Five years after losing a heart-stopping T20 World Cup final to the West Indies, Eoin Morgan’s England start as narrow favourites in their bid to become double world champions despite the absence of Ben Stokes.
Not far behind though are Virat Kohli’s India, an ever-lethal West Indies and Test world champions New Zealand – not to mention South Africa, Australia, former winners Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and fairytale outsiders Afghanistan.
Postponed and moved twice because of the pandemic, the tournament’s seventh edition kicks off on 17 October with Oman – joint hosts with the UAE – taking on Papua New Guinea in a first qualifying round.
The top nations will join the event – played in stadiums 70% full – on 23 October with Australia and South Africa playing the opener of the Super 12 stage and England up against holders West Indies.
England, ranked as the No 1 nation in T20I cricket, beat New Zealand to win the 50-over title at Lord’s in 2019 and victory in the shortest format’s showpiece event will further cement their white-ball dominance.
Morgan’s team will, however, be without Stokes and Jofra Archer, who played a key part in their one-day World Cup triumph, but vice-captain Jos Buttler insists the team is “certainly one of the favourite teams”.
“I know we are missing Ben and Jofra, who are two superstars of the game, but I still look down that list and see some real match-winners in our side.”
England had to defend 19 runs in the last over of the 2016 final at Kolkata’s Eden Gardens but Carlos Brathwaite hit Stokes for four straight sixes, giving the Caribbeans their second world T20 title.
Many of that winning team will be back, led by Kieron Pollard and old war horses Dwayne Bravo (38) and 42-year-old Chris Gayle.
Asian giants India will begin their campaign against arch-rivals Pakistan on 24 October, with Kohli looking to go out with a bang before stepping down as captain of the T20 side after the tournament.
Kohli will look to repeat India’s triumph in the inaugural tournament in 2007 with the then skipper MS Dhoni joining the team as mentor.
Swashbuckling opener Rohit Sharma is widely tipped to be Kohli’s successor and will be key to the team’s chances along with yorker king Jasprit Bumrah.
KL Rahul, meanwhile, hit the most sixes – 30 – in the IPL, which wraps up just before the T20 World Cup and which has allowed many stars the chance to get used to the UAE pitches.
Glenn Maxwell, for example, scored 513 runs including six half-centuries in the world’s most popular cricket league, a performance that will boost Australia’s hopes of a maiden T20 title.
Australia white-ball captain Aaron Finch said he and David Warner will open the batting despite his left-handed partner twice being dropped by Sunrisers Hyderabad in the IPL.
Trans-Tasman neighbours New Zealand, led by Kane Williamson, will also be eyeing two successive world crowns after they won the inaugural World Test Championship, beating India in the final in June.
“We’re in a tough pool, I genuinely think there are six, seven teams that could win this tournament and I guess that’s good for world cricket as well,” said Kiwi coach Gary Stead.
New Zealand are clubbed with India, Pakistan and Afghanistan in Group 1. England, Australia, South Africa and West Indies make up Group 2.
The Proteas and former champions Pakistan remain underdogs while Sri Lanka and Bangladesh need to fight it out with associate nations to join the heavyweights in the Super 12s.
A few weeks after the country’s takeover by the Taliban, the dream winners would be outsiders Afghanistan, all of whose players are based abroad.
Their South African coach, Lance Klusener, recently boasted of his team’s “best spin attack in the world” comprising Rashid Khan, Mujeeb Ur Rahman and Mohammad Nabi.
The tournament was originally meant to take place in Australia at the end of 2020 but was called off because of the pandemic.
Then it was slated to happen in India and was finally moved to the Gulf, but with the Indian cricket board, the BCCI, still hosts.
The matches will be held across four venues – the Dubai International Stadium, the Sheikh Zayed Stadium in Abu Dhabi, the Sharjah Stadium, and the Oman Cricket Academy Ground – with the final scheduled for Dubai on 14 November.
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