England beat India by 9 wickets (with 37 balls remaining) – T20 Internationals Match Report
9th July 2026
England won by 9 wickets (with 37 balls remaining) in the 130th match of 143 in the 4th T20I at County Ground, Bristol. Harry Brook produced a masterclass in aggressive batting, smashing 79 off just 35 balls (8 fours, 4 sixes) at a strike rate of 226 to dismantle India‘s bowling attack. England’s chase was so dominant that they reached 159 with 37 balls to spare and only one wicket lost – a statement victory that underlines their credentials as the world’s premier T20 side.
India’s Innings – Shreyas Iyer Lone Bright Spot
India won the toss and elected to bat, but their innings never gained the momentum required against a disciplined England attack. Vaibhav Sooryavanshi fell early for 15 off 10 at 23/1 in the 2.4th over, caught by the England fielders. Abhishek Sharma contributed 16 off 14 before departing at 48/2 in the 6.4th over, and Ishan Kishan managed just 4 off 6 at 33/3 in the 4.2nd over.
Shreyas Iyer was the lone warrior, striking 80 off 49 balls (4 fours, 5 sixes) at a strike rate of 163 to anchor India’s total. His unbeaten innings provided some respectability to the scoreline, but he lacked meaningful support. Shivam Dube chipped in with 22 off 23, while Tilak Varma (11 off 8) and Washington Sundar (5 off 8) offered little resistance. India limped to 158/7 from their 20 overs.
Jofra Archer was England’s standout bowler, claiming 2/20 from 4 overs at an economy of 5. Josh Tongue took 2/36 from 4, while Will Jacks (1/28) and Adil Rashid (1/49) chipped in with a wicket apiece. England’s bowling was tight, restricting India to a below-par total.
England’s Chase – Brook Takes Flight
Philip Salt and Harry Brook came out swinging, but Salt’s opening partner Jos Buttler fell early for 8 off 8 at 13/1 in the 2.3rd over. That was England’s only blemish. Salt remained composed at the crease, finishing unbeaten on 59 off 42 (9 fours, 1 six) at a strike rate of 140, but the real fireworks came from Brook.
Brook’s 79 off 35 was a clinic in T20 batting – he struck at 226, finding the boundary at will and punishing anything short or wide. His partnership with Salt put India’s bowlers to the sword. Arshdeep Singh was the only India bowler to claim a wicket, taking 1/41 from 3.5 overs, but the damage was already done. Prasidh Krishna (0/26), Prince Yadav (0/28), Axar Patel (0/24) and Washington Sundar (0/19) all went for runs without reward.
Statz MVP: Harry Brook (Statz Rating: 116.67)
Harry Brook earns the Statz MVP award with a Statz Rating of 116.67. His unbeaten 79 off 35 balls at a strike rate of 226 was the defining performance of the match – he took the game away from India within the first few overs and never allowed them back into the contest. Brook’s aggressive intent and clean striking were exactly what England needed to seal a dominant victory.
Top 5 Statz Ratings
- Harry Brook (ENG) – Statz Rating: 116.67 | 79 off 35 (SR 226, 8 fours, 4 sixes) – Masterclass in aggressive T20 batting to seal the chase.
- Shreyas Iyer (IND) – Statz Rating: 98.14 | 80 not out off 49 (SR 163, 4 fours, 5 sixes) – Lone bright spot in India’s innings but lacked support.
- Jofra Archer (ENG) – Statz Rating: 80.15 | 2/20 from 4 overs (economy 5) – Miserly and incisive with the new ball.
- Philip Salt (ENG) – Statz Rating: 53.6 | 59 not out off 42 (SR 140, 9 fours, 1 six) – Composed and efficient in the chase.
- Josh Tongue (ENG) – Statz Rating: 44.53 | 2/36 from 4 overs (economy 9) – Took two key wickets in the middle overs.
Turning Point
The match was decided in England’s opening overs of the chase. Harry Brook came out with intent from ball one, and by the time Jos Buttler fell at 13/1 in the 2.3rd over, England’s trajectory was already set. Brook’s aggressive approach – striking at 226 – meant India’s bowlers were constantly on the back foot. There was no recovery possible once England’s opening pair had seized control.
Match Context
This was the 130th match of 143 in the T20 International series. England (ranked 2nd in the ICC T20I rankings with a rating of 262) delivered a performance befitting their status with a nine-wicket victory. India (ranked 1st with a rating of 275) were outplayed in all departments – their batting lacked depth, their bowling lacked penetration, and their fielding could not stem the flow of runs. Check the full scorecard and head-to-head record on Statz for more detail, or explore the bet builder for alternative match angles.