Cricket-India need cool heads to cope with England power game in semi-final, says Morkel


Cricket - ICC Men's T20 World Cup 2026 - Super 8 - India v West Indies - Eden Gardens, Kolkata, India - March 1, 2026 India's Jasprit Bumrah celebrates with teammates after taking the wicket of West Indies' Shimron Hetmyer REUTERS/Sahiba Chawdhary

MUMBAI, March 4 (Reuters) - India will ⁠need to play with clarity and calmness to combat England's deep and powerful batting ⁠line-up in the Twenty20 World Cup semi-final at the Wankhede Stadium, the hosts' bowling ‌coach Morne Morkel said on Wednesday.

India, bidding to become the first team to successfully defend the T20 World Cup title, meet two-time champions England in the last four for the third straight tournament, with each team winning one of ​the previous games.

"We haven't really spoken about the perfect game. ⁠The quality of this team has ⁠shown that on the day somebody can put their hand up and put in a performance," Morkel ⁠told ‌reporters, noting rising temperatures and the potential influence of dew.

"The way they (England) approach a T20 game, trying to take the game on, will make them a dangerous side. Tomorrow's ⁠going to be a good shootout between two aggressive teams.

"The ​side that can hold their ‌nerves and play the conditions and read some of the conditions quite well and ⁠the quickest (will win)."

At ​Wednesday's optional training session, Tilak Varma and Rinku Singh had a hit in the nets and top-ranked leg-spinner Varun Chakravarthy worked through a single-wicket routine.

"The conversations with him are just about the sort of clarity and ⁠for him just to walk away feeling good about his ​bowling," Morkel said.

"He's a highly skillful guy, hard to pick once you walk into the crease. So for him, it's just about getting that confidence of the ball, getting his speed, his length ⁠control right, and not trying to rush him."

Sanju Samson's match-winning knock against West Indies has eased concerns around India's top order, but Abhishek Sharma's form remains under scrutiny.

With the left-hander managing only 80 runs, including three ducks, in six matches, he faces a significant test against England's varied attack.

"For ​a young guy finding his feet in international cricket, this will ⁠only help him down the line in Indian cricket," Morkel said.

"It's a fresh page for him tomorrow, ​an opportunity to go and do well. Scored 100 here ‌against England not so long ago."

The winners on Thursday ​will advance to Sunday's final against South Africa or New Zealand, who meet in the other semi-final on Wednesday.

(Reporting by Suramya Kaushik in Bengaluru, editing by Ed Osmond)

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