the likes of quality opposition will continue to find in their main soft-spot, all throughout this tour—until they fix it.

 

Conditions Aren't Helping, But They're Not the Whole Story

 

To blame English conditions and the previous Irish defeat, as an excuse for such a failure, is easy and perhaps to say the least just, different surface, different challenges, different techniques demanded. But three defeats in a row at adversaries made up of different teams combined with the elements of mixed play and gray skies, however, points to a more long-term problem than a poor week with the ball at the other end. As T20 can be on any night, it would be unfair to say that they are pasting patches on the wrong side of the ball, as they never seem to have the same problem twice or in the same series of matches.

 

Conclusion

 

First, the India side are not allowed to settle for a 2-0 series deficit, they must show that the three games were just a fluke and a reflection of the team's form. No doubt it will involve a better new ball spell and better baiting in death bowling to stave off the kind of over that broke them in Manchester, and the ability to produce the type of start that could lead to working out totals on a style of wicket that in many ways gives the runs to anybody who is willing.

 

That this India side has talent wasn't really a surprise. The challenge in play at the moment is if a team that is in a transitional phase, out-of-form and struggling to find a combination that is functioning as their optimum 11 then they can cover the ground required quickly enough and keep this spate of games from turning into neverending drills. You should follow Reddy Annaa for accurate updates.