India’s T20 World Cup title defence was not just historically significant — it was statistically extraordinary. A 96-run final victory over New Zealand on Sunday was the conclusion of a campaign featuring three scores above 250, one record-equalling powerplay, and bowling performances that restricted opponents consistently throughout the tournament.
In the final, India’s batting began with calculated precision before detonating into full attack mode. The powerplay delivered 92 for no loss in six overs, equalling the all-time World Cup record. Sharma reached fifty in 18 balls. Kishan followed in 23. Samson was the most measured, taking 33 balls to reach fifty before accelerating to 89 off 46. India were 191 for one in the 14th over with sights set on 300.
A strange middle phase — four wickets in five overs, including three in Neesham’s one-run over — reduced the total to a still-formidable 255. Dube’s final over provided 24 crucial late runs. New Zealand’s bowling, which included Duffy’s 15-run opening over, Ferguson’s 24-run spell, and Henry’s 21-run contribution, was unable to contain India’s top order throughout.
New Zealand’s chase fell 96 runs short. Their top four — Allen (9), plus three batters who collectively equalled that score — offered nothing of substance. Seifert’s fifty was notable but isolated. Bumrah’s three wickets were the decisive moments, his slow yorkers making clean contact with bats and stumps in equal measure. New Zealand were dismissed for 159.
India won their second consecutive T20 World Cup title, becoming the first men’s team to achieve the feat. Their campaign statistics — three 250-plus scores, final margin of 96 runs, tournament-wide consistency — paint the picture of a team playing at a level the sport has rarely seen before.
