Unlike T20 franchise leagues, which feature teams designed to be more or less equal (due to salary caps), T20 international tournaments, with their lopsided, unequal squads and winner-take-all knockout matches incentivise this conservatism to some extent. Saqlain Mushtaq’s defence of his players after the Asia Cup final reflects this. India and Pakistan are both very successful T20 international sides. In T20 internationals among the nine teams in the table below, India (29-13 win-loss record), and Pakistan (20-12) have the two best records in the 2020s.On the face of it, this calls into question India’s recent efforts at discarding the batter’s orthodoxy in favour of the hitter’s. But this record is deceptive. It is built on a lopsided success rate in chases (12-2 for India, 14-2 for Pakistan). Eleven out of Pakistan’s 16 chases have involved targets under 175, eight have involved targets of 152 or less. India’s median score in their 14 chases has been a similarly modest 165. England’s 14-12 record in chases during this period has involved a median chase of 180. Their head-to-head record against Pakistan (3-2) and India (3-5) during this period does not suggest that India and Pakistan have been better T20I sides than England. Australia’s record tells a similar story.In matches where they bat first, Pakistan’s caution stands out. They lose, on average, only 1.2 wickets in the middle third of the innings, while nearly all other teams lose about two wickets or a little under on average, and yet, Pakistan are mid-table in terms of the number of runs scored. They have lost ten out of 16 matches batting first during this period. Above and below Pakistan in this table are teams that have spent more wickets than them in this period, with greater or lesser success. Pakistan are unique in that they have been unwilling to spend wickets at the same rate.International teams seem to be embracing the hitter’s orthodoxy in T20 to varying degrees. Pakistan seem to be the last holdouts for the old way. What stands out is the number of potential runs they forego because they’re conservative about risking dismissal. While India have declared that they want to attack more, the line-ups and batting order they select suggest an element of caution in their approach.A key element in embracing the hitter’s orthodoxy involves the use of the anchor. India insist on playing Virat Kohli, Rohit Sharma and KL Rahul in three of the top four positions in their line-up. To be a genuinely hitting XI, they will need to drop two out of those three down the order and promote their power-hitters – Suryakumar Yadav, Rishabh Pant, Hardik Pandya, and probably Dinesh Karthik – up the order. In a good hitting line-up, the anchor offers insurance in case of a collapse rather than blocking one end from the start. To embrace such a theory fully, India would have to pick the most aggressive T20 opener available to them – Prithvi Shaw. That they haven’t done so, and their line-up positions their hitters below their anchors, suggests that there is a step in the direction of hitting that India are not yet prepared to take.Nevertheless, T20 international cricket is, at long last, moving towards the approach the franchise leagues have already embraced. T20 is a hitter’s game. Hitting is a distinct art and needs to be described on its own terms. It is not a riskier version of batting. Rather, it is a response to the unique circumstances of giving teams ten wickets to use over only 120 balls.

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