“It’s a battle. It’s going to be a battle.”
These are not just two promising sides in Group C. They are both two-time T20 champions, two powerhouse batting line-ups, two XIs with enviable batting depth, and two teams that are known to hit not just big but also lots of sixes.
Ever since West Indies lifted their second T20 World Cup in 2016, they have been extolled as the original six-hitters, a batting “invention” in Sammy’s words, which set the trend for other teams to follow suit. Even though India might be the hot favourites for this T20 World Cup because of their unmatchable six-hitting in recent times, that tag has largely been attributed to them over the last year or so, ever since they adopted a fresh hitting approach with their new generation of batters under a new captain. You stretch the timeline back further and England have been the other team to be consistent ball-bashers in the last 10 years, an approach rewarded with knockout finishes in the last four T20 World Cups and a trophy in 2022.
But the result won’t be decided by who hits more sixes on Wednesday, Sammy said, because both teams are neck and neck in that aspect.
But as soon as Sammy had said that, it was as if a realisation dawned on him that six-hitting was not going to be enough.
“And tomorrow, we’ve got to be smart. Both teams have that power. I think it will rely on which team executes better with the ball. Because I think we could match each other when it comes to six-hitting.”
“You have an idea of what you want to do, but at the end of the day, when you go and play, what the surface dictates, you try to get an extra 20 runs if you can,” Sammy said about how their batters approach the game these days. “If the par score is 190, you try to get 220 to give you some cushion with the ball. But we don’t plan our batting in trying to score 300. We just look at the conditions on the day you assess what the surface dictates. You decide what skill set is required. And then you hope the skills that you have, you could deliver with it. So, I think that’s how we approach it.
“We have class openers in Shai Hope and Brandon King. We have an in-form Hettie (Shimron Hetmyer), since he’s been at No. 3, the responsibility he’s shown has been really good for us. Rovman [Powell] has been here in the IPL for a long time.”
Luckily for the bowlers, the two games that have been played at the Wankhede Stadium so far this World Cup haven’t produced the kind of high-scoring belters that have become the norm in the IPL. But if it rains sixes on Wednesday, the bowler who gets hit the least might win it for his team.
