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‘Pressure on India to win T20 World Cup at home… our goal is to silence the crowd’: Mitchell Santner | Cricket News


'Pressure on India to win T20 World Cup at home... our goal is to silence the crowd': Mitchell Santner
File photo of New Zealand skipper Mitchell Santner during the T20 World Cup final. (ANI)

TimesofIndia.com in Ahmedabad: Mitchell Santner was slightly overwhelmed when he settled into his chair to address the media ahead of the T20 World Cup final against India in Ahmedabad. The room was packed and before the floor opened for questions, hands were frantically raised to shoot queries at the New Zealand captain. The over fifteen minutes of questions and answers mostly manuevered around the expected lines but before he got up, the all-rounder spoke about the pressure India will carry in this game. The pressure of hosting an event. Of defending a title. Of carrying the hopes of a nation is no small matter. When you combine the three, things reach next level. Meanwhile, opponents view this feeling for the hosts as an advantage and an opportunity for themselves.

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Thousands will pass through the turnstiles and fill this gigantic Narendra Modi Stadium for the title clash. It’s no surprise that only a handful would cheer for the BlackCaps as another Sea of Blue is expected. The jersey sellers have already blocked the premium slots around Gate No.1 and Gate No.2, and they clearly favour blue, as it was their preferred hue, showing unfamiliarity with the opposite camp’s colours. For any opposing captain, feeling out of place at the Narendra Modi Stadium isn’t strange and Santner could well take cues from how Pat Cummins & Co. silenced nearly 1,00,000 people on November 19, 2023. Are they, like Cummins, looking to silence the crowd?“Yeah I guess that’s the goal isn’t it, to silence the crowd but I think that there is a lot of variables in T20 cricket and it is fickle at times. We’ve seen throughout the whole World Cup that a lot of teams are on similar pages and it comes down to some little moments in every game that changes the outcome. So I think England were very close to chasing that the other night, we’ve seen South Africa playing very good cricket all the way through and then I guess had a little hiccup against us and you’re out.

Yeah I guess that is the goal, to silence the crowd but I think that there is a lot of variables in T20 cricket and it is fickle at times

Mitchell Santner

“So I think for us it’s taking confidence in that that we can If we go about our business the same way we can upset another big team and I think there’s obviously a lot of pressure on India to win this World Cup at home. I mean it would be, I guess if we don’t win it’d be pretty cool to win a home World Cup so I think that comes with a lot of added pressure as well. So if we can go out there and try to put, I guess, the added pressure on them and see what happens,” said Santner during the press conference on eve of the match.New Zealand are no stranger to ICC knockouts. They have reached three finals — the 2015 ODI World Cup, the 2019 ODI World Cup, and the 2021 T20 World Cup – but their last limited overs title came back in 2000 when they beat India in the final of the Champions Trophy in 2000. The most recent ICC title came when they beat the same opposition in the 2021 World Test Championship final.

New Zealand South Africa T20 WCup Cricket

New Zealand’s captain Mitchel Santner celebrates the wicket of South Africa’s Dewald Brevis with teammates during the first T20 World Cup cricket semifinal. (AP)

The ‘good boys’ have hardly finished first in cricket but have been consistent enough to challenge the best in the business in multi-nation tournaments. The first semi-final at the Eden Gardens in Kolkata showed why they can’t be taken lightly as they walloped the then-unbeaten South Africa by nine wickets with 7.1 overs to spare.“I wouldn’t mind winning a trophy but yeah I think – you look at this group and the groups that have been in the past we are pretty consistent in these tournaments because we try not get overruled by the situation or opponents, we just go out there and do our thing as a unit. It’s been no different this time. And again, it’s going to be obviously a challenge. “Everyone knows we’re probably not the favorites, But we don’t mind. We know we can, if we do our little things well and put in a strong team performance, put us in a pretty good position to hopefully lift the trophy. But yeah, I wouldn’t mind breaking a few hearts to lift the trophy for once,” said Santner.They haven’t had a perfect campaign in the 2026 T20 World Cup but after surviving the Colombo leg and acing the Kolkata semi-final, they run into another team which is yet to play a perfect game. India dropped their contest at this venue during the Super Eight clash vs South Africa, and the Aiden Markram-led unit showed how beatable the hosts are in their own backyard. Even in the 499-run feast at the Wankhede on Thursday, the difference was just seven runs, further highlighting how the Men in Blue can be tested and pushed.

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Captains generally prefer to downplay the final hype but Santner is embracing it. He is aware that it’s not just another game but they will approach it with the mindset they have in the games preceding the title clash.“It’s easy to say it’s just another game but everyone knows it’s probably not. But I think the way you go about it has to be the same whether it’s your preparation, what that looks like on the day leading up to the game. And I think, it always comes down to a couple of moments, especially in T20 cricket, where if you can squeeze the opposition or take the advantage through there. I think we saw it the other night. “I don’t know, it always comes down to fielding at some stage, but if you can be very consistent in the way you approach the game with bearing a couple of moments where you could potentially be a little bit more ruthless or what that looks like, but I think – I don’t think you have to reinvent the wheel. It’s just you’re making a final, you’re coming up against another team who’s also playing some pretty good cricket So it’s never that easy,” said Santner.The good boys of cricket are ready to take the big boys on in their own backyard. The crowd, noise and burden of expectations will be a challenge, and Kiwis are ready to embrace it.



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LPG price hike: Domestic cooking gas cost up by Rs 60 a cylinder | India News


LPG price hike: Domestic cooking gas cost up by Rs 60 a cylinder

NEW DELHI: Domestic cooking gas will cost Rs 60 more per cylinder from Saturday while commercial LPG price rose by Rs 114.5, amid pressure on global energy markets and rising costs due to the West Asia conflict, reports Atul Mathur.The 14.2-kg domestic LPG cylinder now costs Rs 913 in the capital.Officials said there will be no revision in the retail price of petrol and diesel, as oil marketing companies (OMCs) have enough cushion to absorb the rise in global crude prices.LPG cylinder price was last hiked by Rs 50 in April 2025The price of a 19-kg commercial cylinder is Rs 1,883. Ujjwala beneficiaries, who receive a subsidy of Rs 300 per cylinder directly in their bank accounts, will now pay Rs 613 per bottle. The price was last increased by Rs 50 last April. Prices of commercial cylinders, used by hotels and restaurants, are revised monthly based on international fuel costs. They were last hiked by Rs 28 per 19-kg cylinder on March 1 and have risen by Rs 302.5 in the last three months from Rs 1,580.5 in Dec 2025. The development comes a day after the government invoked emergency powers under the Emergency Commodities Act of 1955 and directed refiners to increase production of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) for domestic customers due to supply constraints arising from the ongoing West Asia conflict. India imports over 60% of its LPG requirement and nearly 85-90% of shipments pass through the Strait of Hormuz, which is currently disrupted, curtailing energy flows from the region and triggering a spike in global oil and gas prices. India has over 33.3 crore LPG consumers, including 10.5 crore Pradhan Mantri Ujjwala Yojana beneficiaries who get a subsidy of Rs 300 per cylinder. In 2024-25, the country consumed 31.3 million tonne of LPG, of which only 12.8 million tonne were produced domestically.Officials said the govt has always tried to shield households from international volatility. Domestic LPG prices are linked to international benchmarks such as the Saudi Contract Price (CP). Even as the Saudi CP benchmark rose 16% between Nov 2025 and Feb 2026, domestic LPG prices remained unchanged. Despite the latest revision, domestic LPG prices remain below the market-determined price of Rs 987 for a 14.2-kg cylinder in Delhi in March 2026, they said.Officials said the three state-owned OMCs — Indian Oil, Bharat Petroleum and Hindustan Petroleum — absorbed losses of around Rs 39,000 crore in 2024-25 to protect domestic LPG consumers. Govt compensated Rs 30,000 crore to them.“The impact of the hike translates to about 80 paise per day for a family of four, or just 20 paise per person, assuming an average consumption of 4-5 cylinders per household annually,” a govt official said, adding that LPG in India remains cheaper than in many countries. A cylinder costs Rs 1,207 in Kathmandu, Rs 1,241 in Sri Lanka and Rs 1,046 in Pakistan, the official said. Retail petrol and diesel prices were last revised in April 2022. OMCs absorb losses when crude prices are high and make profits when rates are low.



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EAM Jaishankar: Let Iranian ship dock on humanitarian grounds | India News


EAM Jaishankar: Let Iranian ship dock on humanitarian grounds

NEW DELHI: External affairs minister S Jaishankar said Saturday that India’s “unstoppable” rise would be determined by India alone and not by the mistakes of others. The minister was speaking at the Raisina Dialogue, where US deputy secretary of state Christopher Landau had said earlier that Washington wouldn’t allow India to become big or powerful enough to rival the US by making the mistakes that it did with China.Jaishankar also officially confirmed India had approved the docking of an Iranian ship, IRIS LAVAN, in Kochi on humanitarian grounds days before another Iranian warship, DENA, was torpedoed and sunk by a US submarine on March 4. LAVAN had requested urgent docking in Kochi over technical issues it was facing on Feb 28, the day the war in West Asia started, and the request was acceded to by Indian authorities the next day.Jaishankar: India’s rise will be determined by India aloneThe minister said that India’s rise is going to be unstoppable. “When we speak today about the rise of countries, the rise of countries is determined by the countries. The rise of India will be determined by India,” Jaishankar said during an interactive session.“It will be determined by our strength, not by the mistakes of others,” he added, without naming any country.Speaking about the significance of India’s role in the Indian Ocean, the minister also said that those who work with India obviously will get more benefits. “I’m not saying there are no challenges to India’s rise; there are. But the direction of India’s rise is very clear. In a way, it’s unstoppable,” he said.Asked about India’s role in the region as a security provider in light of the DENA sinking, Jaishankar said that it’s important to understand the reality of the Indian Ocean and underlined the presence of other countries including the US and China in the region.“Diego Garcia has been in the Indian Ocean for the last five decades. The fact that there are foreign forces based in Djibouti happened in the early first decade of this century. Hambantota came up during this period,” said the minister.Talking about IRIS LAVAN, Jaishankar said that India had received a request from the ship that it wanted to come in at an Indian port because it said it was having problems. The ship docked in Kochi with 183 crew members who remain in India.“On March 1, we said you can come in and it took them a few days to sail in and then they docked in Kochi…there were a lot of young cadets. When the ships had set out and when they came here, the situation was totally different. They were coming in for a fleet review and then they got in a way caught on the wrong side of events,” said Jaishankar, adding India was guided by humanitarian concerns.“One obviously had a similar situation in Sri Lanka, they took the decision which they did and one of them unfortunately didn’t make it…we approached the situation from the point of view of humanity, other than whatever the legal issues were and I think we did the right thing,” added the minister.



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Arrested after 7 mths for duping women, man let off over lapses | Mumbai News


Mumbai: A 42-year-old man with around 32 cases of cheating, forgery, impersonation, and cheque bounce registered against him in Mumbai and Bangaluru was arrested on Friday from Wadala after almost seven months of being on the run. The court, however, released him terming his arrest illegal as Bandra police failed to give grounds of his arrest before apprehending him.Accused Mehul Patel’s modus operandi was to look for divorcees/widows with strong financial backgrounds, lure them with sweet talks, honey trap them under pretext of marriage and dupe them. The latest victim is a pilot who was promised marriage and business opportunities and duped of Rs 50 lakh.

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. Two victims who appeared while the accused was brought for remand were left shattered after the court ordered his release, said advocate Akshita Prajapati. “We had taken so much effort to trace him and inform police, leading to his arrest, but a small procedural lapse by police led to his release,” said one of the victims. Patel was arrested in connection with a case registered at Bandra police station following a complaint filed by a single woman. He created a profile on a marriage portal and lured a pilot with proposals. Patel allegedly befriended the complainant through social media in Sep 2023, and introduced himself as a successful businessman. Gaining her trust, he allegedly promised to marry her after her divorce and persuaded her and her father to invest money in his proposed businesses. Police said the complainant initially gave Patel Rs 50 lakh through a cheque in Jan 2024, after he claimed he urgently needed funds for his business. Patel allegedly made the complainant sign documents presented as formalities, which later turned out to be loan agreements. Patel allegedly took another Rs 3 lakh in cash on the pretext of paying a lawyer and school fees. When the complainant later demanded her money back for her father’s medical treatment, Patel allegedly returned only Rs 9 lakh and refused to repay the remaining Rs 44 lakh. “Mehul was earlier in jail for 14 months, moved to Bangaluru after his release and went absconding,” said an official. After inquiries, the complainant also learnt that Patel had allegedly befriended several other women and taken money from them with promises of marriage.



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Accident, not premeditated act: JJB in juvenile bail order | Mumbai News


Mumbai: In a detailed order granting bail to a 17-year-old involved in a fatal car accident, the Juvenile Justice Board observed that intention and knowledge of the act, which are ingredients of culpable homicide not amounting to murder, are hardly attracted in this case. The court also noted that he was a first-time offender who remained at the scene and was not under the influence of alcohol and committed a lapse in judgment typical of adolescence rather than a premeditated act.“In this particular case, it seems that the child in conflict with law (CCL) was driving a car and caused accident…He took the vehicle which shows lack of parenting control. But at the same time, an adolescence act. He had not consumed liquor, so it is not that under the influence of alcohol he lost control over the car,” the board said.

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The board also noted that while stringent charge can be determined at trial stage, the circumstances show the ingredients of accident. Addressing strong opposition from the victims’ family, the board said, “No doubt the victim suffered incomputable loss. Allegedly, the CCL is responsible for causing such a loss. Everyone has sympathies for them, but according to the law, CCL is to be treated innocent… the principle of best interest is to be considered.” The bench further concluded that “seriousness of the offence is not the ground under Juvenile Justice Act to reject bail application.”The incident occurred when a car driven by the teenager collided with a scooter on Feb 5, 2026, in Vidhyavihar, resulting in the death of Dhrumil Patel and serious injuries to his wife Minal Patel.The prosecution and an intervener had argued against bail, pointing to deletion of social media reels showing the teenager performing vehicle stunts as evidence of tampering. The order clarified that “the act of negligence or recklessness must be at the time of committing the offence and such prior stunt reels could not be the evidence in respect of the particular incident.”The teenager was released on a bond of Rs 25,000 with strict conditions to ensure he remains isolated from the investigation and the locality of the victims. Additionally, the order mandates that he “shall not drive the vehicle till he attains majority.” The mother has been ordered to submit a formal ‘After Care Plan’ and relocate the teenager to Navi Mumbai under the supervision of an NGO and a probation officer.The minor’s father was arrested on Feb 10, 2026, for allegedly allowing his minor son to drive the vehicle without a valid license. He too was granted bail by a sessions court last week.



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Business and culture take centre stage on Women’s Day 2026 in Maharashtra’s Thane | Mumbai News


Thane: As the city geared up for International Women’s Day on March 8, a vibrant mix of cultural events, entrepreneurship initiatives, and public programmes unfolded across Thane, celebrating women’s achievements while also highlighting economic concerns.At the headquarters of the Thane Municipal Corporation (TMC), women employees turned corridors into canvases during a lively Rangoli and Mehndi competition inaugurated by mayor Sharmila Pimpolkar. Officials, including deputy commissioner Anagha Kadam, Dr Mitali Sancheti, chief environment officer Manisha Pradhan, and deputy information and public relations officer Prachi Dingankar, were present.

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Participants from various civic departments created vibrant rangoli designs reflecting empowering themes, social awareness, and traditional art. “It was a great opportunity to showcase creativity beyond our daily work,” said a participant.At the Women Economic Development Corporation in Thane, which launched the “Navatejaswini Thane Gramotsav 2026,” the spotlight was on women entrepreneurs. “A platform was given to rural women to showcase their products and skills,” said a district official.Adding to the momentum, the upcoming “District Level and Mini Saras Sales Exhibition 2025–26” will be organised jointly by the District Rural Development Agency, Zilla Parishad Thane, and the Maharashtra State Rural Livelihood Promotion Mission, officials said. “The exhibitions will feature stalls selling handcrafted goods and food items prepared by women’s self-help groups, aimed at boosting rural livelihoods and women’s economic independence,” said a statement issued by the district administration.The Women’s Day celebrations also spilled into public spaces, with engagement activities at Korum Mall and rallies organised by several educational institutes within the city.



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Mother-in-law’s obsession with ‘good news’ drives woman to call for help; asked to give intimacy, menstrual cycle details | Ahmedabad News


AHMEDABAD: A young woman married for two years called the Abhayam women’s helpline, saying she could no longer live in peace in her own home — not because of financial hardship or marital conflict, but because her mother-in-law had made having a grandchild a round-the-clock project. The mother-in-law was tracking her menstrual cycle, demanding details about her physical relationship with her husband, and pressing the couple to conceive despite their decision to wait until the husband found employment.The woman, in her mid-20s, had already left home and stayed away for close to a year before returning about a fortnight ago. When the pressure started again, she called for help. “The family is well-to-do, but there’s no one who has a job currently. Her father-in-law retired as a senior bank official and gets a good pension. The family owns land and other properties through which they get good income. The woman’s husband is preparing for govt recruitment exams. The couple had decided together that they would start a family once he landed a job,” said a counsellor.However, the decision did not sit well with the mother-in-law, said counsellors, adding that she had her own context for the urgency. “She told us that she and her husband had conceived only after 20 years of marriage, following prolonged medical treatment and ‘blessings sought from every deity possible’. She was afraid her daughter-in-law would miss the window for a healthy pregnancy. She told the couple not to worry about expenses — that the family would take care of everything,” said a counsellor.The concern, however, turned into an obsession, according to the complaint by the daughter-in-law. She said that the mother-in-law demanded minute details about the couple’s physical relationship and monitored her menstrual cycle to advise her on the best days to conceive. The pressure grew severe enough that the woman left home and stayed away for close to a year. Before leaving, she told her mother-in-law to stop pressuring her and to instead speak to her own son about the matter.“She returned about a fortnight ago, and as the pestering started again, she decided to seek help. We counselled both sides, after which the mother-in-law promised us not to harass the woman,” said a counsellor.



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Gargai dam plan to come up before BMC panel for final nod | Mumbai News


Mumbai: Almost three months after the BMC floated a Rs 3,000-crore tender to construct the 69-metre Gargai dam near Ogada village in Wada Taluka of Palghar District, along with a 2.2-metre diameter tunnel that will carry water to the Modak Sagar reservoir, the proposal is set to come before the civic standing committee for final approval this week.Officials said the lowest bidder was Soma Consortium, which undertook construction of the Middle Vaitarna dam on River Vaitarna. Once commissioned, Gargai will add 440 million litres per day to Mumbai’s water supply, making it the city’s first new reservoir since Middle Vaitarna became operational in 2014. The BMC is eyeing a 2029 completion, a year that coincides with the next Lok Sabha and assembly polls.

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During the recent budget presentation before the civic standing committee, municipal commissioner said tender for this work was invited in Jan 2026, and actual work is expected to start by March 2026. A provision of Rs 437.51 crore was proposed in budget 2026-27 for the above works and other incidental works of the Gargai project. Officials said the first year post-work order will go into securing permissions and creating infrastructure for relocating six affected villages. Dam construction is planned in the second year, followed by installation of electrical systems in the third year. The project includes a 1,200-kilowatt hydropower unit, intended to offset the dam’s electricity costs.The project comes with significant environmental implications. Around 3 lakh trees must be transplanted across neighbouring villages, with two directly affected by the dam and four required for tree relocation. Compensatory afforestation was proposed across 658 hectares in Washim, Chandrapur and Hingoli.



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Punjab: Police officer beaten to death in village near Amritsar | India News


Punjab: Police officer beaten to death in village near Amritsar

AMRITSAR: An assistant sub-inspector (ASI) was allegedly beaten to death over a personal dispute at his native village, Jagdev Kalan, near Amritsar on Saturday Friday night. Five suspects have been arrested.Police identified the victim as ASI Jagjit Singh of 4th India Reserve Battalion (IRB), posted in Gurdaspur district.He just returned home from duty when a group of people, reportedly relatives of his son’s girlfriend, arrived at his house and raised objections over a personal matter, say police. What began as a verbal exchange quickly escalated into a heated confrontation. According to sources, the ASI and his relatives initially tried to defuse the situation but a scuffle broke out. Jagjit was struck repeatedly on the head with iron rods and collapsed, say sources. Family members rushed him to a nearby hospital, but he died on the way.Amritsar-rural SSP Suhail Qasim Mir said the dispute began with objections raised by the relatives of the girl known to the ASI’s son, which escalated into a violence. Police have arrested five suspects and raids are being conducted to nab the rest, Mir added.The ASI’s wife, Harjit Kaur, alleged that the group attacked him over a domestic dispute. She said other members of the family were also assaulted during the incident. The family demands strict action against the accused and urged police to arrest all those involved at the earliest and ensure exemplary punishment.



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Rinku Singh replaces Abhishek Sharma for T20 World Cup final as Gautam Gambhir handed big suggestion


The Abhishek Sharma vs Rinku Singh debate broke out ahead of the T20 World Cup 2026 Final between the India National Cricket Team and the New Zealand National Cricket Team at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on Sunday, March 8.

Abhishek Sharma is under pressure, and there have been calls for his ouster from the playing XI for the T20 World Cup 2026 final against New Zealand due to his poor form in the tournament. Just before the summit clash, Gautam Gambhir received a direct suggestion.

Big advice for Gautam Gambhir before T20 World Cup 2026 Final

Former Indian batter Mohammad Kaif believes that the defending champions should not hesitate to make a bold change for the final. Kaif has stressed that explosive batter Rinku Singh could be the surprise entry in the playing XI if the team management decides to rest the young opener.

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Abhishek failed to deliver big runs when India needed them most, amassing only 89 runs, including three ducks, in the ongoing T20 World Cup 2026. His struggles in crucial matches have made many experts wonder if India should try a different option for the final.

And now Kaif openly said that the shortest format allows teams to take bold calls, especially in knockout matches. He pointed out how the West Indies recently made a similar move by changing their opening combination, and that decision helped them bring fresh energy into the lineup.

Kaif wants India to give Abhishek Sharma a break

Abhishek Sharma said in a video posted on his YouTube channel: “India can give Abhishek Sharma a break. He has played a lot of matches now. There is no harm in making changes. You can make changes in the shortest format.

Roston Chase opened against India as Brandon King was out of form. They backed him for five or six matches, but they gave him a break for a big match. I believe that, like, you brought in Sanju, and he did a great job, so that change worked in your favor.”

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The cricket pandit has noted that the Men in Blue have enough proven match-winners waiting on the bench. He highlighted that Rinku Singh has consistently delivered runs in different formats of the game, whether it is domestic cricket or franchise leagues.

Rinku Singh deserves his chance in India XI: Kaif

His fearless batting style and ability to finish games could give India an extra advantage in the title clash against the Kiwis. Kaif explained, “India has proven players. Rinku Singh scores runs everywhere, be it in Tests, the Ranji Trophy, or the IPL.

Kuldeep Yadav and Mohammed Siraj also take wickets everywhere. When you look in the dugout to see who can replace Abhishek Sharma, you see Rinku Singh sitting there. So, bring him in. A guy is struggling, and another guy is sitting outside despite doing well.”

At the same time, Kaif feels the team management might continue to back mystery spinner Varun Chakravarthy despite his recent expensive spells. The spinner has the skill to trouble batters if he adjusts his line and length at the Narendra Modi Stadium against the Black Caps.

He signed off by saying, “I think they might not drop Varun. They would work on him, and he might change his line in the next match.”



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