Gloves on, Sanju Samson and KL Rahul gear up to throw fresh punches
Three days before India’s T20 World Cup squad announcement last year, KL Rahul and Sanju Samson went up against one other in the IPL, with one decisive shot at hand to make a last-minute impression before the selectors.
While Rahul set up the game with a healthy 76 in Lucknow, Samson landed the decisive punch, scooping the game and the backup keeper’s spot away with an unbeaten 33-ball 71 helping Rajasthan Royals nervelessly gun down a 197-run target.
Freed from captaincy shackles with a fresh middle-order spot at the Delhi Capitals, Rahul will share the stage again with Samson at the Arun Jaitley Stadium as the sub-plots slowly begin to take shape for the next iteration of the T20 World Cup, only 10 months away.
Samson’s trough
Wednesday’s league stage match-up would not necessarily define anything significant in the context of India’s T20I set-up. However, the prospect of two batting artists and potential front-runners in the wicketkeepers race for next year’s T20 World Cup duelling on a Kotla belter could offer some vital cues for the road ahead.
A year can change many things in Indian cricket, or perhaps nothing. After riding a streak of highs since the last World Cup, blitzing records and making a newfound opener-keeper slot his own, Samson’s certainty as India’s lead keeper for the 2026 World Cup iteration may have taken a dent in the last few months. The England series in January had Samson cut a sorry figure battling the quicks.
Tallying only 51 runs in five innings, Samson exited the series with a thumb fracture off a Jofra Archer bouncer, with the short delivery playing a ringing in his head on a loop. While he’s got the Englishman on his side at the Royals, Samson’s invited himself some trouble dealing with extra pace in the league.
Change in personnel has meant Rajasthan’s Indian top-order relies heavily on Samson and Yashasvi Jaiswal to see off the powerplay, albeit with a subtle lock on aggression.
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The skipper has nearly made a third of Rajasthan’s powerplay runs (116) thus far, but Samson’s 146.83 strike rate is outpaced by 11 other top-order batters who have made at least 100 runs in the phase. While he has interestingly seen off the powerplay in five of the previous six outings, Samson has failed to put on a sizable score since the 66 in their season opener in Hyderabad last month.
Curiously, it is his wont against lengths from both pace and spin in the middle-overs that has made Samson’s attacking game vulnerable to threats. Two previous exits versus pace – against Gujarat Titans’ Prasidh Krishna and Punjab Kings’ Lockie Ferguson revealed Samson to bank almost entirely on his pre-emption of the line from the confines of the crease, irrespective of where the ball lands.
Samson’s relatively new high-backlift stance against pace sees him take a perceptible step backwards in his trigger before his left leg makes the faintest jaunt forward, milli-seconds before the ball is released.
Attempting to drag his front foot back to the base of the stumps to slice a short delivery from Krishna, Samson’s misjudgment of bounce ended up with a tame chip to the short third fielder. That was four nights after he had manufactured trouble by dragging his front leg away from the off-stump to a 144 kph delivery from Ferguson. Taking on the slot delivery from the depths of the crease, Samson could only dig the ball out to the mid-on fielder, a moment before flinging his bat in frustration.
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A pacy left-arm Mitchell Starc test will be in the offing, but Samson has also not been the spin-bashing beast he was a couple of seasons ago. Early indicators suggest a clog, with Samson returning only 36 runs at 115 from the tweakers in the middle phase, a stark dip from his 172.17 SR in 2023 and 140.65 last edition.
Changing perceptions
As Samson plonked sixes off the slower bowlers on match eve, Rahul kept an eye on the soaring Kookaburras after a brief sprinting session.
Rediscovering the “fun” of white-ball hitting has sparked Rahul’s T20 redemption, even initiating discussions on a return to the national fold after the doors last shut on him after the 2022 T20 World Cup. That Rahul can flip seamlessly through the order, even in the shortest format, was impressive when he delivered for Delhi in versatile tracks in Chennai and Bengaluru in succession. But the Kotla can throw a curveball in the middle-order, particularly on dewy nights like the weekend’s jolt before the Mumbai Indians.
DC’s flawless momentum in a 200-plus chase was stalled completely after the newer ball was offered to Mumbai post the 11-over mark. Playing an uncharacteristic, forced drag across the line, the in-form Rahul’s top-edged dismissal against the leg-spinner plunged Delhi’s hopes.
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Heaves and hoicks are as detached from Rahul and Samson’s natural playbooks as any purist in the game. But as the intent frenzy continues to scale new peaks, the stylish bats will offer interesting fodder to discussions on India’s lead T20 wicket-keeping options in a game crucial for momentum for both teams.