AHMEDABAD: Defending T20 World Cup champions India are under immense pressure after suffering a crushing 76-run defeat against South Africa in the Super Eights stage on Sunday. Assistant coach Ryan ten Doeschate described the loss as a “grand-scale mess” and stressed that India will need “two big performances” in their remaining matches to stay in contention for the semi-finals.
Crushing Defeat and Net Run-Rate Woes
India, hot favourites on home soil, were bowled out for just 111 in 18.5 overs while chasing South Africa’s 187-7 at the Narendra Modi Stadium, leaving their net run-rate at a perilous -3.8. The defeat also ended India’s 12-match winning streak in T20 World Cups.
Ten Doeschate acknowledged the team’s disappointment, saying, “Very disappointed in the performance. We’ve messed up on a grand scale and now the onus is on this group of guys to turn it around and put in two solid performances.”
Upcoming Matches Crucial
India are in a group with South Africa, West Indies, and Zimbabwe, with the top two teams advancing to the semi-finals. India’s next match is against Zimbabwe on Thursday in Chennai. Zimbabwe, already giant-killers of Australia and Sri Lanka, pose a significant threat. Meanwhile, South Africa face West Indies on the same day in Ahmedabad, where a win could secure their semi-final spot.
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Ten Doeschate stressed that India will need “at least four points to get through now, and it’s going to need two big performances and a big bounce back from everyone.”
Batting Fragility Exposed
India’s batting woes were laid bare by a disciplined South African attack. Marco Jansen led with 4-22 in 3.5 overs, while Keshav Maharaj claimed 3-24 with spin. Star batters struggled: Ishan Kishan was dismissed for a duck, and Abhishek Sharma, the world’s top-ranked T20 batter, managed only 15 runs in the match after three previous ducks.
Captain Suryakumar Yadav admitted that poor shot selection during the first six-over power play contributed heavily to the collapse. India were 31-3 after six overs, later sliding to 51-5, making recovery extremely challenging.
Historical Pressure
India also face a historical hurdle: no team has ever retained the T20 World Cup, and no side has ever won the trophy on home soil. Headlines in Indian media reflected the shock: “The night the cloak came off” (Indian Express) and “Sloppy India reach point of no return” (Hindustan Times).
With their Super Eights campaign hanging by a thread, India must rethink strategy and deliver two convincing wins to remain in the tournament.



