India were a bit complacent against Ireland in the opening T20I. However, it wasn’t the only wrong thing that they did. The Shreyas Iyer-led side didn’t master the conditions as well. When the second T20I begins at the Civil Service Cricket Club on Sunday, Iyer’s side will know exactly what to expect.
There won’t be a banana swing, a massive turn or a minefield of a wicket. Instead, Belfast is offering something a little trickier. It has extra bounce, a touch of slowness and large square boundaries that reward smart cricket. India didn’t adjust to those conditions in the series opener.
Harshit Rana was perhaps the biggest clue. Operating almost exclusively with hard lengths and back-of-a-length deliveries in the Powerplay, the pacer repeatedly extracted awkward bounce from the surface. Ross Adair, Harry Tector and Tim Tector all looked uncomfortable against balls climbing on them.
Yet when India came out to chase 183, several batters appeared determined to play the same aggressive shots that work on flatter Indian pitches. The bounce wasn’t accounted for, the square boundaries came into play, and Ireland’s bowlers were able to force mistakes. Barring Abhishek Sharma, who remained agonisingly short of a half-century, all other batters got out without taking bounce into account.
Belfast Pitch Report for 2nd IND vs IRE T20I
Belfast T20I numbers: Pace vs Spin since 2021
| Bowling Type | Matches | Wickets | Average | Economy | Dismissal Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pace | 10 | 47 | 19.72 | 7.03 | 16.8 |
| Spin | 10 | 77 | 23.15 | 8.00 | 17.3 |
Spin performance by innings in Belfast
| Innings | Balls | Wickets | Average | Economy | Dismissal Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st Innings | 324 | 15 | 26.26 | 7.29 | 21.6 |
| 2nd Innings | 467 | 32 | 16.65 | 6.84 | 14.5 |
Why should batting first be key in Northern Ireland?
If we look at numbers available above, there’s a clear pattern. While pacers have enjoyed a better economy rate, spinners have actually taken more wickets. What stands out even more is how effective spin becomes later in the game, particularly in the second innings when the pitch begins to slow down.
This is exactly what we saw yesterday too. In the first innings, Axar Patel picked up two wickets, but both came during the closing stages when Ireland were looking to attack every delivery. Through the middle overs, there wasn’t enough assistance for the tweaker. But we saw the pitch cracking up a bit when Irish bowlers came. For a special talent like Matthew Humphreys, he was able to trouble the Indian batters.
The weather forecast remains favourable, so rain should not be a major factor. Expect another surface with a touch of slowness, some extra bounce, and large square boundaries coming into play. So, batting first could be the best bet here in the capital of Northern Ireland.
