Gambhir's Trust-Based Coaching Leads India to T20 World Cup Glory

Gautam Gambhir, after leading India to a T20 World Cup title, emphasized that his accountability lies solely with the team and not social media. He outlined his coaching philosophy of selecting and backing players based on trust and faith, not hope or short-term form. This approach was exemplified by his support for Sanju Samson and Abhishek Sharma during the tournament. India's comprehensive 96-run victory in the final was built on explosive batting and disciplined bowling.

Key Points: Gautam Gambhir on T20 WC Win: Trust Over Social Media Noise

  • Ignore social media noise
  • Build team on trust and faith
  • Play fearless, high-risk cricket
  • Back players through poor form
4 min read

'No attention to social media noise, team building on trust, faith': Gambhir's T20 WC success mantra

Head coach Gautam Gambhir reveals his success mantra of building team on trust and faith, ignoring social media, after India's T20 World Cup title win.

"My accountability is not towards any social media. It is for the team. - Gautam Gambhir"

Ahmedabad, March 9

Following his side's ICC T20 World Cup title win, head coach Gautam Gambhir spoke on being "accountable" not to social media, but the media who cover the sport and the people who make up the whole Team India changing room.

Gambhir continued to build a hefty resume in white-ball cricket with the T20 World Cup title win by beating New Zealand by 96 runs at Ahmedabad's Narendra Modi Stadium on Sunday. Gambhir, with a Champions Trophy 2025, Asia Cup 2025 and T20 World Cup title, has built quite a solid resume as an Indian head coach, alongside an Indian Premier League (IPL) title with Kolkata Knight Riders (KKR) as a mentor. Having won the T20 World Cup, the 50-over World Cup, the Asia Cup and IPL during his playing days, the Delhi-born has carved out quite a heavy list of accomplishments for himself.

Following his side's win during the post-match presser, Gambhir said, "My accountability is not towards any social media. It is for the team. The process was not to be shared. We wanted to play fearless cricket. We wanted to play high risk high reward and this is how you play in this format. Captain and I were on the same page. Because if I can work honestly with them, if we can put in the hard work honestly - my accountability was never before, nor will it be today or in the future (to social media). Then even if I win two ICC trophies as a coach, it really does not matter because in the future, I think those 30 people (in the changing room) matter the most to me in my coaching tenure, no one else matters."

Speaking on his philosophy behind the team selection, which led to him backing Sanju Samson and bringing him back into the playing eleven despite a poor run of form earlier and persisting with world number one batter Abhishek Sharma, who lost his form during the tournament, Gambhir said, "You pick the team on trust and faith not on hope. So when you pick someone on trust and faith, you do not lose that trust and faith after four or five games. As simple as it can get. I have never, ever felt that we have ever picked a team on hope. The trust and the faith that all of us had in the squad that we had in the dressing room, irrespective whether we would have won this tournament, whether we would not have won this tournament, that is irrespective. The faith and trust would have exactly remained the same. So for me, I think that is something which is very important. And that will never go away, the trust and faith.

Coming to the match, NZ won the toss and elected to field first. However, a return-to-form, record-breaking fifty from Abhishek Sharma (52 in 21 balls, with six fours and three sixes) and his 98-run stand with Samson made NZ regret the decision. Later, Samson stitched a century stand with Ishan Kishan (54 in 25 balls, with four boundaries and four sixes) to take India past the 200-run mark in the 16th over. After a brief slowdown, Shivam Dube (26* in eight balls, with three fours and two sixes) made some valuable runs to take India to 255/5, the highest total in T20WC finals.

James Neesham (3/46) was the leading wicket-taker for NZ.

In the run-chase of 256 runs, Axar Patel (3/23) and Jasprit Bumrah (4/15) reduced the Kiwis to 72/5, despite a half-century from Tim Seifert (52 in 26 balls, with two fours and five sixes). Despite a brief partnership between Daryl Mitchell (17) and skipper Mitchell Santner (43 in 35 balls, with three fours and two sixes), India kept chipping in with wickets, and the Kiwis were bundled out for just 159 runs.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

S
Sarah B
As someone who follows cricket closely, ignoring social media noise is crucial. The armchair experts on Twitter/X have no idea about team dynamics. Gambhir focused on the people that actually matter - the players in the dressing room. Well said.
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Priya S
So happy for Sanju Samson! Finally got the backing he deserved and he delivered in the biggest match. This win feels extra special because of players like him. Gambhir's trust paid off big time. 💙
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Rohit P
Respectfully, while the result is fantastic, I hope this "ignore social media" approach doesn't mean ignoring all fan feedback. We are passionate for a reason. But credit where it's due - the team selection and fearless cricket were spot on.
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Vikram M
What a complete performance! 255 in a final is insane. Bumrah and Axar with the ball, Abhishek and Samson with the bat. When the coach and captain are on the same page, magic happens. Jai Hind!
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Michael C
The mental strength shown by the team is impressive. To come back from the group stage hiccups and play such dominant cricket in the knockouts speaks volumes about the environment Gambhir has created. A well-deserved trophy.

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