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Player of the Match
Player of the Match

Semi-final spot on the line in Mohali

Match facts

Sunday, March 27, 2016
Start time 1930 local (1400 GMT)

play3:00
Manjrekar: India top four worrisome

Sanjay Manjrekar and Mahela Jayawardene say while India are favourites, their top order minus Virat Kohli must produce

Big Picture

And so, here it is. The last game in Group 2, a straight knockout match between India and Australia. They have arrived here not via long and winding roads, but short and parallel ones. Both lost their opening games of this tournament to New Zealand. Both beat Pakistan. And both scraped home against Bangladesh, though not without some palpitations. Now, 12 days after the tournament proper began, the parallels will end, with one of these teams to move through to the semi-finals.

Not that everything has been the same for these two teams. India's selectors have stuck firm throughout the tournament, using the same 11 players in every match so far. Australia have made changes in every match and have used 14 of their 15 squad members, with fast bowler Andrew Tye the only man yet to be chosen.

Australia were similarly unsettled when these two teams met in a three-match series in Australia in January, India using only 11 players (the same 11 from this World T20) and Australia trying a whopping 19 different men. There's flexible and then there's frantic, and it's not clear which Australia have been in T20 cricket recently. They lost all three games to India in that series, yet have done enough to get themselves one match from a World T20 semi-final.

The last time India played at home to Australia in a world event was the quarter-final of the 2011 World Cup, when MS Dhoni's men triumphed in Ahmedabad. They went on to win that tournament at home, one of the greatest moments in Indian cricket. If they are to repeat that success in the World T20, they must first get through this quasi quarter-final.

Form guide

(last five completed matches, most recent first)

India: WWLWW

Australia: WWLWW

In the spotlight

Handling spin has never been a strength of Australia's, and Ravindra Jadeja will turn the ball away from a batting order heavy on right-handers. Jadeja is India's leading wicket taker in this tournament (though with only four to his name that may not be saying much) and will hope to find whatever turn there is in a Mohali pitch expected to be on the slow side.

James Faulkner occupies an extremely important role for Australia in this tournament, his batting key during the late stages of an innings and his bowling offering an important point of difference, as Australia's only left-arm seamer. His use of the slower ball earned him a five-for against Pakistan, and at the same venue he would be dreaming of the same kind of performance against India.

Team news

India have not changed their side so far in the tournament; don't expect them to start now. An unchanged XI is almost certain.

India (probable) 1 Rohit Sharma, 2 Shikhar Dhawan, 3 Virat Kohli, 4 Suresh Raina, 5 Hardik Pandya, 6 MS Dhoni (capt & wk), 7 Yuvraj Singh, 8 Ravindra Jadeja, 9 R Ashwin, 10 Jasprit Bumrah, 11 Ashish Nehra

Australia have ummed and ahhed in this tournament, unsure whether to stack the team with allrounders or trust the specialists, and their batting order has been constantly changing according to the team balance. It is just possible the batting group may stay the same for this game, though Nathan Coulter-Nile must be under pressure to retain his spot in the attack having failed to take a wicket in three games this tournament.

Australia (possible) 1 Usman Khawaja, 2 Aaron Finch, 3 David Warner, 4 Steven Smith (capt), 5 Glenn Maxwell, 6 Shane Watson, 7 James Faulkner, 8 Peter Nevill (wk), 9 Adam Zampa, 10 John Hastings/Nathan Coulter-Nile, 11 Josh Hazlewood.

Pitch and conditions

There were plenty of runs in the Mohali pitch against Pakistan when Australia made 193 for 4, and spin played less of a role than it has at some venues. A slowish surface is again expected, and it must be noted that by the time the men walk out for the toss the pitch will already have been used for 40 overs, with the India Women and West Indies Women playing on the same pitch in their match earlier in the day. The forecast for Sunday is good.

Stats and trivia

  • India have won the past five T20s between the sides, with Australia's last win having come at the 2012 World T20 in Sri Lanka

  • Against Pakistan, James Faulkner became the first Australian to claim a five-wicket haul in a T20 international

Quotes

"This format requires you to be at the top of your focus and concentration for 120 balls with the bat and on the field as well. That's the only thing we can look to do."

India batsman Virat Kohli

"I suppose that's what I've learnt over my whole career - it is a very important game but really you've just got to put it in the context that it's just another game."

Retiring Australia allrounder Shane Watson puts things in perspective

  • Virat Kohli assault guides India to Semi-finals

    A 51-ball 82 from Virat Kohli, helped India qualify for the Semi-Finals of the World T20, as they beat Australia by six wickets, with five balls to spare in Mohali on Sunday.

  • 'Emotional' Kohli rates Mohali knock his best

    An emotional Virat Kohli called his unbeaten, match-winning, World T20 semi-final spot sealing 82 off 51 balls as his best innings in the format

  • Dhoni hails Kohli's 'incredible innings'

    India captain MS Dhoni called Virat Kohli's unbeaten 82 an "incredible innings" after he had helped his team into the World T20 semi-finals with a six-wicket win over Australia

  • Watson skips into T20 retirement

    Shane Watson skipped from the field when he imagined Australia had won and there was still a spring in his step after Virat Kohli ensured that his T20 career ended two games earlier than he wanted

  • 'Let ourselves down in middle overs' - Smith

    Steven Smith pointed the finger squarely at Australia's batting through the middle overs, as he has done throughout the tournament, as the key impediment to T20 success

The chase master

122.83

Kohli's average in successful run-chases in T20Is, at a SR of 131: in 15 inngs he has scored 737 runs with 9 not-outs

India on top

6

Consecutive T20I victories for India versus Australia

Kohli v Australia

53.16

Kohli's T20I average v Australia, in 8 innings before today's game. In chases, his average is only 33 from 4 innings

Advantage Australia

16

The difference in runs scored at the halfway stage - Australia were 81 for 3 after 10, compared to India's 65 for 3

Australia's slowdown

51

Runs scored by Australia in ten overs from the 5th to the 14th, after scoring 53 in the first four. They scored 56 in the last six

Flying start

53

Australia's score after 4 overs, their 2nd highest in a T20I; their highest is 55, v WI in Sydney, 2010

Costly Ashwin

22

Runs conceded by Ashwin in his first over, his second highest in a T20I; his worst is 24, v Aus in Rajkot, 2013

To bat first or chase?

6-7

Win-loss record for teams batting first in Mohali, in the last three IPL seasons

Australia's nemesis

8

Number of T20I matches Australia have lost v India. It's their most losses v any team, and India's most wins v an opponent

ICC Men's T20 World Cup

Super 10 Group 1
TeamMWLPTNRR
WI43160.359
ENG43160.145
SA42240.651
SL4132-0.461
AFG4132-0.715
Super 10 Group 2
TeamMWLPTNRR
NZ44081.9
IND4316-0.305
AUS42240.233
PAK4132-0.093
BAN4040-1.805
First Round Group A
TeamMWLPTNRR
BAN32051.938
NED31130.154
OMA3113-1.521
IRE3021-0.685
First Round Group B
TeamMWLPTNRR
AFG33061.54
ZIM3214-0.567
SCOT3122-0.132
HKG3030-1.017