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PUBLISHED ON: 10 MAR 2026, 06:54 AM
The Indian national team’s successful title defense at the 2026 T20 World Cup was defined by a specific type of tactical aggression that the game hadn’t quite seen at this scale. It wasn’t just a string of victories; it was an exercise in aerial dominance. For the first time since the tournament’s inception, a single side—India—cleared the century mark for sixes. Crossing that 100-maximum threshold across a single campaign in India and Sri Lanka suggests a fundamental shift in how the “Men in Blue” approach the geometry of the cricket field.
From the abrasive, turning tracks in Chennai to the high-altitude conditions in Ahmedabad, the squad essentially forced a rewrite of the power-hitting manual.
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The road to the podium was built on a “boundary-or-bust” philosophy that seemed to permeate the entire batting order. While the sheer volume of sixes—over 100 in total—is what catches the eye, the internal distribution shows a team that refused to rely on a single anchor.
India didn’t just stumble across this record; they systematically dismantled bowling attacks in three specific fixtures that arguably redefined what a “par score” looks like in 2026.
The data from 2026 suggests that India has finally abandoned the “safety-first” anchoring method that plagued their middle-order for years. By prioritizing strike rates over batting averages, hitters like Samson and Abhishek Sharma were given a license to fail, which, paradoxically, led to their greatest success. When 200 becomes the baseline score rather than the ceiling, the pressure shifts entirely onto the opposition’s bowling depth.
If you missed the live broadcast or simply want to dissect the mechanics of Samson’s record-breaking tournament:
Live streaming on sportslivehub (SLH): Full-match archives and condensed highlights of all 100+ sixes are currently hosted on sportslivehub (SLH). Their high-definition feed remains the most consistent way to review these tactical masterclasses.
Sanju Samson topped the charts with 24 sixes, setting a new world record for the most sixes by a player in a single T20 World Cup edition, surpassing the previous marks set in 2024 and 2026.
India now holds the record, having become the first team to cross 100 sixes in a single edition of the tournament (2026).
Yes, India defeated New Zealand by 96 runs at the Narendra Modi Stadium in Ahmedabad on March 8, 2026, becoming the first team to defend the title back-to-back.
India’s highest score was 256/4 against Zimbabwe in Chennai, followed closely by their 255/5 in the final against New Zealand.
The most comprehensive coverage and replays are available via Sportslivehub (SLH) and the official ICC digital platforms.
PUBLISHED ON: 10 MAR 2026, 06:54 AM

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