At Chepauk, time acquires the consistency of tamarind – thick, tart, and impossible to rush. The MCC clock watches a day-night ODI ripen with magisterial indifference. Beneath the sail-like canopy roofs, the afternoon heat presses down with bureaucratic efficiency. Vendors continue their circuits, conversations drift through the stands, and the sea air arrives from the Marina. Just beyond the stands, suburban trains rattle past on concrete stilts, their passengers – spectral voyeurs – stealing glimpses of the sunlit turf. By the time the shadows lengthen across the outfield, the match no longer feels like something being watched. It feels like a day being collectively inhabited.
On Saturday (June 20, 2026), the crowd that settles into Chepauk’s long afternoon would expect the Indian juggernaut to complete a 3-0 sweep of Afghanistan in the third and final ODI. At Lucknow, players, and even the on-field umpire Richard Illingworth, reached for cooling towels as heat and humidity combined into an unforgiving working environment. Chepauk offers familiarity, but little relief.
India has batted as if the weather were someone else’s problem. Shubman Gill’s unbeaten 84 and 154 have reinforced his growing centrality to India’s 2027 World Cup plans. Ishan Kishan’s 125 was perhaps equally valuable, restoring him to the ODI conversation while simultaneously strengthening India’s wicketkeeping reserves. K.L. Rahul’s late flourish at Dharamsala added to the sense of batting abundance.
The bowling, too, has offered encouragement. Gurnoor Brar, Harsh Dubey, Arshdeep Singh, and Prince Yadav have all contributed meaningfully. Harshit Rana’s return from a long injury layoff has only expanded India’s options.
For a team seeking to broaden its resources without compromising results, the series has come close to an ideal outcome.
There is one thing the crowd would want. Runs from Rohit Sharma. He remains one of India’s ODI giants. Yet, every innings now carries a second scorecard, invisible but unavoidable, on which selectors, supporters, and time itself keep count. His innings are no longer being watched solely for their runs. They are being watched for evidence of his remainingness.
Shreyas Iyer, too, could benefit from time in the middle.
India’s larger objectives are unlikely to change. The management would gladly accept another evening of experimentation disguised as dominance. If someone else puts a hand up, so much the better.

There are still things to tidy up. At Lucknow, 450 briefly appeared imaginable before the Afghan spinners dragged the innings back to earth, claiming seven wickets for 62 runs in the last ten overs. They demonstrated that even overwhelming afternoons can contain pockets of resistance.
Afghanistan would search for more of those pockets and broader contributions with the bat.
The teams (from): India: Shubman Gill (Capt.), Rohit Sharma, Shreyas Iyer (Vice-capt.), K.L. Rahul (wk), Ishan Kishan (wk), Nitish Kumar Reddy, Washington Sundar, Kuldeep Yadav, Arshdeep Singh, Prasidh Krishna, Prince Yadav, Gurnoor Brar, Harsh Dubey, Yashasvi Jaiswal, and Harshit Rana.
Afghanistan: Hashmatullah Shahidi (Capt.), Rahmanullah Gurbaz (wk), Ibrahim Zadran, Sediqullah Atal, Rahmat Shah, Ikram Alikhil (wk), Mohammad Nabi, Azmatullah Omarzai, Rashid Khan, Nangeyalia Kharote, AM Ghazanfar, Zia Ur Rahman Sharifi, Fareed Malikzai, Bilal Sami, Mohammad Saleem, and Darwish Rasooli.
(Match starts at 1.30 p.m.)
Published – June 19, 2026 07:32 pm IST

