History scripted as India capture third T20 World Cup crown after defeating New Zealand by 96 runs

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AHMEDABAD, INDIA - MARCH 08: Suryakumar Yadav of India lifts the trophy after victory in the ICC Men's T20 World Cup India & Sri Lanka 2026 Final between India and New Zealand at Narendra Modi Stadium on March 08, 2026 in Ahmedabad, India. (Photo by Matthew Lewis-ICC/ICC via Getty Images)

What was supposed to be a final challenge turned into a coronation as India dominated New Zealand in the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup 2026 in Ahmedabad on Sunday.

India exorcised the demons of 2023, when they had lost the ODI World Cup final at the very stadium, as they defeated the Black Caps by 96 runs. It culminated in a brilliant run at the tournament, as India has lost just one match in the last two T20 World Cups.

New Zealand were blown away by the power-packed Indian batting line-up, who posted 255/5, the highest total at a T20 World Cup final. In response, the Black Caps folded at 159 in 19 overs.

The victory ensured India became the first team to defend their T20 World Cup title, the first to triumph at a home championship, and the first to win three T20 World Cup titles.

Meanwhile, New Zealand suffered their fifth straight defeat, in 11 years, in the final of an ICC white-ball world event.

It was Sanju Samson who yet again set up the big win for India.

The gulf in big-match experience was evident, as Samson and Abhishek took the attack to their rivals from the get-go. India hit top gear in the fourth over as they clobbered 24 runs in fourth over.

Samson-Sharma became the first opening duo to score 50+ stand in a T20 World Cup final. A usually reliable Matt Henry ended up conceding four wides in the fifth over, contributing to eight extra deliveries New Zealand bowled in powerplay, the most they have ever done in T20Is.

Samson and Sharma carted the ball all around the park to pile 92 runs in the first six overs. It is the highest powerplay score of this World Cup, and the joint-highest in T20 World Cup history.

Though he wasn’t in the best of form at the start of the World Cup, Sharma rose to the occasion in the final, bringing up the fastest 50 of the tournament in just 18 balls with the help of six fours and three sixes.

Ravindra provided his team the breakthrough as he had Sharma nicked to the wicketkeeper. However, the 98-run opening stand, with Sharma contributing 52 off 21, may have well set India up for another big score.

Even after losing the wicket, India did not let New Zealand get a toehold in the match. Samson and Ishan Kishan went hell for leather, putting on 105 runs in just 48 balls for the second wicket.

Samson brought up his third half-century in a row, this time of 36 balls. It was another stunning innings by the right-hand batter, who jumped on the opportunity after returning to the playing XI. He struck five fours and eight sixes for 89 off just 45 balls.

He became the third player to slam a half-century in the semi-final as well as final of a T20 World Cup. Samson also became only the second batter, after Mahela Jayawardene in 2010, to notch three successive 80+ scores in the T20 World Cup.

India’s top three were in great touch on the day, with Kishan also bringing up his half-century. With four fours and four sixes, Kishan finished at 54 off 25 balls.

New Zealand’s decision to go with a pace-heavy attack in Ahmedabad back-fired. While Henry lost his composure early on, Lockie Ferguson was taken for special treatment by the Indian batters, as he plundered 48 runs off his two overs.

One James Neesham over put the brakes on India. After Samson failed to put away a full toss, Kishan and Suryakumar Yadav followed in the same over, the latter to a brilliant catch by Ravindra, as India slipped from 203/2 to 204/4 in the 16th over.

After a lull in scoring, India picked up the pace yet again in the last two overs. Shivam Dube struck three fours and two sixes to plunder 24 runs off the last over and take India past the 250-mark.

In total, India clobbered 19 fours and 18 sixes to earn 184 runs in boundaries.

Facing a daunting task, the New Zealand chase never took off the ground.

New Zealand suffered early blows as the in-form Finn Allen, Rachin Ravindra and Glenn Phillips fell cheaply. Given a life earlier in the innings, Allen was caught at long-on off Axar Patel, who was brought in early precisely to take on the explosive opener.

Three balls later, Jasprit Bumrah struck sent the left-handed Ravindra packing. As Ravindra flicked the ball of Bumrah’s spell to leg side, Ishan Kishan took a superb diving catch. Patel, playing on his home ground, then castled Phillips to reduce their rivals to 47/3.

Tim Seifert was the only New Zealand batter who took the attack to the home team. He struck five sixes and two fours for a quickfire 52, but Seifert fell to Varun Chakaravarthy.

The Seifert scalp was Chakaravarthy’s 14th at this World Cup, taking him to the top of the ladder for the most wickets.

Captain Mitchell Santner and Daryl Mitchell steadied the New Zealand innings with a 52-run partnership in 28 balls. But once that partnership was broken, the New Zealand challenge fizzled out quickly.

If the batters had delivered the early blows, India’s reliable bowling line-up delivered the knockout punch. Axar Patel and Jasprit Bumrah, whose heroics had guided India to Cup glory two years ago, were once again at the forefront.

While Patel spun a web around the opponents to scalp 3/27 in three overs, the brilliant Bumrah-run broke the back of the chase with 4/15 in four overs. It was the first time that a bowler had claimed a four-wicket haul in a T20 World Cup final.

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