Ultimate conquest: How India shattered every T20 World Cup curse in Ahmedabad
AHMEDABAD: In a night that will be etched into the annals of cricketing history, India has achieved the impossible. By defeating New Zealand in the 2026 T20 World Cup final at the Narendra Modi Stadium, the Men in Blue have not only secured the trophy but have systematically dismantled every major hoodoo that has haunted the tournament for nearly two decades.
Masterclass in Breaking Records
Heading into this final, the narrative was dominated by the ghosts of tournaments past. Skeptics pointed to three insurmountable statistical barriers. Tonight, under the floodlights in Ahmedabad, those barriers fell one by one:
- The Host Curse Broken: For the first time in the history of the T20 World Cup, a host nation has lifted the trophy. India, playing on home soil, successfully navigated the pressure that had crippled every previous host.
- The First Back-to-Back Champions: By successfully defending the title they won in 2024, India has become the first team in history to achieve consecutive T20 World Cup victories, cementing their status as the undisputed kings of the shortest format.
- The Triple Crown: With this victory, India now stands alone as the first nation to secure three T20 World Cup titles (2007, 2024, 2026), moving past the two-title deadlock previously shared with England and the West Indies.
- The "Kiwi Curse" Exorcised: Perhaps the most personal victory for the Indian side was finally overcoming the New Zealand hurdle. Having lost all three of their previous T20 World Cup meetings against the Black Caps, India’s commanding performance tonight finally put an end to that long-standing hoodoo.
Sanju Samson’s Resurgence
The match also served as a resounding statement for Sanju Samson. Entering the final under scrutiny due to his historical struggles against the Kiwis, Samson silenced his critics with a magnificent 89-run knock. His performance—capped off by three consecutive sixes off Rachin Ravindra—was the cornerstone of India’s record-breaking 255/5, the highest total ever recorded in a T20 World Cup final.