Shreyas Iyer Snubbed, This India Star To Bat At No. 3 In 1st T20I Against New Zealand
Indian cricket team skipper Suryakumar Yadav said that wicket-keeper batter Ishan Kishan will be taking Tilak Varma's slot in the batting order during the first T20I against New Zealand.
- NDTV Sports Desk
- Updated: January 20, 2026 07:01 pm IST
- Suryakumar Yadav confirmed Ishan Kishan will bat at No. 3 for India in the first T20I against New Zealand
- Kishan will play in place of the injured Tilak Varma despite Shreyas Iyer being a part of the squad
- "Ishan will bat at number 3 because he is a part of our T20 World Cup team," Suryakumar said
Indian cricket team skipper Suryakumar Yadav said that wicket-keeper batter Ishan Kishan will be taking Tilak Varma's slot in the batting order during the first T20I against New Zealand on Wednesday. With Tilak out of the first few matches due to injury, Suryakumar revealed that Kishan will be batting at No. 3. While Shreyas Iyer was another option for the No. 3 slot, the India captain explained that Kishan will be given the chance as he is a part of the T20 World Cup squad. Kishan was included in the T20 World Cup squad in place of Shubman Gill, keeping "team combination" in mind, while Shreyas was included as a replacement for Tilak for the first three T20I matches.
"Ishan will bat at number 3 because he is a part of our T20 World Cup team and he was picked in the squad first so it's our responsibility to give him a chance," he said in the pre-match press conference.
"He hasn't played for India for past one and half year and in the mean time consistently performed in domestic cricket," the Indian skipper did not leave any room for guess work.
"Since he (Ishan) has been picked for World T20, he deserves to play ahead (of Shreyas). Had it been a question of batting slots Nos 4 or 5, it would have been a different question altogether. Unfortunately, Tilak isn't there so Ishan is our best bet," he added.
When asked if he himself has any chance of batting at No.3 where he got a lot of success, the skipper indicated that he would like to be flexible.
"I have batted at both positions for India. My stats at No. 4 are sightly better although they are good at No. 3 also. But then we are flexible with that," he said.
"We will see and if the situation demands that we have to send a right-hander (in case right hander Sanju Samson gets out), then, I will go in, otherwise Tilak (now injured) has been doing really well at number three." With a strike rate of 113 and an average of less than 15 in 2025, Suryakumar has endured a prolonged rough patch but he intends to change nothing in his batting that has so far given him success.
"I've been out of runs. But I can't change my identity. I have decided to keep doing what I have been doing in the last three or four years so that has given me a lot of success.
"If the performance comes, I'll take it, if it doesn't, it's back to the drawing board. I'm still batting in the nets the way I always have," said Suryakumar.
While most questions predictably were about his form, the skipper very diplomatically spoke about how individual form doesn't matter in the bigger context of the team.
"Had I been playing a single (individual) sport like TT or tennis, I would have worried about my form. But this is team sport and my first responsibility is to ensure that my team does well.
"If team wins, I am happy and if I can contribute in team's success then fine and if not, doesn't matter as it can happen. But I have to look at 14 other players also and there is no place for looking at personal milestones."
(With PTI inputs)
