India Men cheer for India Women, and Mustafizur offers Wahab a lesson
Our correspondents travelling around India for the World T20 pick their best moments of the week
New Zealand v Bangladesh, Kolkata, March 26
In sweaty, sultry Kolkata, New Zealand's batsmen are struggling to crack Bangladesh's bowling on a slow pitch - except Kane Williamson. Standing on the strength of liquids and wet towel scrubs, he has tiptoed to 38 (28 balls) of the team's score of 52. Enter Mustafizur "The Fizz" Rahman. He has conceded two runs off the one over he has bowled so far and has finger-flicked a cutter between Henry Nicholls's flaying bat and leaden foot. Off the third ball of the eighth over, Williamson hops out and redirects the ball towards wide long-off with an inside-out swat. The next delivery is intended to be thumped in a straight line, but Mustafizur is clever enough to shear some pace off to beat him. Williamson reverts to giving himself room, but this cutter is pacier and pings the wicketkeeper's gloves before his bat can find the ball. To counter the extraordinary, Williamson needs to embrace the unorthodox - he deserts the stumps for the lap shot, but Mustafizur has sent down a slower cutter that nudges the off stick. The Fizz's ability to spot the unguarded stumps is particularly impressive after Wahab Riaz doggedly followed Steven Smith all the way to the 15th stump only a day earlier.
India v Bangladesh, Bangalore, March 23
Bangladesh need 52 from 48 balls. Shakib Al Hasan, their most seasoned T20 cricketer, has just walloped Ravindra Jadeja for a big six and silenced the Chinnaswamy Stadium. On comes R Ashwin to bowl his final over. He has a slip in place - the situation demands it; the only way India can win this is by taking wickets. His first ball is like so many he has bowled to left-hand batsmen in Test cricket. The whirring ball, delivered from around the wicket, hangs above Shakib's eyeline, drifting into him. It produces a Test-match response, a cautious forward-defensive block. But the ball drops shorter than Shakib expects, spins away from him, kisses his outside edge, and settles in slip's hands.
India Women v West Indies Women, Mohali, March 27
It was the first double-header involving the India women and men's team at home. Sure, the concept was well-received in Australia, but the true test, especially with calls growing louder for a Women's IPL, came in Mohali. A sell-out crowd was expected for the marquee, prime-time India v Australia knockout shootout. Before that, however, Mithali Raj and company were in the middle of a tense clash against West Indies. What started off as a gentle cheer for every boundary saved, or wicket taken, grew into rapturous applause as the game progressed. In the media centre too, there was an element of mystery surrounding a lot of the Indian players. Which state does she represent? What is her highest score? Is she an allrounder? Do India need a pinch-hitter?
England v Sri Lanka, Delhi, March 26
An unloseable contest was slipping out of England's grasp. Chasing a seemingly out-of-reach 172, Sri Lanka's three-over scoreline of 15 for 4 had been inflated, through the brilliance of Angelo Mathews and his doughty middle order, to an alarm-bell-jangling 155 for 6 in the 19th over. England's spinners had been rinsed, three sixes in each of Adil Rashid's and Moeen Ali's final overs, and now, with 21 runs needed from 11 balls, and with the bit between his teeth, Dasun Shanaka turned his attention to Chris Jordan.
Chandigarh airport is a big pretty barn. It has a sandwich shop, and basically nothing else. But on March 28, it also had Mithali Raj and her India Women's team getting their photographs taken. Then, the Australian men turned up and had their photos taken. Then, the Indian men, who had hundreds more taken. It didn't seem to matter that Chandigarh airport is a defence base, where you are not supposed to take photos. Then, Virat Kohli turned up. There were photographs, but that wasn't enough. Echoing around this big empty space was that familiar chant, "Kohli, Kohli, Kohli".
England v Sri Lanka, Delhi, March 26
In the 11th over of England's innings against Sri Lanka, Jason Roy turns a ball from Jeffrey Vandersay towards square leg. Seeing a huge gap in the field there, wicketkeeper Dinesh Chandimal peels off his glove and tears after it. And two men on the boundary - Milinda Siriwardana and Lahiru Thirimanne - also sprint towards the slowing ball, with purposeful strides and determined expressions. On one of Sri Lanka's previous campaigns, this moment might have stood to showcase the team's dedication, their drive or their unity. They might have hunted the ball down, scooped it up to each other, then bum-patted and high-fived before returning to their fielding positions, full of pep.