India may have won two of their first three matches at the Women’s T20 World Cup and remain in contention for a semi-final berth, but their six-wicket defeat to South Africa at Manchester exposed a concern that has quietly followed them through the tournament – the inability of the middle-order to build on the platform laid by the top-order.
At the centre of that conversation is captain Harmanpreet Kaur.
Her scores of 36 off 35 balls against Pakistan and 24 off 22 against South Africa look respectable on paper, but a closer look tells a different story. In both matches, India lost early wickets and needed someone experienced to rebuild the innings before launching at the death.
Harmanpreet did the rebuilding, but could not manage the acceleration towards the later overs which the innings needed.
Against Pakistan, her strike rate was just above 102 despite facing enough deliveries to dictate the innings. She hit four boundaries but also played 13 dot balls, allowing Pakistan’s spinners to build pressure through the middle overs before holing out while trying to force the pace.
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The pattern repeated against South Africa. Harmanpreet made 24 from 22 deliveries with five dot balls. Once she settled in, the innings never shifted gears. There were singles; gentle pushes into the gaps and strike rotation, but very little intent to attack either the seamers or the spinners.
It is this middle phase that has begun to be a cause of concern. In modern T20 cricket, rebuilding is only half the job. The batter who absorbs pressure is also expected to cash in once set. Harmanpreet had reached that point in both innings but struggled to find the gears required to push India to a big score.
Falling numbers
The numbers also suggest this is not simply a two-match blip.
Since 2023, Harmanpreet has scored 909 runs in 42 innings in the middle overs at a strike rate of 116.24, which is noticeably lower than the likes of Amelia Kerr (125.55) and Heather Knight (120.55).
She has also chewed up 244 dot balls, more than Kerr (207) and Knight (204), thereby leaving India with more work to do at the death. Her own teammate, Jemimah Rodrigues, has struck at 132.29 in the same number of innings and has consumed only 158 dot deliveries.







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