Before the start of the ICC Men's T20 World Cup, India were the overwhelming favourites to win the tournament. But after heavy losses to Pakistan and then New Zealand on two Sundays in Dubai, India is now in danger of making an early exit from the tournament, in complete reversal of their pre-tournament billing. The crushing eight-wicket loss to New Zealand has caused massive damage to their plans for entering the knockout stages.
We take a look at the reasons behind India's second consecutive loss in the tournament:
1. Insipid batting display
A pattern has emerged from India's batting display in both losses: Batters failing to rise to the occasion. Against Pakistan, the openers were dismissed in the power-play and the opponents tightened the grip in the middle as well as death overs as India registered a below-par 151/7. The same script repeated itself against New Zealand on Sunday. Though India rejigged their batting order by getting Ishan Kishan to open and pushing Rohit Sharma to three, it didn't yield the desired results as the openers were dismissed in power-play. With the run-flow stemmed in the middle overs, India were unable to get boundaries, resulting in a gap of 71 balls for boundaries between the sixth and 17th overs. None of the Indian batters went past 30 as they crumbled to 110/7 in 20 overs, their second-lowest score in Men's T20 World Cups.