Cricket
Babar Azam: A Tribute Pakistan’s Greatest Ever Batter Deserves
Babar Azam is Pakistan’s most complete modern batter, with elite numbers across Tests, ODIs, T20Is, and the PSL. This tribute explores his records, technique, comeback, cricket politics, league performances, and the milestones still waiting for him.
If there was ever a Pakistani batter deserved to called a legend while he was still an active player, it was Babar Azam. It’s quite unfortunate how this master batter has had to deal with undue criticism and enmosity from former players and a section of Pakistani media, but this tribute beats all nay-sayers once and for all.
Babar Azam is the most complete all-format batter Pakistan has produced in the modern era.
Across Tests, ODIs, T20Is, the Pakistan Super League, and global T20 leagues, he has built a career around timing, discipline, balance, and rare repeatability. His numbers already place him among Pakistan’s batting giants. His style has given Pakistan cricket something even more valuable: dignity under pressure.
As of June 2026, Babar has scored more than 15,700 international runs, with 32 international centuries and 108 international half-centuries. He has reached No. 1 in both ODI and T20I batting rankings and No. 3 in Test rankings. In the PSL, he stands as the tournament’s all-time batting benchmark.
Still, his story is not finished.
The next phase of Babar Azam’s career will decide whether he remains a statistical great or becomes the defining batting legacy of Pakistan cricket in the 21st century.
For more coverage, visit The Sports Encounter’s Cricket Hub.
Babar Azam Career Statistics Across All Formats
International Career Summary
| Format | Matches | Innings | Runs | Average | Strike Rate | Highest Score | 100s | 50s |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tests | 62 | 114 | 4,481 | 42.68 | 54.97 | 196 | 9 | 31 |
| ODIs | 143 | 140 | 6,626 | 53.44 | 86.60 | 158 | 20 | 38 |
| T20Is | 145 | 136 | 4,596 | 38.95 | 128.02 | 122 | 3 | 39 |
| Total | 350 | 390 | 15,703 | — | — | — | 32 | 108 |
Data note: Career statistics were checked against current cricket database listings on June 19, 2026. Minor match-count differences can appear across sources when recently completed matches or DNB entries are updated at different times.
The Batter Pakistan Waited Years to Find
Pakistan cricket has never lacked talent.
From Hanif Mohammad to Zaheer Abbas, Javed Miandad, Saeed Anwar, Inzamam-ul-Haq, Mohammad Yousuf, Younis Khan, and Misbah-ul-Haq, the country has produced batters with genius, courage, elegance, stubbornness, and memory-making power.
Even so, Babar Azam arrived with something different.
He did not enter international cricket as a chaos merchant. He did not make batting look like a street fight. Instead, he brought order. The head stayed still. The hands remained soft. The front foot moved with purpose. When the ball left his bat, it often looked less like a shot and more like a decision made early.
That quality mattered because Pakistan cricket has often lived at emotional extremes. One defeat can start a national inquiry. One dropped catch can become a week-long argument. One low score from a star can invite questions about intent, loyalty, captaincy, ego, and technique.
Inside that environment, Babar became the calmest face in the room.
His greatness is not built on one format, one tournament, or one unforgettable innings. It has come through accumulation. Match after match, year after year, format after format, he kept giving Pakistan runs when the team badly needed a batting identity.
That is why this tribute must go beyond numbers.
The numbers matter, of course. Yet Babar’s career also tells a bigger story about Pakistan cricket’s longing for stability, its harsh treatment of excellence, and its uneasy relationship with players who become larger than the system around them.
Babar Azam in ODIs: Pakistan’s Most Reliable Modern Run Machine
ODI cricket remains the format that best explains Babar Azam’s batting greatness.
The 50-over game asks more questions than many fans realize. A batter must survive the new ball, rotate strike, judge risk, handle spin, rebuild after wickets, and accelerate without losing shape. Power alone does not solve ODI cricket. Neither does patience alone. The great ODI players understand tempo.
Babar has understood that tempo better than any Pakistani batter of his era.
Babar Azam ODI Career
| Matches | Innings | Runs | Average | Strike Rate | Highest Score | 100s | 50s |
| 143 | 140 | 6,626 | 53.44 | 86.60 | 158 | 20 | 38 |
His ODI average is elite by global standards. For Pakistan, it is historic.
Babar became the fastest batter in ODI history to reach 5,000 runs, getting there in 97 innings. He later reached 6,000 ODI runs in 123 innings, another marker of rare consistency. With 20 ODI hundreds, he is level with Saeed Anwar for the most ODI centuries by a Pakistani batter.
That final detail carries emotional weight.
Saeed Anwar was not just another Pakistani opener. He was grace in motion, one of the most naturally gifted left-handers the country has produced. For Babar to stand alongside him on 20 ODI centuries is a major legacy moment. One more ODI hundred will move Babar clear at the top.
However, the more important point is this: Babar did not reach that mark through one golden year. He reached it through sustained excellence.
Pakistan’s batting order has often changed around him. Openers have come and gone. Middle-order experiments have failed. Finishers have been tried, dropped, recalled, and questioned. Through all that churn, Babar stayed as the reference point.
In ODIs, he is Pakistan’s safest bet, cleanest builder, and most reliable modern match-shaper.
Babar Azam in T20Is: The Record, the Argument, and the Misread Role
T20 cricket has created the most complicated public conversation around Babar Azam.
On paper, he is one of the most productive batters in the format’s history. In public debate, he is often judged through one narrow lens: strike rate.

That debate cannot be ignored. Modern T20 cricket has moved quickly. Teams now value boundary percentage, powerplay dominance, middle-over acceleration, matchup hitting, and finishing impact more than ever. Babar, like every elite player, has had to evolve with the format.
Still, reducing his T20I career to strike rate alone is poor cricket reading.
Babar Azam T20I Career
| Matches | Innings | Runs | Average | Strike Rate | Highest Score | 100s | 50s |
| 145 | 136 | 4,596 | 38.95 | 128.02 | 122 | 3 | 39 |
Babar has three T20I hundreds and 39 half-centuries. He has reached No. 1 in the ICC T20I batting rankings. He has also moved past some of the biggest names in the format on major run and fifty-making lists.
Yet the argument around him continues because Pakistan’s T20I structure has rarely given him a simple role.
Many times, Babar has opened or batted high in lineups where the middle order lacked reliable finishing power. In that situation, he was expected to score quickly, bat deep, protect against collapse, and still answer every criticism about tempo. That is not a normal batting brief. It is four jobs in one.
To be fair, Babar can still improve parts of his T20 game. He can take more calculated risks against spin between overs 7 and 12. He can turn more starts into high-impact 75s and 90s. When Pakistan have wickets in hand, he can press earlier without waiting for the final phase.
Those are cricket points, not personal attacks.
The difference matters.
A proper T20 debate should ask how Babar can evolve. A lazy debate pretends he has already failed. His record says otherwise.
Babar Azam’s Test Career: The Mountain Still Waiting
Babar’s Test career is strong, but it still feels like a story waiting for its grandest chapters.
That makes it the most important part of his legacy from here.
Babar Azam Test Career
| Matches | Innings | Runs | Average | Strike Rate | Highest Score | 100s | 50s |
| 62 | 114 | 4,481 | 42.68 | 54.97 | 196 | 9 | 31 |
His 196 against Australia in Karachi remains one of Pakistan’s great modern Test innings. It was not just a big score. It was resistance, patience, technique, and emotional control packed into one marathon performance.
However, Test cricket asks for more than flashes of greatness. It demands long-term authority.
Pakistan’s Test batting giants built legacies through innings that stayed in public memory. Hanif Mohammad had his 337. Javed Miandad had his streetwise mastery. Younis Khan had volume and overseas steel. Mohammad Yousuf had one of the greatest calendar years ever. Inzamam carried calm power. Misbah gave Pakistan late-career discipline and leadership.
The Technique of a Legend in the Making
Babar has the technique to belong in that company. Now he needs the second act.
His Test form dipped during a difficult stretch, and the criticism became intense. Pakistan cricket rarely separates form from emotion. Once a star batter struggles, technical issues quickly turn into public judgment. Babar felt that pressure.
Even so, recent signs have been better. His 68 and 47 against Bangladesh in May 2026 suggested that rhythm was returning. Those were not legacy-making scores, but they mattered because Test form often returns quietly before the big hundred arrives.
From here, Babar needs three things.
First, he needs long overseas innings that strengthen his record beyond home conditions.
Second, Pakistan must give him a stable role without constant captaincy noise or selection drama.
Third, he has to turn more 50s and 70s into 130s, 160s, and double hundreds.
If those pieces come together, Babar can still finish as one of Pakistan’s finest Test batters.
For readers interested in the broader technical discussion around modern batting, The Sports Encounter’s analysis on how the Lord’s pitch fiasco exposed modern-day batting technique offers useful context.
Major Records and Milestones Babar Azam Has Broken, Matched, or Chased
Babar’s record sheet is already heavy.
Some achievements belong to Pakistan cricket. Others place him in global company. A few remain active because he is still building his career.
Babar Azam Records and Milestones
| Record or Milestone | Detail |
| Fastest to 5,000 ODI runs | Reached the mark in 97 innings |
| Fastest to 6,000 ODI runs | Reached the mark in 123 innings |
| Most ODI centuries for Pakistan | 20, tied with Saeed Anwar |
| No. 1 ODI batter | Held the ICC ODI batting ranking |
| No. 1 T20I batter | Reached the top of ICC T20I batting rankings |
| Best Test ranking | Reached No. 3 in ICC Test batting rankings |
| ICC ODI Cricketer of the Year | Won in 2021 and 2022 |
| ICC Cricketer of the Year | Won the Sir Garfield Sobers Trophy for 2022 |
| PSL all-time leading run-scorer | More than 4,300 PSL runs |
| Most PSL 50-plus scores | More than 40 fifty-plus scores |
| PSL 2026 dominance | Scored 588 runs for Peshawar Zalmi |
These numbers should settle one thing: Babar is not living on reputation.
His style can sometimes trick people. Because he bats beautifully, some assume he is soft. That is a mistake. Beauty and toughness can exist in the same batter. In Babar’s case, elegance has often been the visible surface of discipline.
The real achievement is repeatability.
A few players can play one stunning innings. Far fewer can keep producing across formats, years, roles, and crises. Babar belongs to the second group.
Babar Azam in the Pakistan Super League: The Tournament’s Batting Benchmark
The Pakistan Super League is not just a domestic T20 competition. For Pakistan cricket, it is a public trial room.
Young fast bowlers attack without fear. Spinners bowl with freedom. Crowds react sharply. Social media judges every over. A bad PSL season can damage a player’s national conversation. A great one can rebuild a career.
Babar Azam has owned that stage.
Babar Azam PSL Career Summary
| Category | Record |
| PSL runs | 4,380 |
| Matches | 111 |
| Innings | 109 |
| Highest score | 115 |
| PSL centuries | 4 |
| PSL fifties | 39 |
| 50-plus scores | 43 |
| Teams | Islamabad United, Karachi Kings, Peshawar Zalmi |
| Span | 2016 to 2026 |
He is the highest run-scorer in PSL history. That is not a side note. It is a major part of his career.
PSL 2026 made that legacy even stronger.
Babar Azam in PSL 2026
| Team | Matches | Innings | Runs | Average | Highest Score | 100s | 50s |
| Peshawar Zalmi | 11 | 11 | 588 | 73.50 | 103 | 2 | 3 |
That was one of the finest PSL seasons any batter has produced. Babar scored two centuries, added three fifties, and led Peshawar Zalmi’s batting with authority. He also equaled the record for most runs in a single PSL season.
Beyond the runs, his partnership with Kusal Mendis became one of the tournament’s best stories. Their 191-run stand against Karachi Kings was the highest partnership in PSL history. Later, The Sports Encounter referenced that calm partnership while covering Sri Lanka’s T20I defeat against West Indies in Jason Holder Leads West Indies Past Sri Lanka as Kusal Mendis Misses the Calm He Found With Babar Azam.
That partnership showed one of Babar’s underrated strengths.
He does not only score runs. He gives others room to breathe. Stroke-makers can attack around him because he understands risk, pace, and structure. In a league filled with power-hitters, that kind of batting intelligence still wins matches.
Babar Azam’s Return to Form: The Quiet Rebuilding of a Champion
Every great batter eventually meets a difficult phase.
Babar’s dip felt heavier than most because it happened under captaincy pressure, team instability, and daily public scrutiny. His Test runs slowed, T20I strike rate became a recurring debate, and his place in certain squads was questioned. Even his leadership identity became part of the noise.
During that period, every innings felt like a public exam.
A start was not enough. A fifty brought questions about tempo. A low score became a character judgment. That is the burden of a player whose normal standard has become extraordinary.
Gradually, though, signs of recovery appeared.
His unbeaten ODI century against Sri Lanka in November 2025 ended a long wait for an international hundred. After that, his return to Pakistan’s T20I plans before the 2026 T20 World Cup showed that selectors still understood his value. Then came PSL 2026, where Babar did what great players often do when their aura is questioned: he answered through volume.
The 588-run PSL season was not nostalgia. It was evidence.
He scored heavily, he led the side, he built partnerships. He showed more intent than ever. Most importantly, he reminded Pakistan cricket that class does not disappear because form becomes complicated.
His ODI scores against Australia in June 2026, including 69, 16, and 40, did not fully settle the debate. However, they showed rhythm. The bigger innings still needs to come at international level, but the batting shape looks healthier than it did during his lowest spell.
That matters.
Babar’s next hundred will not only be a score. It will feel like a restoration.
Pakistan Cricket Politics and the Pressure Around Babar Azam
No serious article on Babar Azam can ignore the environment around him.
Pakistan cricket has always been emotional, political, brilliant, messy, and impatient. Selection changes, captaincy disputes, board instability, dressing-room leaks, former-player criticism, regional narratives, and media pressure have shaped careers for decades.
Babar has played his prime years inside that machine.
It would be irresponsible to claim, without evidence, that one individual or one group has deliberately tried to destroy his career. However, it would be equally dishonest to pretend Pakistan cricket gives its best players stable conditions.
History says otherwise.

Many Pakistani players have seen careers damaged by poor timing, sudden selection calls, captaincy politics, public campaigns, or weak player management. Some were pushed too early. Others were dropped too quickly. A few were never given proper role clarity. Several were praised after retirement more generously than they were protected during their careers.
Babar is not the first great Pakistani player to face this pattern.
He is simply facing it in the social media age, where every opinion travels faster and every failure becomes louder.
That creates a dangerous situation. A technical debate becomes a moral judgment. A strike-rate discussion becomes an attack on intent. A captaincy failure becomes a reason to question batting greatness. In the middle of that noise, the actual cricket often gets lost.
Pakistan must be careful here.
If the country wants Babar to become a true super legend, it cannot treat him as both its biggest hope and easiest scapegoat. Standards are necessary. Honest criticism is healthy. But chaos is not accountability.
Give him a clear role. Protect him from meaningless noise. Judge him by performance, impact, and improvement. Above all, stop using every team failure as proof against one batter.
That is how serious cricket systems handle rare players.
Technique, Grit, Focus, and the Babar Azam’s Method
Babar Azam’s technique starts with balance.
When he is batting well, his head remains still, his front foot moves with purpose, and his hands stay close to the body. The bat comes down straight. His wrists allow him to place the ball into gaps. His cover drive gets the praise, but his real strength is control through the hitting zone.
That control makes him special.
Many batters can hit a good ball once. Babar can repeat a scoring option without looking rushed. In ODIs and Tests, that repeatability becomes a weapon. In T20Is, it gives Pakistan structure, although he must keep adding sharper gears as the format evolves.
His grit is often misunderstood because it is quiet.
Some players perform toughness through gestures. Babar usually shows it by starting again. After criticism, he returns to the nets. After captaincy pressure, he bats. Following a slump, he rebuilds. After being questioned, he responds through method rather than theatre.
That is still toughness.
Younger cricketers can learn a lot from him. Not only Pakistani players, either. Any young batter watching Babar can see the value of alignment, patience, shot selection, fitness, and emotional control.
He proves that elegance does not mean weakness.
The modern game needs power, but it also needs players who know how to build an innings. Babar offers that lesson. He reminds young batters that timing still matters. Discipline still matters. Batting is still a craft, not only a highlights package.
For Pakistan specifically, that example is priceless.
A system full of raw talent needs visible standards. Babar has become one.
Babar Azam in International T20 Leagues
Babar’s T20 league career has taken him beyond Pakistan.
He has been associated with teams including Somerset, Colombo Strikers, Guyana Amazon Warriors, Rangpur Riders, Sylhet Sixers, and Sydney Sixers, along with his PSL teams Islamabad United, Karachi Kings, and Peshawar Zalmi.
His overseas league story is more mixed than his PSL record.
At Somerset, he produced strong moments and gained valuable county experience. In other leagues, his impact has varied depending on role, conditions, availability, and team balance. His Big Bash League stint with Sydney Sixers brought attention but also criticism around tempo.
That criticism should not be ignored, but it should be placed properly.
Franchise T20 cricket can be unforgiving. A player may bat in unfamiliar conditions, with different teammates, different bowling patterns, and different tactical expectations. Babar’s style is built on rhythm and structure, so some overseas league environments have not always shown his best version.
Even then, the challenge remains open.
A dominant overseas T20 league campaign would strengthen his global franchise reputation. It would also answer one of the few remaining questions around his T20 profile: can he impose himself in every league, not only in Pakistan’s familiar competitive ecosystem?
Babar should welcome that challenge.
Great players usually do.
Why Babar Should Not Be Trapped Inside Comparisons
Babar Azam and Virat Kohli will always be compared.
That is natural because India-Pakistan cricket turns every batting discussion into a rivalry. Kohli is an all-time giant. His chase record, ODI authority, Test captaincy legacy, fitness revolution, and global stature are enormous.
Respecting Babar does not require reducing Kohli. Admiring Kohli does not require dismissing Babar.
The problem begins when comparison becomes a cage.
Babar has played in a different cricket culture, a different system, and a different team structure. Kohli’s India had stronger financial infrastructure, deeper batting resources, the IPL ecosystem, and more stable long-term planning. Babar’s Pakistan has often had selection churn, middle-order uncertainty, board changes, and constant role confusion.
Their batting tasks have also differed.
Kohli often played within stronger, better-settled units. Babar has frequently carried Pakistan’s batting identity while also absorbing captaincy pressure and public expectation. In T20Is especially, that has affected how his innings are judged.
Therefore, the fairest way to evaluate Babar is through his own cricketing reality.
He is not Pakistan’s version of someone else.
He is Babar Azam.
That should be enough.
The greats do not need borrowed shadows. They need honest measurement, proper context, and time.
What Records Babar Azam Can Still Achieve
Babar is 31. If fitness, form, selection stability, and motivation remain with him, several major records are still within reach.
Records and Milestones Still Waiting for Babar Azam
| Possible Record or Milestone | Why It Is Within Reach |
| Most ODI centuries for Pakistan outright | He needs one more ODI hundred to move past Saeed Anwar |
| 7,000 ODI runs | He is already beyond 6,600 ODI runs |
| 8,000 ODI runs | Achievable with another strong ODI cycle |
| 10,000 ODI runs | Difficult, but possible if he plays deep into his 30s |
| 5,000 Test runs | Very close |
| 7,000 Test runs | Possible with sustained red-ball form |
| 8,000 Test runs | Requires a strong late-career Test peak |
| 25 Test centuries | Possible if he improves conversion |
| 5,000 T20I runs | Very close |
| Most international runs by a Pakistan batter | A long-term target if he plays consistently |
| Most international centuries by a Pakistan batter | Still possible with a strong final phase |
| More PSL records | Already the benchmark, but can stretch the record further |
| A defining global tournament | Still the emotional legacy prize |
The final point is the biggest.
Pakistan fans remember numbers, but they fall in love with moments. One World Cup knockout innings, one Champions Trophy final masterclass, one unforgettable Test hundred away from home, or one tournament carried almost alone could lift Babar’s legacy into a different emotional category.
He has already built the record base.
Now he needs the folklore.
Final Tribute: Pakistan’s Greatest Ever Batter Still Has More to Give
Babar Azam has given Pakistan cricket grace in an age of noise.
When the batting order looked fragile, he offered control. And when panic surrounded the team, he gave the innings shape. When criticism became personal, he kept returning to the crease. Through captaincy pressure, form dips, public debates, and changing expectations, the runs kept coming.
That is what great players do.
They do not escape struggle. They survive it long enough to make it part of the story.
Babar’s career already belongs among Pakistan’s finest. As an all-format batter, his case is stronger than anyone Pakistan has produced in the modern era. Others may have owned one format more completely. Some may have created bigger individual memories. A few may still hold deeper emotional places in Pakistan’s cricket imagination.
Even so, Babar’s combination of Test quality, ODI dominance, T20I volume, PSL supremacy, technique, consistency, and burden-bearing responsibility makes him unique.
Babar’s Test career still has room to rise. His T20 game still has gears to add. His ODI record still has milestones to break. There is no question about his PSL legacy that can stretch even further. The final chapter has not been written.
For now, this much is clear.
Babar Azam is not merely a player Pakistan should debate after every innings. He is a player Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) should protect, understand, and celebrate while he is still here.
Greatness does not always shout.
Sometimes, it arrives in a still head, a straight bat, and another cover drive that makes a nation pause for half a second before remembering how lucky it is.
FAQs
How many international runs has Babar Azam scored?
As of June 2026, Babar Azam has scored 15,703 international runs across Tests, ODIs, and T20Is.
How many international centuries does Babar Azam have?
Babar Azam has 32 international centuries: 9 in Tests, 20 in ODIs, and 3 in T20Is.
Is Babar Azam Pakistan’s greatest ever batter?
Babar Azam has the strongest case as Pakistan’s greatest all-format batter. Earlier legends remain vital to Pakistan’s cricket history, but Babar’s consistency across Tests, ODIs, T20Is, and the PSL makes his profile unique.
What is Babar Azam’s best format?
ODI cricket is statistically Babar Azam’s strongest format. He averages above 53, has scored 20 centuries, and has broken major fastest-runs milestones.
How many PSL runs has Babar Azam scored?
Babar Azam has scored 4,380 runs in the Pakistan Super League, making him the tournament’s all-time leading run-scorer.
What did Babar Azam do in PSL 2026?
Babar scored 588 runs for Peshawar Zalmi in PSL 2026, including 2 centuries and 3 fifties. It was one of the strongest individual seasons in PSL history.
Why should Babar Azam not be compared with Virat Kohli?
Babar and Virat Kohli can be compared statistically, but Babar should be assessed within his own cricketing environment, role, team structure, and national context. His legacy deserves its own frame.
Breaking News
England Fall Apart at Trent Bridge as New Zealand Seal Historic Comeback and Stokes Era Ends in Defeat
New Zealand completed a memorable 2-1 Test series comeback against England at Trent Bridge, winning the third Test by 160 runs as Ben Stokes’ international career ended with a painful home defeat.
England needed one last act of control to send Ben Stokes into retirement with a series win. Instead, Trent Bridge gave English cricket a colder ending: another batting collapse, another failed chase, and a New Zealand side celebrating one of its finest away series victories.
New Zealand beat England by 160 runs in the third Test at Nottingham, closing the match on the final day and taking the three-match series 2-1. For England, the defeat hurt on several levels. It ended Stokes’ international career in loss, raised sharper questions about the team’s direction, and confirmed a second straight Test defeat after the heavy setback at The Oval.
For New Zealand, it became a series to remember. They lost the first Test at Lord’s by 115 runs, then fought back with a 253-run win at The Oval and a commanding finish at Trent Bridge. That kind of response, away from home, against an England side built on aggression and pressure, says plenty about the Blackcaps’ temperament.
For more cricket coverage and long-form match analysis, visit The Sports Encounter’s Cricket Hub.
Match Snapshot
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Match | England vs New Zealand, 3rd Test |
| Venue | Trent Bridge, Nottingham |
| Result | New Zealand won by 160 runs |
| Series Result | New Zealand won 2-1 |
| Target | England needed 373 |
| England 2nd Innings | 212 all out |
| Player of the Match | Daryl Mitchell |
| Player of the Series | Nathan Smith |
New Zealand Built the Win Before the Final Day
The final scoreline tells only part of the story. New Zealand’s win came from pressure built across five days, not one final burst.
After winning the toss and batting first, New Zealand made 438. Devon Conway’s 157 and Tom Latham’s 151 gave the visitors the kind of first-innings base that makes chasing a Test match feel heavy from the start. England did respond through Ben Duckett’s 113, Jacob Bethell’s 74, and Harry Brook’s 58, but 354 still left them 84 behind.
That deficit mattered.
New Zealand then stretched the game through Daryl Mitchell and Rachin Ravindra. Mitchell’s unbeaten 100 from 241 balls was patient, stubborn, and perfectly suited to the situation. Ravindra’s 94 added fluency and control. When New Zealand declared on 288 for 9, England were left chasing 373.
That target was not impossible in modern cricket. England have built part of their identity around daring fourth-innings chases. Yet this was never only about the number. It was about New Zealand forcing England to bat with judgment after four days of pressure.
England could not do it.
England’s Chase Lost Shape Too Early
England began the final day already damaged at 103 for 4. Stokes had made 30 from 20 balls in his final international innings, but his dismissal on the fourth evening removed the emotional center of the chase. Ben Duckett made 36, Harry Brook 21, and Jacob Bethell fell without scoring.
The fifth morning demanded calm. England gave New Zealand more openings.
Emilio Gay edged Nathan Smith early. Joe Root, England’s best chance of a stabilizing innings, fell for 18 after a brilliant Henry Nicholls run-out. From there, England’s hopes narrowed to resistance rather than victory.
Jamie Smith fought hard for 60 from 90 balls and shared a 75-run stand with Gus Atkinson, who made 19 from 70 balls. That partnership showed England could still survive when they respected the situation. The problem was that too much damage had already been done.
Mitchell Santner helped finish the job, Zak Foulkes took three wickets, and Nathan Smith again showed why he became one of the defining players of the series.
Why England Lost Two Tests in a Row
England’s defeats at The Oval and Trent Bridge came from different match situations, but the pattern looked familiar.
At The Oval, New Zealand punished them with Matt Henry’s 11-wicket masterclass, Glenn Phillips’ century, and a ruthless final-day finish. The Sports Encounter covered that series-turning result in detail here: New Zealand Force Series Decider with a Crushing Win Over England in 2nd Test.
At Trent Bridge, England had Stokes back, Jofra Archer in the wickets, and enough batting depth to compete. Yet they lost key sessions through poor decision-making.
Their top order played too loosely in the chase. Their first innings had promise but never fully erased New Zealand’s advantage. Their second innings lacked the discipline required for a 373 chase. England seemed caught between instinct and responsibility, especially when the target required phases of patience rather than constant momentum.
That is the deeper issue. England’s aggressive style works best when players understand when to attack and when to absorb pressure. In this match, New Zealand handled those moments better.
New Zealand’s Comeback Was Built on Depth
New Zealand’s series comeback deserves serious respect because it came under pressure and without a fully fit attack in the decider.
Matt Henry, the hero of The Oval with 11 wickets, missed the third Test because of a calf injury. Glenn Phillips, who scored a crucial hundred in the second Test, was also unavailable. For many teams, losing two match-winners before a decider in England would become a built-in excuse.
New Zealand turned it into proof of depth.
Nathan Smith, Zak Foulkes, Will O’Rourke, and Santner all gave captain Tom Latham control in different phases. O’Rourke’s injury during the final day made the task even harder, but New Zealand never let the match drift. Their fielding stayed sharp. Their bowling plans stayed disciplined. Their batting partnerships kept England on the back foot.
Smith’s rise across the series was especially important. He took key wickets, carried responsibility, and finished as Player of the Series. In a series that began with New Zealand 1-0 down, his impact helped change the entire tone.
Stokes’ Farewell Leaves England With a Bigger Question
Ben Stokes’ retirement from international cricket gave the match an emotional layer England could not turn into performance.
His final game had moments that reflected his career: a four-wicket haul in the first innings, a brisk 30 in the chase, and the familiar sense that something dramatic might still happen while he was involved. But the ending belonged to New Zealand, not to Stokes.
The Sports Encounter covered the shock of his retirement announcement here: Ben Stokes Shocks World Cricket with Sudden Retirement.
Now England must solve two problems at once. They need a new captain, and they need clarity about their Test identity. Joe Root remains the experienced option, and Harry Brook looks like the natural long-term successor. Root’s continued excellence, including his return to the top of the Test batting rankings, remains central to England’s next phase. Read more here: Joe Root Reclaims No. 1 Test Ranking as England’s Modern Great Keeps Defying Time.
What This Series Means for New Zealand
This was not just a strong away win. It was a statement about New Zealand’s ability to regenerate.
Kane Williamson’s international farewell had already pushed the Blackcaps toward a new era. The Sports Encounter looked at that wider transition here: New Zealand Says Goodbye to Its Quietest Giant: Kane Williamson.
This series showed that New Zealand still have the structure, patience, and competitive nerve to win big matches away from home. Conway and Latham gave them old-school batting value. Mitchell and Ravindra controlled key middle phases. Smith and Foulkes showed the bowling group has fresh life beyond the established names.
They lost the first Test. They lost Henry before the decider. They lost Phillips too. Then they won the series.
That is why this comeback will sit high in New Zealand’s modern Test memories.
Final Verdict
England ended the series with too many questions and too little control. Their style still has power, but the last two Tests exposed the danger of turning aggression into habit. Stokes leaves behind a huge legacy, but he also leaves England at a difficult crossroads.
New Zealand leave England with something cleaner: a 2-1 series win, a historic comeback, and proof that their Test cricket still has steel.
At Trent Bridge, England wanted a farewell story.
New Zealand wrote a comeback story instead.
The Sports Encounter’s cricket coverage focuses on match reports, player performances, tactical analysis, selection debates, rankings, tournament trends, and the biggest stories shaping the modern game.
Breaking News
West Indies Crush Sri Lanka by an Innings as Jangoo, Chase and Roach Turn North Sound Into a Statement
West Indies crushed Sri Lanka by an innings and 217 runs at North Sound after Amir Jangoo’s 233, Roston Chase’s 194 and Kemar Roach’s 300th Test wicket.
West Indies produced one of their most complete Test wins in recent memory at North Sound, crushing Sri Lanka by an innings and 217 runs in the first Test after a match built on record-breaking batting, relentless fast bowling, and a milestone moment for Kemar Roach.
Sri Lanka made 308 after being sent in. West Indies replied with 626/9 declared, powered by Amir Jangoo’s 233, Roston Chase’s 194, and a 401-run sixth-wicket stand that rewrote both West Indies and Test cricket records. The hosts then dismissed Sri Lanka for 101 in the second innings to seal victory before tea on day four at the Sir Vivian Richards Stadium.
This was more than a big win.
It was a Test that gave West Indies a new batting story, a captain’s statement, a fast-bowling milestone, and a reminder of what their red-ball cricket can still look like when every part of the side clicks.
For more cricket coverage, follow The Sports Encounter’s Cricket section.
Key Facts: West Indies vs Sri Lanka, 1st Test
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Match | West Indies vs Sri Lanka, 1st Test |
| Venue | Sir Vivian Richards Stadium, North Sound, Antigua |
| Dates | June 25-28, 2026 |
| Series | Sri Lanka tour of West Indies |
| WTC cycle | ICC World Test Championship |
| Toss | West Indies won and chose to field |
| Sri Lanka 1st innings | 308 all out |
| West Indies 1st innings | 626/9 declared |
| Sri Lanka 2nd innings | 101 all out |
| Result | West Indies won by an innings and 217 runs |
| Major batting record | Amir Jangoo and Roston Chase added 401 for the sixth wicket |
| Major bowling milestone | Kemar Roach reached 300 Test wickets |
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West Indies Turn the Toss Into Control
West Indies won the toss and chose to bowl first, backing their seam attack to make early use of the North Sound surface.
Sri Lanka were not blown away immediately. Captain Dhananjaya de Silva produced a strong first-innings 120 from 168 balls, hitting 17 fours and giving the visitors a serious base. Dinesh Chandimal added 54, while Sonal Dinusha contributed 43.
A total of 308 gave Sri Lanka something to defend.
West Indies shared the wickets well. Justin Greaves took 3/39, Kemar Roach, Alzarri Joseph and Shamar Joseph picked up two wickets each, and Jayden Seales added one. At that stage, the Test was still alive.
Then West Indies slipped to 168/5.
Sri Lanka had an opening. West Indies had pressure. The match needed someone to take ownership.
Amir Jangoo and Roston Chase did far more than that.
Jangoo’s 233 Announces a New West Indies Match-Winner
Amir Jangoo walked into this Test with something to prove and left it with one of the great modern West Indies batting performances.
His 233 from 373 balls was not a loose, carefree innings. It was a long act of control. He batted for 579 minutes, struck 19 fours and three sixes, and turned a vulnerable West Indies position into total command.
Jangoo became only the third West Indies batter to score a Test double century against Sri Lanka, joining Brian Lara and Chris Gayle.
That company alone tells the story.
The innings mattered because of where it started. West Indies were 168/5 when Justin Greaves fell. Sri Lanka were still in the match. One more wicket could have changed the tone completely.
Instead, Jangoo settled in, absorbed pressure, trusted his scoring areas, and gradually broke Sri Lanka’s resistance.
By the time he was dismissed for 233, West Indies were already beyond Sri Lanka’s reach.
Chase Misses 200, But Captains the Test With 194
Roston Chase fell six runs short of a double century, but his 194 was every bit as valuable as Jangoo’s double hundred.
The West Indies captain faced 324 balls, batted for 512 minutes, and hit 13 fours and two sixes. It was his highest Test score and one of the defining innings of his career.
Chase did not simply ride Jangoo’s momentum. He helped create it.
He arrived when West Indies were rebuilding. He left when the match was effectively gone for Sri Lanka.
That is captaincy with the bat.
West Indies eventually declared on 626/9 after 160.5 overs, taking a 318-run first-innings lead.
Sri Lanka were no longer chasing victory. They were fighting for survival.
The 401-Run Stand That Rewrote West Indies and Test History
Jangoo and Chase added 401 runs for the sixth wicket.
That partnership broke two major records.
First, it became West Indies’ highest sixth-wicket partnership in Test cricket, breaking the previous national record of 282 between Brian Lara and Ridley Jacobs.
Second, it broke the overall Test record for the highest sixth-wicket partnership or lower, passing the 399-run stand between Ben Stokes and Jonny Bairstow against South Africa in Cape Town in 2016.
It also became the first 400-plus stand for the sixth wicket or lower in Test cricket history.
That number is the spine of this match.
West Indies were five down and vulnerable. Sri Lanka had found a route into the innings. Then Jangoo and Chase batted them out of the contest, out of the day, and ultimately out of the Test.
Match-Defining Partnerships
| Partnership | Runs | Wicket | Record/Impact |
| Amir Jangoo and Roston Chase | 401 | Sixth wicket | West Indies’ highest sixth-wicket Test stand and the highest sixth-wicket stand or lower in Test history |
| Brian Lara and Ridley Jacobs | 282 | Sixth wicket | Previous West Indies sixth-wicket Test partnership record |
| Dhananjaya de Silva and Sonal Dinusha | 99 | Sixth wicket | Helped Sri Lanka recover in the first innings |
| Brandon King and John Campbell | 58 | First wicket | Gave West Indies a stable start before early wickets fell |
Roach’s 300th Test Wicket Gives the Win Its Historic Soul
Kemar Roach’s second-innings spell gave this Test its emotional centerpiece.
Roach finished with 4/51 in the second innings and six wickets in the match. His fourth wicket of the innings was also his 300th in Test cricket.
The milestone came when he bowled Asitha Fernando.
Roach came wide of the crease, angled a full ball into middle stump from round the wicket, and rattled the stumps as Asitha swung and missed. Roach looked skyward and absorbed the moment. Bowling coach Ravi Rampaul rose to his feet. Jayden Seales, Shamar Joseph and Alzarri Joseph rushed toward him. Roston Chase embraced him.
Everyone wanted a piece of Roach.
It was more than one wicket.
Roach became only the fifth West Indies bowler to reach 300 Test wickets, joining Courtney Walsh, Curtly Ambrose, Malcolm Marshall and Lance Gibbs.
For a team trying to rebuild its Test identity around a new generation of quicks, the scene carried real meaning. The younger fast bowlers mobbing Roach showed what the milestone represented. The old guard had delivered again, and he had shown the next generation what endurance looks like.
Top 5 West Indies Test Wicket-Takers
| Rank | Bowler | Test Wickets | West Indies Legacy |
| 1 | Courtney Walsh | 519 | West Indies’ all-time Test wicket leader |
| 2 | Curtly Ambrose | 405 | One of the greatest fast bowlers in Test history |
| 3 | Malcolm Marshall | 376 | Widely regarded among cricket’s finest quicks |
| 4 | Lance Gibbs | 309 | West Indies’ greatest Test spinner |
| 5 | Kemar Roach | 300 | Fifth West Indies bowler to reach 300 Test wickets |
Kemar Roach in All-Time Test Wicket Context
| Category | Bowler | Country | Test Wickets | Why It Matters |
| All-time leader | Muttiah Muralitharan | Sri Lanka | 800 | Highest wicket-taker in Test history |
| Second all-time | Shane Warne | Australia | 708 | One of cricket’s defining match-winning spinners |
| Most by a fast bowler | James Anderson | England | 704 | Highest Test wicket tally by a seamer |
| West Indies leader | Courtney Walsh | West Indies | 519 | First fast bowler to reach 500 Test wickets |
| West Indies modern great | Kemar Roach | West Indies | 300 | Enters the elite 300-wicket Test club |
Sri Lanka Collapse Under Seam Pressure
Sri Lanka began their second innings 318 runs behind. They needed long partnerships, soft hands, and hours of concentration.
They found none of them.
Jayden Seales struck early, removing Pathum Nissanka for 3. Roach trapped Nishan Madushka lbw for 2. Seales then removed nightwatcher Kasun Rajitha for 4.
Sri Lanka were 19/3 after 5.1 overs.
That left Dinesh Chandimal trying to delay the inevitable. He made 43 from 60 balls, but Sri Lanka kept losing wickets around him. Shamar Joseph bowled Kamindu Mendis for 9 and trapped Dhananjaya de Silva lbw for a duck. That second wicket mattered because Dhananjaya had been Sri Lanka’s first-innings pillar.
Alzarri Joseph then bowled Kusal Mendis for 8.
Roach removed Chandimal, Milan Rathnayaka and Asitha Fernando during the second-innings collapse. Sri Lanka slipped from 71/6 to 84/9, and the Test was nearly done.
Seales completed the job.
He knocked over Lahiru Kumara with a sharp full ball from around the stumps. Kumara backed away again, looking for room, but could not connect. Seales connected with the stumps instead, sealing West Indies’ innings-and-217-run victory and triggering celebrations across the home camp.
Sri Lanka were all out for 101 in 31.2 overs.
West Indies Bowling Card: Sri Lanka Second Innings
| Bowler | Overs | Runs | Wickets | Economy |
| Kemar Roach | 11 | 51 | 4 | 4.63 |
| Jayden Seales | 10.2 | 14 | 3 | 1.35 |
| Shamar Joseph | 5 | 19 | 2 | 3.80 |
| Alzarri Joseph | 5 | 11 | 1 | 2.20 |
The numbers show the balance of the attack.
Roach supplied the landmark and the cutting edge. Seales gave control and the final blow. Shamar Joseph and Alzarri Joseph added pace, hostility, and pressure.
That mix is exactly what West Indies want from their Test bowling future.
Sri Lanka’s Worrying Lessons
Sri Lanka had one major first-innings performance from Dhananjaya de Silva, one useful contribution from Chandimal, and too little else.
Their first innings total of 308 looked competitive only until West Indies batted. Once Jangoo and Chase took control, Sri Lanka needed a disciplined second innings to make West Indies bat again.
Instead, they collapsed.
The second innings tells the story:
| Score | Situation |
| 8/1 | Nissanka gone early |
| 19/3 | Top order broken |
| 48/5 | Dhananjaya dismissed for 0 |
| 71/6 | Kusal Mendis gone |
| 84/9 | Roach tears through the tail |
| 101 all out | Seales seals the win |
Sri Lanka were not only beaten by runs. They were beaten by pressure, scoreboard weight, and a West Indies pace attack that kept asking questions.
Their bowlers also paid the price for the Jangoo-Chase stand. Milan Rathnayaka worked hard for 5/124. Sonal Dinusha bowled 56 overs and conceded 234. By the time Sri Lanka came out for their second innings, they had already spent too much time chasing the game.
Why This Massive Victory Matters for West Indies
This was a statement win because every part of the West Indies side contributed.

Jangoo gave the batting order a new story. Chase led with authority. Roach reached 300 wickets. Seales looked sharp and controlled. Shamar Joseph and Alzarri Joseph brought energy. Greaves played an important first-innings role with the ball.
The scale of the victory matters too.
An innings-and-217-run win in a World Test Championship match gives West Indies more than points. It gives belief that their Test side can still produce complete performances when batting depth and fast-bowling discipline arrive together.
For supporters who have seen too many fragmented West Indies Test displays, this match offered something different: control from the middle of day two until the final wicket.
Roach Feature Earmarked
Kemar Roach’s 300-wicket milestone deserves its own full feature.
This match report captures the moment, but Roach’s career needs a deeper look. His brilliance has never been built on noise. He carried West Indies fast bowling across different eras, survived injuries, adapted as pace declined, stayed skilful enough to keep taking wickets, and now stands as the bridge between Walsh, Ambrose, Marshall, Gibbs and the new generation of Seales, Shamar Joseph and Alzarri Joseph.
That story deserves a standalone tribute.
Final Verdict
West Indies crushed Sri Lanka because they owned the decisive moments.
Jangoo and Chase turned 168/5 into 626/9 declared with a 401-run record stand. Roach gave the win its historic heartbeat with his 300th Test wicket. Seales delivered the final strike. The fast bowlers finished the job with a second-innings demolition.
Sri Lanka were beaten by an innings and 217 runs because West Indies never let them back into the contest.
At North Sound, West Indies found runs, records, wickets, rhythm, and legacy in the same Test match.
That is why this win feels bigger than the scorecard.
FAQs
What was the result of West Indies vs Sri Lanka 1st Test?
West Indies beat Sri Lanka by an innings and 217 runs at North Sound.
What were the final scores?
Sri Lanka made 308 and 101. West Indies made 626/9 declared.
Who scored the most runs in the match?
Amir Jangoo top-scored with 233 for West Indies.
What record did Amir Jangoo and Roston Chase break?
They added 401 for the sixth wicket, West Indies’ highest sixth-wicket Test partnership and the highest sixth-wicket stand or lower in Test history.
Whose West Indies sixth-wicket record did Jangoo and Chase break?
They broke the previous West Indies sixth-wicket Test record of 282 between Brian Lara and Ridley Jacobs.
Did Kemar Roach reach 300 Test wickets?
Yes. Roach became only the fifth West Indies bowler to reach 300 Test wickets.
Who took the final wicket?
Jayden Seales bowled Lahiru Kumara to complete West Indies’ innings-and-217-run win.
Who are the top five West Indies Test wicket-takers?
Courtney Walsh, Curtly Ambrose, Malcolm Marshall, Lance Gibbs and Kemar Roach.
The Sports Encounter’s cricket coverage focuses on match reports, player performances, tactical analysis, selection debates, rankings, tournament trends, and the biggest stories shaping the modern game.
Breaking News
Ireland Clean Sweep T20I World Champions India in Belfast
Ireland completed one of their greatest cricket weekends, beating India by one run in Belfast to seal a historic 2-0 T20I series sweep.
Ireland have delivered one of the greatest weekends in their cricket history.
Two days after beating India for the first time in any format, Lorcan Tucker’s side stunned the reigning T20 world champions again in Belfast, defending 154 to win the second T20I by one run and complete a historic 2-0 clean sweep.
India finished on 153/9 chasing 155, leaving Ireland’s players walking around Stormont to acknowledge a crowd that had just witnessed a landmark moment for the sport in the country.
This was a series Ireland entered as outsiders. They leave it with a first-ever series win over India in any format, a 2-0 sweep over the world champions, and a result that brought India’s 16-series undefeated T20I run to a grinding halt.
For more cricket coverage, visit The Sports Encounter’s Cricket section.
Key Facts: Ireland vs India, 2nd T20I
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Match | Ireland vs India, 2nd T20I |
| Venue | Civil Service Cricket Club, Stormont, Belfast |
| Date | June 28, 2026 |
| Toss | India won and chose to field |
| Ireland score | 154/8 in 20 overs |
| India score | 153/9 in 20 overs |
| Result | Ireland won by 1 run |
| Series result | Ireland won 2-0 |
| Historic record | Ireland’s first-ever series win over India in any format |
| Major India streak ended | 16 consecutive undefeated T20I series or tournament run |
| First T20I result | Ireland won by 34 runs |
| Second T20I heroes | Harry Tector, Jai Moondra, Matt Hollard, Ben Calitz |
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Ireland Turn One Shock Into a Series Statement
The first win was historic. The second made it unforgettable.
Ireland had already shaken cricket by beating India by 34 runs in the opening T20I at the same ground. That result gave Ireland their first win over India in any format after years of one-way history between the two sides.
The challenge after that was emotional and tactical.
Could Ireland back it up?
Could they handle India’s response?
Could a side missing five first-choice players and working with a weakened attack produce the same discipline again?
By the end of Sunday, the answer had landed loudly.
Ireland defended another total India would have backed themselves to chase. They held their nerve through a chaotic final over. They trusted their bowlers. They kept attacking India’s confidence. They closed out the series with a clean sweep that will sit among the proudest weekends Irish cricket has known.
Harry Tector Gives Ireland a Fighting Total
Ireland’s 154/8 was not a runaway score, but it gave their bowlers something to work with.
Harry Tector held the innings together with 53 off 47 balls, hitting five fours and one six. It was not a flashy T20 innings. It was more important than that. Ireland had lost early wickets, and Tector’s job was to keep the innings alive long enough for someone to change the tempo.
That support came from Ben Calitz, whose 37 off 23 balls gave Ireland the acceleration they badly needed. Calitz struck three fours and two sixes, lifting the total after Ireland had slipped into a dangerous middle phase.
Ross Adair’s 16 off seven balls gave the innings early punch, while George Dockrell’s 19 off 14 added useful late runs.
Ireland’s innings followed a pattern that defined the whole series. They never looked entirely safe, but they kept finding enough.
That mattered because India’s bowlers had created opportunities.
Prince Yadav, on T20I debut, was India’s standout performer with 3/22 in four overs. He removed Lorcan Tucker, Harry Tector and Liam McCarthy, showing control and composure in his first international appearance.
Arshdeep Singh took 2/35, Shivam Dube claimed 2/25, and Harshit Rana kept things tight with 1/17 from three overs.
At the break, India needed 155. Against most sides, that would have looked manageable. Against Ireland in Belfast this weekend, it became a test of nerve.
India’s Chase Cracks in the First Five Overs
India lost the match long before the final ball.
The chase began with chaos. Sanju Samson fell lbw to Jai Moondra from the first ball of the innings. Abhishek Sharma followed for another duck before the first over was complete.
India were 0/1 after one ball, 1/2 after four balls, and 19/3 when captain Shreyas Iyer was bowled by Moondra for 10.
Then Ishan Kishan was run out for 12, leaving India 35/4 after 4.5 overs.
That was the moment Ireland’s belief turned into control.
Moondra had already damaged India in the first T20I. This time, he tore through the top order again. His 3/32 gave Ireland the dream start they needed and placed India’s chase under stress from the opening over.
India still had batting depth, but the early collapse changed the tempo of everything that followed. Every single became heavier. Every dot ball became louder. Every boundary carried the feeling of recovery rather than control.
Tilak Varma Fights, But Ireland Keep Finding Wickets
Tilak Varma gave India hope.
His 55 off 46 balls was the only true anchor in the chase. He absorbed pressure, rebuilt the innings with Axar Patel, and reached his half-century from 45 balls.
But Ireland kept breaking partnerships before India could breathe.
Axar Patel made 14 off 18 before Matt Hollard removed him. Shivam Dube threatened with 20 off 16, but Matthew Humphreys dismissed him at 109/6. Then came the wicket that tilted the match fully toward Ireland.
Tilak, set and dangerous, fell to Hollard for 55 in the 18th over.
India were 117/7.
Suryansh Shedge followed shortly after, also falling to Hollard, and India were 121/8 with their recognized batting almost gone.
Hollard finished with 3/26 from four overs. That mattered because this was not a one-off impact. He had already been central to Ireland’s first win in the series. In the space of one weekend, he became one of the defining figures of Ireland’s greatest T20I series result.
Final Over Chaos, One-Run Glory
India entered the final over needing 20 runs.

At 135/8 after 19 overs, Ireland were heavy favorites. But India still had Harshit Rana and Arshdeep Singh at the crease, and the final over turned into one last test of composure.
India found boundaries. Ireland conceded extras. The pressure climbed again. Harshit Rana’s late hitting dragged India back into a contest that had looked nearly done.
Then he fell for 21 off 10 balls.
Prince Yadav’s late six brought India painfully close, but Ireland held on by one run. India closed on 153/9.
The margin made the result even more dramatic. Ireland won the first game by 34 runs with authority. They won the second by one run with nerve.
Great weekends need both.
India’s 16-Series Run Ends in Belfast
This result carries major weight because of who Ireland beat and what they stopped.
India arrived in Ireland as reigning T20 world champions. They also carried a 16-series undefeated T20I run, a mark of consistency that had turned them into the benchmark side in the format.
Ireland ended that run in two matches.
The first win proved they could hurt India. The second proved they could handle India’s response.
That is why this clean sweep should be treated as a defining Irish cricket result, not a passing upset. India were expected to level the series after the first defeat. Instead, they lost the toss advantage, the chase, the series, and a major streak.
For India, the questions will be sharp.
Why did the top order collapse twice in Belfast? Why did the chase feel rushed after early wickets? Why did a lineup with enough experience fail to manage two chaseable totals? And why did Ireland look calmer in the pressure moments?
Shreyas Iyer’s side will now carry those questions into a demanding England series.
Lorcan Tucker’s Ireland Deserve Their Bow
This series belongs to Lorcan Tucker and his team.
Ireland were without several regulars. Their attack was weakened. Their squad carried fresh faces. Tucker had only recently taken over the T20I captaincy. Against India, that could have become a reason for survival mode.
Instead, Ireland played with clarity.
They used the conditions. They bowled into the pitch. They forced Indian batters to hit into bigger boundaries. They defended totals that demanded collective discipline rather than one superstar performance.
Across the two games, the pattern was striking.
In the first T20I, Ireland posted 182/9 and bowled India out for 148.
In the second, they posted 154/8 and restricted India to 153/9.
Two games. Two defended totals. Two Indian chases broken by Irish pressure.
The players’ lap around the ground after the match captured the scale of it. This was a thank-you to the crowd, but also a moment of recognition. Irish cricket had just given its supporters a weekend they will talk about for years.
What This Means for Ireland
Ireland now have proof they can beat elite opposition across a series, not only in isolated moments.
That matters for rankings, belief, selection pressure, sponsorship, public attention, and the next generation watching from the stands.
Harry Tector’s batting showed maturity. Tucker’s leadership passed a major early test. Moondra and Hollard gave Ireland new bowling identities. Calitz added punch. Dockrell offered experience. Humphreys and McCarthy gave the attack balance.
This was a team result in the truest sense.
Ireland did not win because India gifted them one bad hour. They won because they kept forcing India into bad decisions over two matches.
Final Verdict
Ireland’s 2-0 clean sweep over India in Belfast is one of the most important results in their cricket history.
They beat the reigning T20 world champions twice. They defended two totals India would have expected to chase. They ended a 16-series undefeated T20I run. They did it while short of key players and with a reshaped attack.
This was Ireland’s weekend.
Lorcan Tucker and his players deserve every step of that lap of honor.
FAQs
What was the result of Ireland vs India 2nd T20I?
Ireland beat India by one run in Belfast. Ireland scored 154/8, and India finished on 153/9.
Did Ireland win the series against India?
Yes. Ireland won the two-match T20I series 2-0.
Is this Ireland’s first series win over India?
Yes. This is Ireland’s first-ever series victory over India in any format.
Who starred for Ireland in the second T20I?
Harry Tector scored 53, Ben Calitz made 37, while Jai Moondra and Matt Hollard took three wickets each.
Who top-scored for India in the chase?
Tilak Varma top-scored for India with 55 off 46 balls.
What major India streak did Ireland end?
Ireland ended India’s 16-series undefeated run in T20I cricket.
The Sports Encounter’s cricket coverage focuses on match reports, player performances, tactical analysis, selection debates, rankings, tournament trends, and the biggest stories shaping the modern game.
