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India’s middle-order has been unpredictable and its repeated failures have hurt them.
In the 2017 World Cup final, India had lost seven wickets for 28 runs to go down to England by nine runs, while in the recent tri-series final against Australia, they collapsed to 144 all out after being 115 for three at one stage while chasing 155.
“The middle order could definitely improve,” said Mandhana, who became the third Indian to reach 1,000 T20I runs at the 2018 Women’s T20 World Cup and was also the leading run-scorer in the recent tri-series in Australia.
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“We must try not to get out in the 16th or 17th over and the problem will be sorted if we can stay until the 20th over,” added the 23-year-old, who rose to number four in the ICC rankings on Friday.
India will begin their T20 World Cup campaign with a clash against four-time champions Australia on February 21.
While India lost to the Australia in the tri-series final, they had also defeated the hosts in a crucial league game, in which Mandhana scored 55 and young Shafali Verma blasted 49 from 28 balls to help the team chase down 177 losing just three wickets.
Australia head coach Matthew Mott believes India have the most feared batting line-up at the T20 World Cup and Mandhana agrees that they have a balanced batting order.
“We can be very unpredictable on our day, but I’d like to agree (with Mott),” she said.
“We have some great batters and our order is very balanced. The top four or five are quite settled. We’ve had the same top five for the last year and that’s been a good thing for us,” Mandhana was quoted as saying by the ICC.