
Following India‘s heavy 76-run defeat to South Africa, the team’s strategy for their must-win T20 World Cup 2026 Super 8 game against Zimbabwe in Chennai on February 26, 2026, has become a major talking point.
Two-time World Cup-winning captain Ricky Ponting and former India coach Ravi Shastri have offered sharp tactical advice to help the defending champions keep their campaign alive, specifically addressing the controversial exclusion of vice-captain Axar Patel. This loss snapped a 12-match winning streak, creating an urgent need for the Indian think-tank to resolve their selection puzzles before wrapping up the Super Eight stage against the West Indies in Kolkata this Sunday.
Ricky Ponting’s plea for simplicity and the best XI for India’s Super 8 game vs Zimbabwe
Ponting has urged the Indian management to stop over-complicating selection based on opponent matchups and instead return to the fundamentals of squad building. He believes the decision to bench vice-captain Axar Patel to avoid bowling a left-arm spinner to South Africa’s left-handers was a tactical error that ignored the core value of fielding the strongest possible team. Ponting emphasized that a captain’s primary skill lies in the ‘art’ of managing world-class bowlers effectively within a game, rather than completely removing them from the XI based on the handedness of the opposition batters.
“Listening to the commentary, the reason Axar didn’t play is because of the left-handers in the opposition side. But there’s still some right-handers there. It just comes down to the art of the captain of being able to use Axar at the right time. I would be going back to the basics. I’d be just looking at their lineup. Who’s our best XI for the conditions in Chennai?” Ponting was quoted as saying by ICC.
The case for Kuldeep Yadav’s wrist-spin variety
Beyond the debate over Axar, Ponting is pushing for the return of Kuldeep Yadav to the starting lineup for the Chepauk clash. He argues that Kuldeep’s unique ability to spin the ball both ways makes him a ‘matchup-proof’ asset who can trouble any batter regardless of whether they are left or right-handed. This variety is particularly lethal on subcontinental tracks where the extra bounce and deceptive ‘wrong-ones’ of a wrist-spinner can create wicket-taking opportunities that traditional finger spinners might miss, especially when defending a total.
“If it has Kuldeep Yadav in it, that’s the other one that I’d be thinking about bringing back because it doesn’t matter with him if it’s left-hand or right-hand. He can bowl wrong ones and spin the ball away from the left-hand outside edge of both those batters.” Ponting concluded.




