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17th Over Haunted Us: Iyer on India's T20I Loss to England

India captain Shreyas Iyer admitted the 17th over proved decisive after England chased down 191 with an over to spare. Jacob Bethell's unbeaten 76 and a 29-run over swung the match in England's favour. Iyer backed Ravi Bishnoi despite his expensive spell, saying he would learn from the experience. The skipper praised Bethell's fearless attitude and said the team would move forward positively.

2nd T20I: '17th over haunted us,' says Iyer on where India's lost the game vs England

Manchester, July 4

India captain Shreyas Iyer admitted that one costly over changed the course of the contest after England completed a four-wicket victory in the second T20I in Old Trafford on Saturday, chasing down 191 with an over to spare.

Speaking after the defeat, Iyer assessed how the game unfolded, highlighted Jacob Bethell's decisive innings, backed Ravi Bishnoi despite his expensive spell, and stressed that the young leg-spinner would emerge stronger from the experience.

India had appeared in control for much of England's chase after reducing the hosts to 1/2 in the opening over and keeping the pressure on through the middle phase. However, Bethell's unbeaten 76 and a momentum-shifting 29-run 17th over swung the match firmly in England's favour.

Reflecting on where the match turned, Iyer chose not to single out any individual despite the decisive spell.

"I think we all know where it went away but I don't want to pinpoint a particular player. I was like, okay he's going to come back strong after that (the first no ball). But the 17th over haunted us. But he'll learn," Iyer said post game.

The India skipper also felt his side had posted a competitive first-innings total on a surface that wasn't straightforward for batting.

"I think it was a phenomenal score on this pitch with variable bounce. First 15 overs we were on top of the game but suddenly - credit to the way Jacob played," he added.

Bethell's calculated assault, particularly against the spinners in the closing stages, proved decisive as England overturned India's advantage. Iyer credited the left-hander and England's planning for identifying the conditions and boundary dimensions early in the chase.

"They analysed the dimensions of the ground and the wicket early," he said.

Iyer also praised Sam Curran for executing England's tactical plans with the ball during India's innings, pointing to the accuracy of his lines.

"He was bowling right outside off stump, and that was very well planned (Curran)," the skipper stated.

The India captain reserved special praise for Bethell's fearless mindset, saying the youngster's approach had already stood out during practice sessions, as he said, "He's got that unflinching attitude where he's fearless. The way he bats in the nets... something to learn out of him. I wasn't anticipating him to be nervous."

Despite the disappointing result, Iyer insisted the dressing room would move forward positively rather than dwell on the setback.

"Absolutely, I'm always in high spirits and I know that this is the lowest you can go," he concluded.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Priya S

Bethell played like a seasoned pro, kudos to him. But our bowling just goes flat too often in the death overs. We need a proper plan B when the main bowlers are leaking runs. These are the matches that decide series!

James A

Good perspective from Iyer. He's right that 190 is a great score on that pitch. The boundaries here in Manchester are small, so 29 in an over can happen if you lose focus. India just need to tighten up at the death.

Rohit L

Iyer backing Bishnoi is good man management, but the reality is we need seamers who can bowl those yorkers consistently in the death. Arshdeep was good but we're too reliant on spin in the middle overs abroad. Time to look at someone like Mukesh Kumar for variety.

Emma D

I was at the game! The atmosphere was electric. Bethell's innings was something else - clean hitting against quality spinners. India's top order set it up well but you need that one bowler to step up in the death overs. Hard luck India, but great cricket overall.

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