Sanju Samson's Shattered Dreams to World Cup Glory: A Comeback Story

Sanju Samson has opened up about his emotional struggle after a poor batting performance in the New Zealand series prior to the T20 World Cup 2024, where he felt his dreams were shattered. He revealed he isolated himself for days, accepted his failure, and that this acceptance helped him recover quicker. A pivotal moment was a conversation with coach Gautam Gambhir before the Zimbabwe game, which assured him of his place and shifted his mindset from competing for a spot to fighting for the team's cause. Samson then scripted a historic comeback, scoring 321 runs in five matches to win the Player of the Tournament award and surpass Virat Kohli's previous tournament record.

Key Points: Sanju Samson on T20 World Cup 2024 Triumph After New Zealand Struggle

  • Overcame poor form before World Cup
  • Isolated himself for 4-5 days
  • Accepted missed opportunities
  • Gambhir's selection assurance key
  • Scored 321 runs in 5 matches
3 min read

"After New Zealand series, I thought my dreams were shattered": Sanju Samson on his struggle with bat before T20 World Cup

Sanju Samson reveals he felt broken after NZ series but acceptance led to Player of the Tournament award in T20 World Cup 2024 with 321 runs.

"After the New Zealand series, I thought my dreams were shattered. - Sanju Samson"

Ahmedabad, March 9

India's star wicketkeeper-batter Sanju Samson, who scripted history and became a household name in India for his remarkable exploits in the men's T20 World Cup 2024, has spoken about the upheaval he went through earlier for not being able to make use of opportunities that came his way and how acceptance helped him deal better with the struggle.

Samson said he felt broken after the New Zealand series before the T20 World Cup, in which he struggled to score with the bat. He took time to process his emotions, isolating himself for four to five days.

Samson's remarkable comeback earned him the Player of the Tournament award in the T20 World Cup, and he scored 321 runs in five matches.

"It was in my mind, but when we were playing the World Cup in the West Indies a year and a half ago, I was thinking, visualising and practising to do something like this. But after the New Zealand series, I thought my dreams were shattered. I think God had his own plans, and I'm so grateful. I was broken after the New Zealand series, and I let myself feel that I was broken. I was absolutely not moving from my bed for four to five days. I couldn't bat. I was completely out of the system. I wasn't happy, and I behaved like I wasn't happy. I let myself feel the emotions. So, I accepted the fact that I didn't use the opportunities I got. I was realistic with myself. I didn't fight those emotions, and I didn't pretend to be confident. Once I accepted the fact, I could recover a bit quicker," Sanju Samson said on JioHotstar.

Samson also revealed meeting Indian head coach Gautam Gambhir before the Zimbabwe game in the Super 8 fixture.

"I met Gauti bhai in the gym before the Zimbabwe game, and that's where he told me, 'Sanju, be ready, you are going to play the next game.' I was 100 per cent ready. In my mind, I said, 'Yes, now let's do the talking, this is what I was waiting for.' But I would like to share something very honest, I don't like to compete with my teammates in the squad. Once we are together fighting for a cause, then I bring out my best. During the New Zealand series, it was always about, 'Will I be part of the team or not?' I never perform well when I am fighting for places. But when the opportunity came, we were together fighting for one goal, the World Cup, so I'm glad things worked out in the end," he added.

Samson scripted a comeback for ages, as he overcame poor form and exclusion from the playing eleven to shine when everything was at stake. Having scored just 46 runs in five innings against New Zealand before this tournament, Samson lost his place in the team to Ishan Kishan.

When a leftie-dominant top-order was struggling against off-spin, destiny handed Sanju a second chance.

Right from the virtual quarterfinal against West Indies to the title clash against New Zealand, Samson displayed remarkable strokeplay and broke records.

Samson made 321 runs in five innings at an average of 80.25 and a strike rate of 199.37, with 27 fours and 24 sixes, and ended as the third-highest run-getter in the tournament. He also surpassed Virat Kohli's total of 319 runs in the 2014 T20WC edition.

Pakistan batter Sahibzada Farhan overtook Virat's record earlier, ending the tournament as the leading run-getter with 383 runs at an average of 76.60 and a strike rate of 160.25, with two centuries and two fifties.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
His honesty is so refreshing. Most players give cliché answers, but he openly talked about being broken and staying in bed. It makes his World Cup heroics even more special. Well done, Sanju!
R
Rohit P
Respect for Gambhir as well. That conversation in the gym before the Zimbabwe game must have been a huge confidence booster. Coach and player combo worked wonders. Hope he gets a long run in the team now.
S
Sarah B
As a cricket fan from the US, it's inspiring to see this human side of athletes. The pressure in India must be immense. His story is about resilience. Fantastic performance!
V
Vikram M
While I'm happy for his success, this also highlights a problem. Our selection is so inconsistent. A player of his caliber should not have to go through such mental turmoil wondering if he'll be picked. The system needs to back players more.
K
Kavya N
"I don't like to compete with my teammates in the squad." This line says so much about his character. True team player. When the goal was the World Cup, he delivered. What a legend in the making! 🏏
M
Michael C
The stats are insane. 321 runs at a strike rate of nearly 200 in a World Cup

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50