India will be desperate to address their middle-order batting woes and sloppy fielding when they take on Bangladesh in a must-win Women’s T20 World Cup Group A clash on Thursday in Manchester. Despite sitting second in the points table, India’s semifinal qualification chances hang by a thread as they need to win their remaining both games to have a shot.
While Australia have cemented their place in the semifinals, India and South Africa fight for the second spot from Group A. Both South Africa and India are on four points each. While India have Bangladesh and Australia in front of them, South Africa face relatively easier opponents in Bangladesh and the Netherlands in their final two group encounters.
Runners-up in the 2020 edition, India started their campaign with wins over Pakistan and the Netherlands. A six-wicket loss to South Africa derailed their campaign. India entered the 12-team tournament with the form of their top order as a concern, but Smriti Mandhana and Shafali Verma have largely allayed those fears.
However, the inability of the middle order to get going has emerged as a fresh concern for the team management. Skipper Harmanpreet Kaur, Jemimah Rodrigues and Yastika Bhatia have each been unable to carry on the momentum provided by the openers, and their failure to accelerate invariably has left a lot to do for the likes of Richa Ghosh and Deepti Sharma.
Having played three matches each, both Kaur and Rodrigues have managed just 11 boundaries between them without hitting a single six. Yastika, meanwhile, has struck only three fours in two innings, numbers that are likely to worry the Indian camp heading deeper into the tournament.
The top two teams from each groups will advance to the semifinals and India would not want to be in a situation where they are challenged for that second spot by South Africa.
India’s semifinal qualification scenarios
Scenario 1: If India beat Bangladesh, Australia
The safest route for India is to beat both Bangladesh (June 25) and Australia (June 28) to finish on maximum of 8 points and qualify for semifinals. Even if third-placed South Africa win both their remaining games, India will go through, courtesy their better net run rate (NRR). India’s current NRR is +2.511 as compared to South Africa’s -0.546.
Scenario 2: If India win one and lose one
In case India win one and lose one in their remaining two games, it would Harmanpreet Kaur side to six points. In that case, India need South Africa to lose one of their remaining games (against Netherlands or Bangladesh), which is very much unlikely. If South Africa lose a game, India qualify for the last four on NRR. If the Proteas win both, India are out.
Scenario 2: If India lose to Australia, Bangladesh
In case India lose both their games against Bangladesh and Australia, India will stand eliminated, thus extending their quest for a maiden Women’s T20 World Cup title by two more years.
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