Samson's omission emotional, not logical, says Parthiv Patel
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Former India wicketkeeper-batter Parthiv Patel has argued that the decision to drop Sanju Samson and hand teenage opener Vaibhav Sooryavanshi a debut opportunity in the ongoing T20I series against England was driven by emotion rather than cricketing logic. Patel made the remarks as India stared at an unassailable 3-0 series deficit in the five-match rubber, with the first game washed out and only one fixture remaining.
How the Series Unravelled
England sealed the series with a commanding nine-wicket win in the fourth T20I — their first-ever bilateral T20I series victory over India. The defeat in the third match was particularly damaging: India suffered a 125-run loss, their heaviest in the format, exposing deep vulnerabilities in the top order.
Sooryavanshi, just 15 years old, has found it difficult to justify the bold selection. He scored 14 on debut, followed by 13 in the third T20I, with only a modest contribution in the fourth game as India's batting continued to struggle at the top.
Parthiv's Case Against the Selection Logic
'Why is it always Sanju Samson who misses out? If you look at Sanju Samson's career over the last 11-12 years, the one question that has always followed him is consistency. In 12 years, there has been just one IPL season in which he scored over 500 runs. Even in international cricket, he either blows hot or cold. And when it comes to selection, that factor always comes into play,' Patel said in an interview on Jio Hotstar.
He elaborated: 'Either the player who isn't scoring quickly enough gets left out, or the one who has been inconsistent. You can't make decisions based on both emotion and logic. So emotionally, yes, it was the right call to give Vaibhav Sooryavanshi a chance. But if you go purely by logic, then why has Sanju Samson been left out? So, I think this decision was taken emotionally.'
India's Deep Talent Pool and the Selection Paradox
Patel also placed the debate in a broader context, noting that India's extraordinary depth in batting talent perpetually fuels selection controversies. He pointed to the pattern seen at the last T20 World Cup, when Shreyas Iyer's absence dominated headlines — only for questions about Rajat Patidar's exclusion to emerge once Iyer was recalled.
'Ever since the series against Ireland began, everyone has been saying, 'Play Vaibhav Sooryavanshi, play Vaibhav Sooryavanshi.' Now that he's playing, the question has become, 'Why isn't Sanju Samson playing?' That's just our tendency. Because our talent pool is so deep, whenever the team loses a match, we always feel the player sitting out would have done a better job,' Patel added.
What Happens in the Final Match
India and Sooryavanshi will look to salvage some pride when the two sides meet in the fifth and final T20I on Saturday. For the defending T20 World Cup champions, a consolation win would do little to mask a series that exposed selection inconsistencies and a fragile top order — questions that will follow the team into their next assignment.