Imagine going up against the best cricket team in the world… with your former coach leading the underdogs. That’s exactly what’s happening as UAE take on India in the Asia Cup, with Lalchand Rajput — the man who once guided India to T20 World Cup glory — now plotting against them. Fans are already calling it the potential “upset of the year.”
Lalchand Rajput knows the enemy better than most — and on Tuesday he’ll try to turn that inside knowledge into history. The UAE, coached by Rajput who guided India to the inaugural T20 World Cup crown in 2007, take on the reigning T20 world champions in what on paper looks like a David-vs-Goliath clash. For the UAE it’s a chance to flip a script: after a month of preparation and a testing tri-series that produced near-misses and lessons rather than wins, they arrive in this Asia Cup fixture with nothing to lose and everything to gain. For India, fresh from a long rest and with one eye on defending their world title, it’s about control, selection balance and keeping their momentum intact.
India re-enter international action with a squad that blends brute T20 firepower with tactical bowling variety. The big talking point is the recall of Test captain Shubman Gill, who returns to the T20 set-up as vice-captain and is likely to open alongside Abhishek Sharma. Gill’s IPL form — prolific scoring at a brisk strike rate — gives India a steady top-order anchor to complement the side’s usual blitz hitters. Sanju Samson’s place remains the puzzle: does India shoehorn Samson into a middle-order role or keep Jitesh Sharma and the existing balance intact? The bowling is versatile, with Jasprit Bumrah leading the attack and the spin options — Kuldeep Yadav and Varun Chakravarthy — offering contrasting mystery and guile. India’s preferred XI will be judged on whether they want three front-line quicks plus two all-rounders, or a three-bowler, three-allrounder mix that bolsters batting depth.
The UAE arrive with a tough form line — recent results have been unkind — but form can bend fast in T20s. Their tri-series showed grit: they nearly toppled Afghanistan and got vital match practice ahead of this heavyweight fixture. Captain Muhammad Waseem and opener Alishan Sharafu are set to carry the batting burden, with Asif Khan and wicketkeeper Rahul Chopra providing the middle-order bite. The bowling depends on a mix of pace and experience — Junaid Siddique, Muhammad Rohid and Haider Ali will shoulder responsibility, while left-arm spinner Simranjeet Singh, who impressed earlier in the year, could be a tactical weapon if conditions aid turn.
Pitch and weather will play a quiet but crucial role. Earlier in the year India deployed four spinners on Dubai’s used surfaces, but the pitches for the Asia Cup look fresher and more conducive to pace early on — a factor that might nudge both teams toward balanced attacks. Heat and humidity will test fitness; whoever manages their energy and execution across bursts will gain an edge.
This is more than a match. It’s a storyline heavy with irony: Rajput, the architect of India’s early T20 success, now trying to mastermind an upset over the nation he once coached. For the UAE it’s a chance to silence doubters and galvanise belief. For India, it’s a tune-up and a reminder that even champions must respect the underdog. If Rajput and Waseem engineer a result, the cricket world will call it the upset of the year — and a reminder that in T20, anything is still possible.