- January 6, 2026
- Updated 11:31 am
Making the cut
Strap: Home World Cup, high expectations & a squad that blends proven winners with restless new firepower
Blurb:
When India begin their title defence against the USA in Mumbai on February 7, 2026, they will carry the weight of expectation and the responsibility of delivery
Byline: Rakesh Ganesh
As the cricketing spotlight swivels back to the subcontinent, India return not just as hosts, but as the defending champions of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup. Co-hosted by India and Sri Lanka from February 7 to March 8, 2026, the tournament sets the stage for a month of breathless, high-voltage cricket, with 20 teams jostling for supremacy.
Yet, for all the grandeur on the horizon, the build-up to India’s squad announcement arrived without the usual buzz. There were meant to be no shocks, no curveballs, nothing to suggest upheaval after months of settled selections. And still, here we are. Because in Indian cricket, calm is often just the prelude to a storm. So, who paid the price, and who survived the cut?
Title defence activated
India didn’t just win the last T20 World Cup in the Americas in June 2024, they owned it. Under Rohit Sharma, the campaign was ruthless and pristine. Unbeaten through the league and Super Eight stages, England comfortably dispatched in the semifinal, and a nerve-shredding final where South Africa somehow going down by seven runs in a moment of collective unravelling, it’s was a dream run. The trophy was lifted, the confetti settled, and as is always the case in Indian cricket, the churn began almost instantly.
The T20 World Cup waits for no one. With the tournament returning every two years, planning for the next assault started before the echoes of celebration had fully faded. The immediate retirements of Rohit Sharma, Virat Kohli, and Ravindra Jadeja from T20 internationals only accelerated the process, forcing selectors to confront the uncomfortable task of filling generational voids.
And yet, continuity remains the spine of this title defence. Eight members of the 2024 triumph, Suryakumar Yadav (now leading the side), Axar Patel (his trusted lieutenant), Hardik Pandya, Shivam Dube, Arshdeep Singh, Jasprit Bumrah, Sanju Samson, and Kuldeep Yadav, are back for another tilt at glory.
Those missing from the previous squad include the retired trio of Rohit, Kohli, and Jadeja, along with Yashasvi Jaiswal, Rishabh Pant, Mohammed Siraj, and Yuzvendra Chahal. In their place stand Abhishek Sharma, Tilak Varma, Washington Sundar, Ishan Kishan, Harshit Rana, Varun Chakaravarthy, and Rinku Singh, names that reflect both ambition and intent.
Doubt India at your peril. Since SKY took over as full-time captain from the Sri Lanka tour last July, India haven’t lost a match, seven wins on the bounce, bolstered by bilateral sweeps at home and away against Sri Lanka, South Africa, and Australia, and capped by a flawless 7–0 run at the Asia Cup in the UAE, where Pakistan were brushed aside three times in as many Sundays.
Four defeats in their last 29 matches, never more than one in a series, and the comfort of home conditions for nearly the entire tournament, installing India as favourites isn’t bold prediction. It’s simply the most logical conclusion.
From certainties to casualties
If India’s squad announcement needed a gasp-inducing moment, it arrived swiftly with Shubman Gill’s omission. The Test and ODI captain, also India’s T20I vice-captain, had been pencilled in as a first-choice opener alongside Abhishek Sharma since the Asia Cup earlier this year. His absence has blown the doors open at the top. Sanju Samson, who previously ceded his opening slot to Gill, suddenly finds himself back in contention, though the path is anything but clear.
Waiting in the wings is Ishan Kishan, returning to the national fold after nearly two years in exile, armed with domestic numbers too loud to ignore. His run-fest at the 2025 Syed Mushtaq Ali Trophy, where he finished as the leading run-scorer and steered Jharkhand to a historic maiden title, forced India’s hand and, in the process, created room for Rinku Singh, a name missing from recent T20I squads.
All debates aside, the talking stops here. When India begin their title defence against the USA in Mumbai on February 7, they will carry the weight of expectation and the responsibility of delivery. This is the core group entrusted with defending the crown, blending proven match-winners with fearless new-age firepower, leadership with flexibility, pedigree with promise. From here on, reputations don’t matter, only performances do.
BOX – I
India’s T20 World Cup squad:
Suryakumar Yadav (c), Abhishek Sharma, Tilak Varma, Hardik Pandya, Shivam Dube, Axar Patel (vc), Ishan Kishan (wk), Sanju Samson (wk), Jasprit Bumrah, Varun Chakravarthy, Arshdeep Singh, Kuldeep Yadav, Harshit Rana, Rinku Singh, Washington Sundar.
BOX – II
India’s T20 World Cup Titles
- Champions: 2007, 2024
- Runner-Up: 2014
- Participations: India has played in every edition of the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup since its inception in 2007.
BOX – III
All-Time Performance (India @ T20 WC)
- Total Matches Played: 53
- Wins: 35
- Losses: 15
- Ties/No Results: 3
- Titles Won: 2 (2007, 2024)