
2 minute read
WHO TO WATCH
from 2022-09 Sydney
by Indian Link
More than any other format of the game, T20 cricket is an individual sport, where impact players can single-handedly win matches in the shortest window. a s the T20 World cup draws near, RiTaM MiTR a takes a closer look at the key players expected not only to win matches, but to deliver what is an increasingly coveted trophy.
It’s official: Babar Azam has succeeded Virat Kohli as Asia’s “it” batsman. But with one key difference: Azam is more important to Pakistan than Kohli is to India. With the crispest cover drive in the game, a calming captaincy, and a penchant for racking up runs at record-breaking pace, Azam is not only technically brilliant, but a simply beautiful batsman to watch.
The top-ranked T20 international batsman, Azam is a key figure in Pakistan’s recent renaissance, and will be hungry to deliver some muchneeded joy to a country that has been ravaged by recent floods.

Rashid Khan
Rashid Khan is perhaps the only Associate player who would walk into any international team. Given how long he has been bamboozling batsmen with the most effective googly in the game, it is easy to forget that Afghanistan’s best player is only 24. Khan is a veritable T20 mercenary, and is into double-digits for franchisebased representation. While he is picked primarily for his unreadable leg-spin, Afghanistan would do well in the T20 World Cup to better utilise Khan’s prodigious hitting ability, an area where T20 franchises have often failed him.
As a precociously talented young all-rounder, Pandya had an arrogant nonchalance belying the cricketing nous within. But in 2018, after a steady start to his international career, Pandya was stretchered off the field with a back injury, one that many (including Pandya) thought would be career-ending.
It was not. On return from injury, Pandya’s impact has been immediate and devastating. The best short-form player in India’s tour of Australia last summer, Pandya also led the Gujarat Titans to the 2022 IPL title in the franchise’s debut season, playing a key role with both bat and ball. He then starred in India’s Asia Cup campaign, including in a thriller against Pakistan.
He may have matured as a player, but the trademark swagger has remained. With an almost Caribbean presence, Pandya – alongside Suryakumar Yadav – will be India’s most feared batsman in the tournament. It’s a (huge) bonus that Pandya is back to bowling 140+ kph and taking regular wickets, too.
Glenn Maxwell has long under-delivered on his potential, but that’s largely a product of his limitless ability, especially in T20 cricket where he is among the first names on any team sheet.

It is of course impossible (and almost pointless) to set a field to the dynamic Maxwell, who is the world’s most daring and successful exponent of reverse sweeps, switch hits, lap sweeps and ramp shots.
Maxwell boasts an all-round game, with handy off-spin and purely electric fielding his other strengths. In home conditions, in his favourite format, expect Maxwell to light up the tournament.
Liam Livingstone was the number one pick in the inaugural Big Bash League draft, and it’s no secret why: quite simply, Livingstone hits the ball bigger and longer than anyone else in the world.
Livingstone first made headlines when he hit 350 off just 138 balls for his club side in a 50-over match. At the international level, his numbers do not yet make for compelling reading, but Livingstone has enjoyed a stunning 12 months, including for Kings XI Punjab in the IPL and Birmingham Phoenix in the Hundred. A true utility player, Livingstone bowls both off-spin and legspin and is short odds to hit the most (and longest) sixes in the tournament.

