India's Women's T20 World Cup hopes ended in disappointment, with familiar flaws exposed. A rethink is needed after underperforming in batting, bowling, and fielding, despite entering as favourites.

India's Women's T20 World Cup hopes ended in disappointment, with familiar flaws exposed. A rethink is needed after underperforming in batting, bowling, and fielding, despite entering as favourites.

India's Women's T20 World Cup hopes ended in disappointment, with familiar flaws exposed. A rethink is needed after underperforming in batting, bowling, and fielding, despite entering as favourites.

India arrived in England for the Women's T20 World Cup as one of the tournament favourites. Barely a year after ending their long wait for an ODI World Cup title, they looked poised to chase another piece of history.

Instead, their campaign ended in disappointment. India crashed out in the group stage after failing to beat the tournament's stronger sides, exposing familiar flaws that have repeatedly surfaced at ICC events.

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While Harmanpreet Kaur's side registered victories over Pakistan, the Netherlands and Bangladesh, defeats to Australia and South Africa proved costly and dashed their hopes of winning back-to-back World Cup titles.

More importantly, the campaign has left the team staring at a much-needed reset.

The six-wicket defeat to Australia on Sunday, which officially ended India's semifinal hopes, only brought into sharper focus what had become increasingly evident throughout the tournament- despite entering as favourites, the Women in Blue were still a side searching for answers.

It marked the second successive T20 World Cup under Harmanpreet's leadership in which India failed to progress beyond the group stage, reviving uncomfortable questions over the team's direction in the shortest format.

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"Rethink" was the word both Harmanpreet and head coach Amol Muzumdar used after the campaign came to an end. Looking at how the tournament unfolded, the need for a reset is difficult to ignore.

The 37-year-old remains India's most successful T20I captain and one of the defining figures of Indian women's cricket. But another disappointing T20 World Cup campaign has inevitably put her future in the format under the spotlight.

Muzumdar, however, backed the veteran to continue. "It's up to the selectors to decide the captain. I think, yes. My short and sweet answer would be yes," he said when asked if Harmanpreet should remain skipper.

Whether she continues, however, will ultimately depend on how the selectors interpret India's latest World Cup failure.

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It is equally difficult to ignore that under Harmanpreet's leadership, India underperformed in all three departments.

The team entered the tournament without a settled combination, continued to shuffle batting positions and personnel, and frequently appeared reactive rather than proactive under pressure.

Harmanpreet's own returns with the bat also deserve scrutiny. Since the 2024 T20 World Cup, the India captain has crossed the fifty-run mark only four times in 24 innings, highlighting her inconsistency.

Her fighting half-century against Australia, with India's campaign hanging by a thread, served as a reminder of her class and ability to deliver on the biggest stage. Yet it remained her only substantial contribution with the bat during the tournament.

In the earlier matches, Harmanpreet struggled to dictate the middle overs and failed to provide either the stability or acceleration expected from India's most experienced batter.

Selection, too, remained an issue throughout the campaign. Questions surrounding the pace attack, middle-order composition and all-round options remained unresolved even in the final group game.

India rotated their seamers throughout the tournament. Nandani Sharma and Kranti Gaud featured in three matches each, while Renuka Singh and Arundhati Reddy played only two apiece, reflecting the lack of a settled bowling combination.

India have repeatedly spoken about embracing a fearless brand of cricket, but their approach often appeared conservative.

The middle overs continued to be a major concern as the batting unit repeatedly lost momentum after promising starts in the powerplay. Yastika Bhatia and Jemimah Rodrigues, expected to anchor the middle order alongside Harmanpreet, endured disappointing campaigns.

Neither batter is known for power-hitting, yet India persisted with both. While Jemimah batted at No. 3 during the England series leading into the World Cup, Yastika was promoted to one down during the tournament itself, reflecting the uncertainty surrounding the batting order.

Fielding, another area that has often let India down in major tournaments, again proved costly. India dropped 10 catches during the competition -- the third-highest tally among all teams.

The most damaging lapses came against South Africa, where Marizanne Kapp was reprieved three times before guiding her side to a crucial victory.

There were missed opportunities against Bangladesh as well, with India putting down four catches inside the opening five overs. Misfields and lapses in the deep repeatedly allowed opponents to recover from difficult situations.

For a team that entered the tournament as favourites, the early exit will force uncomfortable introspection.

(With PTI inputs)