New Zealand’s success was built on method and clarity, with Daryl Mitchell firmly at the centre of it. Throughout the series, Mitchell displayed exceptional control against both pace and spin. Against the spinners, he used his feet decisively — either getting to the pitch or rocking back to manipulate length.
He repeatedly employed the sweep and reverse sweep, particularly against Ravindra Jadeja and Kuldeep Yadav, forcing them off attacking lines and unsettling field placements. Both spinners struggled to adapt, allowing Mitchell to milk singles effortlessly and keep the scoreboard ticking.
Against pace, Mitchell was equally assured. He played late, worked the ball into gaps with soft hands, and denied India the opportunity to build pressure through dot balls — a recurring theme across the series and a key factor in New Zealand’s dominance during the middle overs.
| Photo Credit:
Vijay Soneji
Kuldeep Yadav was particularly targeted by the New Zealand batters through the middle overs.
| Photo Credit:
Vijay Soneji
While India did have positives, they were few and far between. Virat Kohli stood out as a lone bright spot, continuing his tremendous form and once again standing tall as the fulcrum around which the team must build. Beyond him, however, consistency remained elusive. Several batters got starts across the three matches but failed to convert them into match-defining innings — a shortcoming captain Shubman Gill acknowledged after the series.
The bowling, particularly the spin department, raised serious concerns for the host. On surfaces expected to assist turn, both Jadeja and Kuldeep were worryingly ineffective, especially during the middle overs, allowing New Zealand’s batters to dictate terms and dominate crucial periods of play.
To compound matters, India’s fielding was abysmal, to say the least. Missed chances and sloppy ground fielding proved costly as the Black Caps pounced on every opportunity presented to them. In a series decided by fine margins, those lapses repeatedly tilted the balance in New Zealand’s favour.
With the 50-over World Cup still more than a year away, this defeat should act as a timely wake-up call. For head coach Gautam Gambhir and Gill, the priority now is to address the shortcomings — tighten fielding standards, demand greater accountability with the bat, and settle on the most effective XI. There is time to course-correct, but rebuilding confidence and clarity within the group must begin immediately.
Published on Jan 19, 2026
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