Match Analysis

Kuldeep makes the wait worthwhile

After warming the bench throughout in England, he picked up a four-for in his first T20I since the 2024 T20 World Cup final

Shashank Kishore
Shashank Kishore
10-Sep-2025 • 2 hrs ago
Kuldeep Yadav couldn't resist a bit of mischief at training. After a lengthy bowling session, as he settled in for a small refreshment break, he turned to the journalists who had gathered to focus on every single aspect of India's training ahead of the Asia Cup.
He jokingly asked which of his team-mates had matched his Yo-Yo test score. He was playfully referring to the chatter he had apparently seen on social media about certain players achieving certain fitness benchmarks. It was all light-hearted fun after two hours of bowling in sapping heat and humidity.
Kuldeep didn't stop there. Soon the chatter veered towards Barcelona prodigy Lamine Yamal and Neymar, his favourite player. Kuldeep was effortlessly drawn into a football tangent. Recently, the self-confessed football tragic has even found a new outlet for that obsession in the form of his own YouTube show, Fulltwo Football.
As he bantered with journalists, he looked completely in his element. It reflected the mind space of a man at ease with where he is at with India returning to the white-ball formats, where he is more or less assured of a place in the XI. Only two months ago, the England Test tour had felt agonisingly long.
He had spent the entire summer warming the bench, often spotted with an earpiece plugged in, listening to commentary when not running drinks. For a bowler at the peak of his powers, it must have taken enormous mental discipline to stay focused, knowing it wasn't because of his primary skill, but because of the team's need for batting depth, that he had to sit out.
On Wednesday, when the chance finally came, Kuldeep grabbed it with both hands - taking four wickets to run through UAE in India's Asia Cup opener. It was a nice evening out upon his return to the T20I set-up for the first time since that memorable June afternoon in Barbados at the T20 World Cup last year.
That tournament should have triggered another surge in his stop-start career, but a groin injury that was later diagnosed as sports hernia forced him to miss five months of cricket. He eventually returned to play a part in India's Champions Trophy win, and had a decent IPL - 15 wickets in 14 games at an economy of 7.07- for Delhi Capitals, but the England tour stuck out like a sore thumb.
"It was tough for me," Kuldeep said at the post-match presentation of the time spent sitting out in England. "I was working on my bowling and my fitness with Adrian [Le Roux, India's strength & conditioning coach], and everything came together tonight. In this format, the length is the key - reading what the batters are trying to do and reacting to it ball by ball."
When Kuldeep came on to bowl, UAE were decently placed. Their only bright sparks came early in the innings when Alishan Sharafu's audacious lofted drive over extra cover off Axar Patel and a flurry of boundaries from Muhammad Waseem against Jasprit Bumrah had them end the powerplay at 41 for 2.
"In this format, the length is the key - reading what the batters are trying to do and reacting to it ball by ball"
Kuldeep Yadav on what works in T20 cricket
But two boundary-less overs thereafter, including one from Kuldeep, forced the batters to take extra risks. One such mis-timed hit against a nicely tossed up delivery had Rahul Chopra drag Kuldeep to Shubman Gill at wide long-on. Three balls later, Kuldeep picked up another with his trademark fizz, trapping Waseem lbw.
He nearly had a third the very next delivery against left-hand batter Harshit Kaushik but the inside edge narrowly missed leg stump. But Kuldeep wasn't to be denied. He tossed up a wrong'un that dipped, drew Kaushik forward and ripped past the inside edge to crash into the stumps. The zing bails lit up, as did Kuldeep's face.
He had just taken three wickets in an over, each off different types of deliveries. It was as if he was laying out his one trick after another for everyone to see. He finished with a fourth, off another wrong'un that brushed the batter's pad on the way to Samson - a fortuitous wicket into his kitty only because UAE had run out of reviews. UAE were bundled out for 57, which India knocked off in no time.
After a summer spent waiting for his turn, it felt like Kuldeep was finally beginning to revel in the joy of being back where he belongs.

Shashank Kishore is a senior correspondent at ESPNcricinfo

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