INDORE: India’s absolute dominance at home will come under examination when it meets a determined New Zealand in the decisive third ODI at the high-scoring Holkar Stadium here on Sunday, with the three-match series locked at 1-1.
India has not lost a bilateral ODI series at home since March 2019, when Australia overturned a 0-2 deficit to win 3–2, including the decider in Delhi. But that history is now firmly on the line.
For New Zealand, the context is equally compelling.
The Black Caps have toured India for bilateral ODIs since 1989 but have never won a series in India and this is arguably their best opportunity to break that barren run.
India head coach Gautam Gambhir would not like another tumbling at home under his regime after getting a number of unwanted firsts. India lost five Tests at home under Gambhir apart from losing an ODI series in Sri Lanka for the first time.
India’s defeat in the second ODI at Rajkot was shaped less by one extraordinary innings than by how New Zealand seized control of the middle overs.
Daryl Mitchell’s unbeaten century was built on calculated aggression, particularly against spin, an area where India has been struggling of late.
Indore, with its short boundaries and minimal assistance for bowlers, offers even less margin for error.
India’s ability to tackle spin has raised questions. Despite depth and power, the side has continued to show discomfort against spin in the middle overs. Strike rotation has stalled at key phases, forcing batters into high-risk options rather than controlled accumulation.
Much of the spotlight will be on Rohit Sharma, who is enduring a lean run in this series. His ultra-aggressive approach at the top has been a defining feature of India’s recent ODI philosophy, but repeated early dismissals has added a bit of pressure.
Virat Kohli, meanwhile, remains the fulcrum around which India’s ODI batting revolves. With India’s next 50-over assignment for senior players likely to come in July during the tour of England, the fans would hope for another RoKo show.
The choice between Nitish Kumar Reddy and Ayush Badoni is effectively a debate between depth and control.
Reddy adds seam-bowling insurance, though used sparingly, and late-innings power, while Badoni offers a tighter technique against spin and composure in the middle overs.
The case for including left-arm pacer Arshdeep Singh also gains weight at Indore, where variations rather than raw pace often determines success.
Arshdeep’s ability to swing the new ball, attack the stumps and execute yorkers at the death offers India a different tactical dimension, particularly against New Zealand’s largely right-handed top and middle-order.
His inclusion would also reduce the burden on the spinners in the middle and late phases, allowing India to rely more on pace-off deliveries, wide yorkers and hard lengths — methods better suited at Holkar Stadium than spin.
The challenge lies in whom he replaces. Mohammed Siraj’s new-ball role makes him difficult to leave out.
New Zealand has oodles of confidence and clarity. Mitchell’s dominance, supported by Devon Conway, has reflected the Black Caps’ ability to identify match-ups and execute without overreach.
Their bowlers, though lacking headline names, have used variations and hard lengths effectively in conditions offering little natural assistance.